Arch Cap Group — Income Statement, Cash Flows & Balance Sheet
Is Arch Capital profitable?
Arch Capital's revenue has grown strongly and the business continues to generate substantial profit.
| Metric | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Change (2024→2025) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net premiums earned | $12,440M | $15,100M | $17,065M | +13% |
| Net investment income | $1,023M | $1,495M | $1,625M | +9% |
| Total revenues | $13,634M | $17,440M | $19,929M | +14% |
| Net income | $4,442M | $4,312M | $4,399M | +2% |
| Diluted EPS | $11.62 | $11.19 | $11.60 | +4% |
Premiums and investment income have both climbed meaningfully, fuelled by organic growth and the mid-2024 acquisition of Allianz's U.S. middle-market business. Net income has been roughly flat across three years at around $4.3–4.4 billion, largely because a large favourable tax event ($873M tax benefit in 2023) flattered that earlier year; on a pre-tax basis, earnings are clearly trending upward.
The combined ratio (a key profitability gauge for insurers) remains healthy at under 83%, well below the 100% level that signals underwriting profitability.
| Ratio | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall combined ratio | 79.3% | 82.5% | 82.8% |
| Insurance segment | 91.7% | 94.8% | 95.2% |
| Reinsurance segment | 81.4% | 83.2% | 80.8% |
| Mortgage segment | 9.3% | 12.6% | 14.6% |
The combined ratio (losses + expenses as a percentage of premiums earned) below 100% means the underwriting business itself is profitable before investment income is even considered. The mortgage segment stands out with an exceptionally low ratio, while reinsurance is also strong; the insurance segment operates closer to breakeven on underwriting alone.
Where does Arch Capital's revenue come from?
Reinsurance is the largest and fastest-growing premium segment, while mortgage contributes disproportionate underwriting profit relative to its size.
| Segment — net premiums earned | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insurance | $5,446M | $6,627M | $7,771M | +17% |
| Reinsurance | $5,836M | $7,242M | $8,122M | +12% |
| Mortgage | $1,158M | $1,231M | $1,172M | -5% |
| Segment — underwriting income | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insurance | $450M | $345M | $375M | +9% |
| Reinsurance | $1,098M | $1,222M | $1,558M | +27% |
| Mortgage | $1,064M | $1,094M | $1,000M | -9% |
Both insurance and reinsurance premiums are growing rapidly; insurance benefited from the Allianz acquisition boosting volumes. The mortgage segment is seeing modest premium pressure as the U.S. housing market slows, with underwriting income dipping slightly, but it still produces exceptional margins for its size. Reinsurance is the standout growth engine on the profit line.
Does Arch Capital generate cash?
Arch Capital generates substantial operating cash flow, which it is increasingly directing toward share buybacks.
| Cash flow item | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Operating cash flow | $5,749M | $6,673M | $6,172M | -7% |
| Investing cash flow | -$5,468M | -$4,461M | -$4,036M | Improving |
| Share repurchases | $0M | $24M | $1,890M | Large increase |
| Special cash dividend | $0M | $1,866M | $0M | — |
Operating cash flow is strong and consistent. The modest year-on-year dip in 2025 reflects timing of loss payments rather than deteriorating profits. In 2024, Arch returned capital via a one-off $1.9 billion special dividend; in 2025 it shifted to aggressive buybacks, repurchasing nearly $1.9 billion of its own shares. The investment portfolio is growing as premiums grow, which is normal for an insurer.
How strong is Arch Capital's balance sheet?
Shareholders' equity has grown substantially, and financial leverage is modest relative to the asset base.
| Balance sheet metric | 2024 | 2025 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total assets | $70,906M | $79,241M | +12% |
| Total shareholders' equity | $20,820M | $24,206M | +16% |
| Senior notes (debt) | $2,728M | $2,729M | Flat |
| Debt-to-equity | 13.1% | 11.3% | Improving |
Arch Capital carries a modest fixed debt load of about $2.7 billion that has barely changed in years, while equity has compounded strongly. The bulk of liabilities are policyholder-related reserves — a normal feature of an insurer — not financial borrowings. The investment portfolio of over $46 billion is diversified, predominantly in investment-grade fixed income, and unrealized losses on that portfolio have shrunk materially as interest rates stabilised, helping push accumulated other comprehensive income back near zero after two years in the red.