MGIC Investment Corporation authorized a $750 million share repurchase program running through December 2028, paired with a quarterly dividend payable May 21. The Milwaukee-based mortgage insurance provider disclosed the authorization after market close, the largest capital return framework in the company's recent history.
The buyback replaces a prior authorization and gives management discretion to retire shares over four years through open-market purchases or accelerated share repurchase agreements. MGIC's board simultaneously declared a $0.10 per share quarterly dividend, maintaining the rate established in late 2023. The company held $5.8 billion in shareholder equity as of December 2024, with a risk-to-capital ratio of 8.1:1, comfortably below the 25:1 regulatory ceiling for private mortgage insurers.
This matters because mortgage insurance sits at the intersection of housing finance stress and GSE credit enhancement. MGIC's willingness to commit three-quarters of a billion dollars to buybacks signals management conviction that current loss ratios—13.2% in Q4 2024, down from 16.8% a year earlier—will hold or improve. The company's primary insurance in force stood at $282 billion at year-end, covering loans with a weighted average FICO score of 747 and loan-to-value ratios averaging 94%. Housing inventory has stabilized near 1.1 million units nationally, reducing foreclosure pipeline risk while rate cuts have paused prepayment acceleration that would erode premiums. GSE credit-risk transfer programs remain capacity-constrained, keeping demand for traditional MI steady. MGIC's management is betting that margin compression from rising home prices and stable employment will not arrive before they retire a meaningful portion of the float.
Allocators should watch PMI Group and Radian Group capital allocation announcements in the next sixty days; if competitors follow with similar programs, it confirms sector-wide confidence in credit quality. Monitor MGIC's monthly delinquency disclosures for any uptick in 60-day-plus delinquencies, which would lead claims paid twelve to eighteen months out. The May earnings call will clarify whether the buyback pacing skews front-loaded or ratable across the four-year window. Origination volume through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in Q2 will determine whether new insurance written offsets the capital outflow or whether the company expects to operate with a flatter book.
The 8.1:1 risk-to-capital ratio leaves $18 billion in cushion before regulatory limits bind. That is the number MGIC is betting will not compress faster than they can shrink the denominator.