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RLI Corp (RLI 0.73%)
Q2 2020 Earnings Call
Jul 23, 2020, 11:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, and welcome ladies and gentlemen to the RLI Corp.'s Second Quarter Earnings Teleconference. As a reminder, we will open the conference up for question-and-answers after the presentation.

Before we get started, let me remind everyone that through the course of the teleconference RLI management may make comments that reflect their intentions, beliefs and expectations for the future. As always these forward-looking statements are subject to certain factors and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ materially, including the ongoing impact of the novel coronavirus COVID-19 global pandemic.

Please refer to the risk factors described in the Company's various SEC filings, including in the annual report on Form 10-K as supplemented and the Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2020, which should be reviewed carefully. The Company has filed a Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission that contains the press release announcing second quarter results.

RLI management may make reference during the call to operating earnings and earnings per share from operations, which are non-GAAP measures of financial results. RLI's operating earnings and earnings per share from operations consist of net earnings after the elimination of after-tax realized gains or losses and after-tax unrealized gains or losses on equity securities. RLI's management believes these measures are useful in gauging core operating performances across the reporting periods, but may not be comparable to other companies' definitions of operating earnings. The Form 8-K contains a reconciliation between operating earnings and net earnings. The Form 8-K and press release are available at the Company's website at www.rlicorp.com.

I will now turn the conference over to RLI's Vice President, Chief Investment Officer, and Treasurer, Mr. Aaron Diefenthaler. Please go ahead, sir.

Aaron Diefenthaler -- Vice President, Chief Investment Officer and Treasurer

Good morning. On behalf of management, welcome to RLI's second quarter earnings call. We hope you're all staying safe in this new normal and appreciate you listening in.

Joining me are Jon Michael, Chairman and CEO; Craig Kliethermes, President and Chief Operating Officer; and Todd Bryant, Chief Financial Officer. Todd will first offer some additional financial details from the quarter and hopefully answer some of your common questions, then Craig will break down market dynamics in the current climate, at the close of prepared remarks, we'll open the call to questions and Jon will close with some final thoughts. Todd?

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Aaron. Good morning, everyone. Last night we reported second quarter operating earnings of $0.77 per share. We experienced 1% of top line growth while posting an 88.4 combined ratio. Investment income was relatively flat in the quarter, while unrealized gains on the portfolio reversed the first quarter's trend and positively impacted net earnings and book value. Book value per share ended the quarter at $23.39, up 8% for the year inclusive of the dividends.

Craig will talk more about our products and market conditions in a minute, but from a top line standpoint, the 1% growth in gross premiums written was driven largely by rate increases and expanded distribution. As you would expect, premium from some products was down in the quarter, given the impact of the economic slowdown and shelter-in-place orders brought on by the pandemic.

Most notably, transportation premium declined down $12 million in the quarter and $33 million on a year-to-date basis. Excluding transportation, gross premiums written was up 6% in the quarter and 11% year-to-date. While overall premium growth was down from prior quarters trends, top line results were better than our initial expectations as the quarter began.

From an underwriting perspective, we posted a second-quarter combined ratio of 88.4, our loss ratio was 48.5 and included $6 million in COVID-19 related impacts. As we increased current loss -- current year loss booking ratios on several products where heightened exposure exists. With the $5 million we set aside in the first quarter, our year-to-date COVID-19 reserves totaled $11 million as of June 30th. By segment, these reserves totaled $2 million for property, $1 million for surety, and $8 million for casualty.

We also recorded $6 million in storms and civil unrest related losses in the second quarter. Offsetting these additions, we posted approximately $22 million in net benefits from prior year's reserve releases with casualty adding $19 million and surety adding $3 million.

Moving to expenses, compared to last year, our expense ratio declined 2.8 points to 39.9. During this time of uncertainty, we have taken targeted actions to eliminate or defer expenses. Among other things, actions taken include a slowdown in hiring, position consolidations, select merit reductions or eliminations, travel curtailment and option grant deferral. We continue to evaluate areas of opportunity for efficiency gains and expense savings.

Having said that, similar to last quarter, the majority of the decline in expenses continues to be driven by reduced levels of amounts earned, under bonus and incentive plans. While two performance metrics, combined ratio and operating earnings compare favorably to last year, a third component, growth in book value continues to lag last year's achievement, resulting in lower amounts earned. The decline in amounts accrued under incentive plans account for the majority of the decrease in our expense ratio as well as the bulk of the decrease in general corporate expense.

Turning to investments, coming up the early stages of stabilization in late March, capital Markets made a significant rebound in the second quarter. As outlined in our press release, total return for the three months was 6.6%, driven by meaningful results from both fixed income and equities. The portfolio is now in positive territory for the year and once again a contributor to book value growth since December.

Our liquidity profile has proven durable in this environment and our operating cash flow return to form in the second quarter, allowing us to put money to work in high quality, investment grade bonds. Investment income was flat on the quarter, as influenced by a larger average cash balance and lower all -- lower overall yields. Obviously, the outlook on the economy remains less than certain, but we will continue to focus on investing for the long term, while maintaining a sound balance sheet.

Outside of the core portfolio, our share of earnings at Maui Jim was down over 50%, while earnings from Prime were up modestly in the quarter. As Jon discussed first quarter call, Maui Jim results are significantly affected by the retail and economic environment. With much of the retail sector shut down during the quarter, Maui Jim results were negatively impacted. Certainly, the length of any downturn may impact the results of these investees, particularly any lasting impact on the retail sector as it relates to Maui Jim. Overall, a good quarter in an environment that remains challenging and somewhat uncertain.

And with that, I'll turn the call over to Craig.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Thank you, Todd, and good morning, everyone. A pretty good quarter all things considered. As Todd mentioned, we achieved top line growth of 1% and an 88 combined ratio. Year-to-date, we've been able to achieve 4% growth with an underwriting margin of 10 points. Rewind 90 days and we would have been pleasantly surprised at these results. Overall, we see the market is broadly improving. In the U.S. businesses are adjusting to the new environment, beginning to open back up and people are getting out, even if only on a limited basis. I see, this is a testament of American ingenuity and perseverance.

Great momentum has continued with double-digit increases on our property and casualty portfolio, on both the quarter and year-to-date basis. We're still seeing pockets in the P&C space and certainly in surety, that remain quite competitive. But our results for the quarter, speak to our resiliency as a company.

The construction industry, which touches about one-third of the businesses we insure, never completely shut down. There have been a number of delays in projects but very few cancellations. We did not flinch in the face of adversity and continued to execute in markets that were feeling disruption even prior to the outbreak of the pandemic. Namely, our access casualty, management liability, property catastrophe and marine businesses continue to achieve rate increases and some growth.

We remain cautious that a slower economic recovery and new capital entering the market, may serve to dampen top line growth opportunities, particularly in the construction industry, where we expect to see some slowing of new projects into 2021.

I do want to provide some introductory comments about our assessment of COVID-19 and then I'll go into more details by segment. As a reminder, we do not offer event or travel cancellation, trade credit or any virus related coverages. We also do not focus on large insurance, program business, the entertainment industry, or hope -- or high-profile risks where bespoke manuscript forms are more common.

We are underweight in certain high-risk classes, like restaurants, lodging, bars and habitational. And we have very -- a very small book of workers' compensation insurance. All of our policies require direct physical damage to property to trigger coverage for business income. We believe all of these mitigating factors will serve us well as we quantify our exposure relative to the industry and peers. The true financial impact of this pandemic will never be known with absolute certainty. We do believe that it will result in direct, tangential and even some moral hazard losses to us and the industry.

As I mentioned last quarter, the bulk of the COVID claims we have received, are being made due to the suspension of operations based on government orders or business decisions, and are not the result of direct physical damage to any property. Although claim flow has diminished significantly over the last 45 days, we continue to diligently review the individual circumstances of each claim, gather detailed information from claimants, thoroughly investigate the facts and undertake detailed analysis to determine coverage based on the individual facts of each claim.

We have incurred some costs related to these investigations but have not paid any losses to date. As Todd quantified, we currently estimate our ultimate amount for losses that have occurred, resulting from the pandemic to be $11 million. We have increased our current year booking ratios in several of our financial related product lines to reflect the protracted impact of pandemic related loss occurrences. We will continue to assess and adjust, if necessary, as new information materializes.

To offer some perspective on the breadth and relative impact to us, I wanted to offer some perspective on the claims that have been reported. We have received COVID related claims in each of our three major reporting segments, across 18 different products and from 40 states. The claim count began to flatten out in the middle of May, but we are still receiving one or two claims a day. 90% of those claims are being made for loss of business income.

To provide some scale relative to our operations, COVID related claims make up less than 10% of all reported claims this year and less than 2% of our entire open inventory of claims. We will continue to monitor the impact and profile of our claims closely. On to some detail with each -- within each of our segments.

In casualty, top line was flat for the quarter with a combined ratio of 93. Many of the products in this segment were challenged with stalled exposure basis, particularly in primary and commercial excess liability. We are pleased with our solid underwriting performance and we were able to continue to grow many products that had momentum prior to the COVID outbreak. Management liability was up 22% with growth coming from rate overexposure.

The public and private D&O market is hard. Submissions are up 20%, limits are down and rates have risen more than 35% for the second straight quarter. This significant market shift is beginning to make a dent in the last decade of softening rates and increasing loss -- cost inflation. We will remain cautious in this business, as we believe it will be impacted by pandemic related claims and litigation at least through 2021.

Our contract pack product is focused on small contractors in the embedded space and continues to grow as a result of new production sources and geographic expansion. It remains a very solid business from a profitability standpoint. The unsupported personal excess business, also known as PEP, continues to grow significantly as a result of market disruption, investments in sales teams and technology and channel expansion.

Our transportation business is by far the most affected by the resulting shutdown and has a meaningful drag on the top line results in this segment. The public transportation business, which consists mostly of charter, school and transit buses will continue to be impacted until there is a vaccine, effective treatment or drastic lower number of new cases. In-force premium has dropped by more than 50% for this class. We have reported very good underwriting results in this business on the quarter and year-to-date. Our team is working closely with our customers and making sure, they know, we are in this with them for the long haul.

Rate increases continue in casualty overall, but submission flow and size of rate increases are highly correlated to the most problematic classes in lines of business for the industry, including habitational, automobile, commercial access and directors' and officers' liability. Although, we achieved very little overall premium lift in the segment for the quarter, many of the underlying products continue to grow. We are also able to achieve a 9% rate increase, which should bode well for future bottom-line results, as we prudently manage any increased exposure from people and businesses resuming normal activities.

Our property segment was up 8% for the quarter and 11% year-to-date. The combined ratio of 86 for the quarter is much improved from last year. All products in this segment, continue to grow, but more so through rate than exposure. Rates are up over 20% on catastrophe exposed businesses, marine market conditions continue to harden, as Lloyd assesses its future and refocuses on profitability.

Our property portfolio is well diversified in classes, geographies and perils, which is supported by another great quarter of results. We do anticipate further hardening in this segment and we are well positioned and confident in our ability to execute on opportunities that present themselves.

In surety, our top line is down 7% for the quarter and 3% year-to-date. We continue to report very good underwriting results and remain profitable across all products in this segment. This speaks to our bottom-line focus and discipline and what remains a very competitive space. The top line remains challenged as we still see significant competition, despite some principal suffering from more financial distress and some underwriting loss is felt by our competitors on large accounts.

Demand is down due to the economic -- due to economic factors, less regulation and decreased commodity prices. We believe the best long-term positioning is to flex our underwriting muscle and pay -- play great defense until better opportunities arise. We will continue to focus on building deeper relationships with our most trusted and valued distribution partners, investing in technology, advancing our sales and marketing efforts and listening and responding to the needs of our customers.

The pandemic has allowed us to focus and deliver on several long-standing technology projects in our transactional businesses. One of the silver linings of this crisis is that it has served as a catalyst for change. Given all the disruption and uncertainty, we are pleased with our results, which were better than we expected heading into the quarter. Despite the economic downturn and the heightened risk profile in some financial products, we feel better because we have a broad and diversified portfolio of products. And many of these products have only been marginally impacted by the pandemic. We have not missed a beat in our execution in these markets. Pricing continues to be on the rise in most products. Our customer retention's remain very strong and cancellations and premium collections have only been mildly impacted.

We attribute this to our focus on selection of the best-in-class risks and financially strong insured. The frequency of claims is down with some improvement in the environment to settle and reduce our claim inventory. And the industry has won a few early court decisions on standard wording around direct physical loss.

Despite this guarded optimism, there is still economic headwinds that will continue to put pressure on our top line. In addition, the plaintiffs' bar is very adaptable, creative and persistent. The pandemic has presented them with a target-rich environment for years to come. RLI will maintain a prudent approach to underwriting and continue to be opportunistic in niches where we have unique expertise. We are known in our chosen markets and to all of our stakeholders as a stable, successful, strong and sustainable partner. We are a special company made up a very talented and responsible owners that makes us different in our industry and these different works for all RLI stakeholders.

Thank you. And now I will turn it over to the moderator to open it up for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Matt Carletti, JMP Securities.

Matthew Carletti -- JMP Securities LLC -- Analyst

Hey, thanks, good morning.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Morning, Matt.

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Morning, Matt.

Matthew Carletti -- JMP Securities LLC -- Analyst

Craig, I wanted to circle back on just one question on your COVID exposure, the claims you've seen, I heard your comments that there's no paid losses to the date, you really just investigated some things and I appreciate a lot of the stats you gave. And it sounds like, most of what you're seeing are claims for BI. If I go back to last quarter, I remember you saying that -- a couple of things, one was like the vast majority of the exposure you have has some sort of -- not just the physical damage qualifier but a buyer's exclusion or pathogen exclusion. And that there is some split along those lines in terms of admitted versus surplus line products. And I was hoping that you might be able to give us just a little bit better of an idea how to think about that, is vast majority kind of 90% plus or is it more south of that or just -- there is a lot of broadly among the universes, there is a lot of just qualitative terms, kind of, we put on things and everybody has a different meaning by it. I'm just hoping to get a better feel for, kind of, what part of your book might not have a virus exclusion, understanding that doesn't mean there's exposure that it still has a physical damage exclusion on it?

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Sure, Matt. Well, I mean, I think I said last time is that the policies that don't have the virus exclusion, specifically, are mostly excess and surplus lines policies and that's still true. And I guess from the definition from a vast majority i would say, I mean I'll leave you at greater than 50%. So -- and that's true of both the claims that have been made, as well as the as the policies that were written.

Matthew Carletti -- JMP Securities LLC -- Analyst

Okay. Would -- I guess another way to think about this is, or you brought a color here. Is -- I mean obviously property is kind of the exposure where business interruption will come in. When we think about RLI's property book, can you give us just a rough split of what might be written on it admitted basis versus written on surplus line basis?

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Yeah.

Matthew Carletti -- JMP Securities LLC -- Analyst

Excluding like wide home owners and things like that wouldn't be any exposure.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

So I mean the businesses that are admitted for us, we have a small home business insurance product which is, I mean it's really just that, it's people that have a business running out of their home, that's all admitted and that those are small policies. There's a large number of policies there. And obviously, a personal lines products are admitted and then we have a fair amount of property and casualty packages, commercial packages for like architects and engineers and miscellaneous professionals. That contract pack product that I talked about in my opening remarks is an admitted product. I mean a lot of that is either for the architects and engineers, those folks are white-collar workers for the most part, that are working from home, much like insurance companies right now. In the contract, package is smaller, subcontractors who are still, for the most part, on the job, on very small jobs.

Matthew Carletti -- JMP Securities LLC -- Analyst

Yeah.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

On the E&S space, I mean those classes can be anything from warehouse, it could be an apartment building, we don't do a ton of restaurants. But we do some, don't do very -- many bars and that's mostly written to our excess and surplus lines property unit, there are mid-size risks, so we don't write these really big limits, right. I mean, a typical property limit for us would be less than $10 million and then the bulk business interruption or income coverage would be sub-limited even under that. So -- and then some of the binding authority business that we've started doing over the last couple of years is also in the excess and surplus lines space, but again those folks typically buy even lower business income coverage. I think the average is less than $100,000 of business interruption or income coverage in it has monthly limitations in addition to that total limit that I just the outlined.

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

The one thing I would add there too -- just real quick is a number of those policy -- the package policy, the general binding authority policy, those are in the casualty segment. We book all of our package policies in the casualty segment, if they have property and liability components. So I just want to make sure there is clarity on that.

Matthew Carletti -- JMP Securities LLC -- Analyst

That is helpful. Great. Well, no that's great, thank you for the color. I mean any -- all those titbits help in, kind of, painting the mosaic of what's out there. So that's all I got. Thank you for the answers and congrats on a nice result in a tough environment.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Thanks, Matt.

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Matt.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Randy Binner, B. Riley.

Randy Binner -- B. Riley FBR -- Analyst

Hey, good morning. I'd like to try and ask a more direct question about the COVID related claims that you mentioned at the top of the call. I guess, is it possible for you to describe one of those BI claims that's still open. What the dynamic would be to have something that you still -- you're still determining what the loss might be?

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Well, Randy, so obviously, all these claims didn't come in on one day. So we've had claims that are reported as frequently as yesterday, that are around business interruption. So there is no -- we are investigating every claim and talking to every one of the claimants and walking through and understanding the circumstances and then evaluating where there is coverage for each claim. So there is no -- we certainly are approaching this on a one by one individual basis. There is no summary -- summarily decision or summarized decision here. It's -- we go into each claim looking to see if there is coverage and evaluating the circumstances of that. I mean one example would be talking to someone about whether they had actually had COVID or someone on the premises has been tested for COVID and has that test turn back positive. So that might be -- they might be able to prove that there actually was COVID on the premises or in the premises. So every situation, every claim is different so I don't think I could describe an average claim in this.

Randy Binner -- B. Riley FBR -- Analyst

Okay. But, I mean is -- are some of them advancing more from a claims perspective, meaning that they retained a lawyer and they may have -- there may be -- they may be in a jurisdiction where they can advance their case or I mean, it could -- because based on what I'm understanding on how you describe your policy forms and how I understand policy forms, it doesn't seem like there'll be a lot of coverage. I'm just curious if there is -- if there are some cases where they are able to push the claim forward.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Well, there's -- ultimate decision is made in a court of law, right. If you -- someone chooses to retain an attorney and pursue that avenue so...

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

I mean I think ultimately, Randy. I mean those types of things are what our claim folks and our actuarial folks talking together consider in establishing what we have, from a reserve -- from an IBNR standpoint.

Randy Binner -- B. Riley FBR -- Analyst

Yeah.

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

We -- nearly 100% of the reserves we have are in IBNR.

Randy Binner -- B. Riley FBR -- Analyst

Yeah. Okay, fair enough. And then just a couple more. One quick one, just on Maui Jim real quick, do you, can you quantify for us -- that result is actually a little bit better than I would have thought, do I take -- can I take it they have e-commerce sales and so can you give a rough percentage of how much they can operate online?

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, Randy. It's Jon. Actually when Maui -- when this happened, as you might expect Maui Jim does have a direct line, they also have a relationship with Amazon Prime. And thank god they did, because largely their operation retail wise, were shut down worldwide. It was shut down during their three best months for sales. So, the fact that they were able to do roughly half, on an earnings basis, for the quarter of what they did last year is a testament to Maui Jim's management and operations. As the quarter progressed, retail began to open up, not just in this country on a limited basis, but in other places worldwide. So that -- their orders on a retail basis began to come in as the quarter progressed. So, the latter months were better than the early months. So for example, April was not very good month but May and June were much better months. So, but I will just say that there -- those direct-to-consumer type distribution channels, we're not a very large part because Maui Jim was really focused on retail, but thank God, they did have those direct channels and did have very good technology around those channel that enabled them to see pretty good increases in the use of those channels. So, we think they've done very well through this and they think they have done very well, even more important.

Randy Binner -- B. Riley FBR -- Analyst

Okay, great and just one more. And I apologize if I missed this, but did you all quantify submission activity in the E&S area specifically?

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

No, we talked generally that submissions were up in certain areas. I mean it's a mixed bag. I think certainly on the property side of the house, submissions are significantly up, on the casualty side, realized in the E&S space, we write predominantly construction risks. So, there are not a lot of new projects that were undertaken during or -- during COVID. So, the submission flow was flatter to even slightly down in some of our primary general liability.

Randy Binner -- B. Riley FBR -- Analyst

Got it. Okay, thanks.

Operator

Our next question comes from Jeff Schmitt, William Blair.

Jeff Schmitt -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Hi, good morning.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Morning, Jeff.

Jeff Schmitt -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

The COVID losses of $11 million year-to-date, could you break that out between the LAE component and the period loss component into these -- there have been a couple of court rulings in favor of that physical damage requirement, does that change the math at all, in the LAE component?

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

I don't have the breakdown between loss and LAE, Jeff, I mean I think as our actuaries go through it, there is not necessarily distinction in what we put up in the second quarter. I know we talked in the first quarter, the bulk of that really was defense related but they really are looking at in the totality from both a loss and defense standpoint. But I don't have the breakdown between IBNR.

Jeff Schmitt -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Okay and then just looking at property margins, obviously, they're pretty good compared to where they were a couple of years ago. You continue to get rate there, the market is getting rate, if anything that probably more likely to go up then down, is there an opportunity there to, sort of, pull back on rate and try and really expand that business? I mean, I know it's -- if you go back five, six, seven years ago, it was 35% or 40% of gross premiums. Is there an opportunity to try and grow that back to a larger book?

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

So, Jeff, this is Craig. I mean, obviously underers [Phonetic] make those decisions and trade-offs every day and try to evaluate. I can tell you from a portfolio level whenever they do the math, that never -- the math never works. So when you do the math to figure out, well, how much rate do I have to cut to grow more, the margin gets so thin that you end up being bigger, but you don't really make any more money and there is no incentive to do that for us. Why would we take on more exposure for no more profit? So that's generally the math, it doesn't mean there aren't going to be pockets of opportunity there, certainly, we'd love to continue to grow that business. We think that right now we're getting rate. I'll say above what we'd like to see as technical rate, because there is no such thing as that's enough. But, and let's also keep light that the reinsurers, I believe are in the process -- they've already started the process, but I believe that will continue for a while is getting rate increases. So we're going to be paying more for reinsurance, I think, us as well as the whole market on a go-forward basis. So, we need that rate to pay for the additional protection that we -- or the protection that we currently have.

Jeff Schmitt -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Got it.

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Jeff, one more thing on that. Jon Michael. We are restrained as to how much CAT risk, we can take too. So that would...

Jeff Schmitt -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Okay

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

That would restrict our writings.

Jeff Schmitt -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Got it. And just one last one on the E&S market. It seems like there could be more exposure there. There is probably less virus exclusions. I mean, I know you mentioned it, I think others have as well. There is already, sort of, some large players pulling back there. And if they have more exposure here on the COVID, are you seeing sort of even more dislocation there or is it been similar to what it was a quarter or two ago?

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I mean, I think the disruption is on the -- is the fact that the reinsurers are starting to raise rate and that rate has to get into the primary at some point in time to be able to continue to make your margins. I don't think we would classify the disruption necessarily to be COVID related or virus related on the E&S side. I think it's just rate we've needed to get for a while and now that the reinsurers are charging more, we know that the cost of our goods sold has gone up, and we need to pass that along or get more rate to be able to make the same margins.

Jeff Schmitt -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Okay. All right. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from Meyer Shields, KBW.

Meyer Shields -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

Thanks. One question, I really probably should know the answer to this, but are any of the defense costs against BI claims recoverable?

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

You say recoverable, by reinsurers from reinsurers or..

Meyer Shields -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

No, no, no. I mean, from the claimants or from the attorneys.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

I don't think I can answer that question there.

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well Mayer, that's -- it could be litigated right, but largely in this country, no, but it could be litigated.

Meyer Shields -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

Okay. No, fair enough. Is there any way, we can get the -- both the weather-related losses and the COVID losses in dollars by segment, just for the second quarter?

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Meyer, it's Todd. So if you look at the second quarter, the storms and civil unrest, the $6 million there, splits about $4.5 million of the property segment and $1.5 million to the casualty segment. Again, that general binding business and other package business that we have in the casualty segment, so that's how that splits. And then the COVID-19 is $5 million in casualty and about a million in surety for the second quarter piece.

Meyer Shields -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

Perfect.

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

I think just the post quarter, we were $3 million in casualty, and $2 million in property for COVID-19.

Meyer Shields -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

Excellent. Okay, that's very helpful. Final Question when, I think Craig was just talking about reinsurance rate increases, is there any reason to anticipate any change and maybe how much of your gross premium that your're seeing, as the interest prices rise and as the primary prices rise?

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. It's Jon. We evaluate that all the time, obviously. We view reinsurers as our partners. So, as rates increase on the margins, I've heard other companies talk about reevaluating their retentions, and we do that all the time. But largely we're viewing our reinsurers as partners in the whole process. So, yes and no, but I don't see any significant change...

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

We haven't.

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yet.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

I mean, its -- yeah, as long as -- I mean we'd obviously, Meyer, we priced the stuff up internally and try to figure out what we think of the fair price loss cost with their margin on top and if we would change retentions it normally would be around the co-participation as opposed to our first dollar retention. And as Jon says, we have long-term partners that reinsurers and that's exactly the way we view them, as partners, and we talk about our alignment all the time, we talk about our alignment with shareholders, but we also have a lot of alignment with other stakeholders, particularly reinsurance partners and we need them to continue to be able to thrive and be successful as well.

Meyer Shields -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

Okay, perfect. Thanks so much.

Operator

Our next question comes from Mark Dwelle, RBC Capital Markets.

Mark Dwelle -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Yeah, good morning. Just a couple of questions that have --haven't already been covered. I just want to clarify on all of the COVID related charges that you've taken, those are all just being ordinarily run through the loss ratio. So, those metrics that you gave us to extent, we wanted to back them out of kind of the run rate of your loss ratios, we could just do that math off of the premiums and the numbers you gave, is that correct?

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

We have -- with respect to the casualty and the surety, I mean, that really is booking ratio based. So yes, the $2 million that was put up in property that you just -- you could still do the same thing, with it but it's not truly booking ratio base from that standpoint, property is really more of a reported based, but similar approach either way from your standpoint.

Mark Dwelle -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Okay. And then, I mean you had indicated, all of this is sort of IBNR. We would, I guess, we would -- based on some of Craig's comments it sounds like the pace of incoming claims is continuing to slow. So I mean, I guess, I am inferring I guess accordingly that we would expect that kind of the need for further reserves would likewise continue to slow alongside of a slowing claim count presuming that persist. Is that likewise correct?

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Well Mark, I think some of it's going to determine over what period of time this ultimately develops over. And Craig, talked about that too, is it will become more difficult over time to know what's directly related to COVID and indirectly related. So it really is going to be a quarterly view, as our actuaries and claim folks get together and look at loss trends. And those have another quarter worth of information. I would say it's really a quarter-by-quarter review in that respect.

Mark Dwelle -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Okay, that's helpful. I think we've had enough of COVID discussion for today. Let's move on to -- Craig, you had mentioned on the transport business, if I wrote it down, right, it was -- the premiums were down $12 million, was that primarily the result of lay up credits or whatever you might call them or maybe, I guess what I'm trying to get at is, was the -- was there an underlying growth in the book of business due to premium pricing or -- and/or new business that was then offset down to that level or was there an actual reduction in the amount of business you were writing that contributed to the decline?

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Mark so on transportation, the biggest hit has been taken in the public transportation area and we did take all the policies that were in force at the time last quarter, first quarter, we had adjustments we offered to people to be able to lower their exposures because basically, on average, people were taking nine out of 10 units out of service and storing them. And they weren't obviously operating them. So we allowed them to basically take credit for that. So the things, mid-term we had to make a bunch of mid-term adjustments. So ever -- So now as you start to renew these policies, some of them are putting some business, some buses are going back into production, but not very many. I'm going to tell you, public transportation, it's still operating at about 10% to 20% of what it was prior to the pandemic and I think that's the way it's going to be for a while. And I think that also as things renew, we're additionally, recognizing some of the other businesses like a truck and small commercial specialty business within transportation that the exposure bases are down and they're getting credits and their insurance premiums for the fact that the miles they're driving or anticipating are going down. So therefore, they're paying less premium. And I think as I said, we expect that business is probably going to cut about in half, overall, this year and then we'll have to build it back up. We've done this before, the business was as big as $80 million at one point in time and shrunk to $40 million because people -- it was just way too competitive and our people were willing to cut it to stay profitable. In this case, this isn't really about rates as much as it is -- because we're still getting rate. It's really more about exposures and exposures are down there -- for the premium is down.

Mark Dwelle -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

All right. I appreciate the clarification. Thanks, that's good color. And then the last question I have this is just kind of a small question within the Prime Holdings business, is there. I'm trying to understand, is there some seasonality to that business or is there something that we can track independently to, kind of, get an understanding of, kind of, the ups and downs. It seems like a much more jaggedy earnings pattern than maybe I would have expected?

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Yeah. Well, he writes, he is the market of last resort and where there is disruption, he will step in. So it really, it is going to depend on where the opportunities are for disruption and if he feels he has expertise in that space and he'll step in and -- so you will see fairly jaggedy results -- or not results probably as much as top line in his business. Just because, it's just really depends I mean I'll tell you frankly, I am as surprised as probably you are every month when he reports his premium.

Mark Dwelle -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

As long as we're all surprised together.

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

We're a small player.

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Just a reminder, we're a small player on that business so.

Mark Dwelle -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Understood. I appreciate the color. Thanks.

Operator

There are no further questions in the queue at this time.

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you. It's Jon Michael. Craig was being more modest than we're used to around here. He called the quarter a pretty good quarter. I'm going to say, it was a great quarter given the circumstances. I'd like to thank our employees for remaining focused on our customers. Our employees have not missed a beat. We're effective, they are effective and productive. And thank you for listening, stay healthy and keep you and your family safe.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 46 minutes

Call participants:

Aaron Diefenthaler -- Vice President, Chief Investment Officer and Treasurer

Todd W. Bryant -- Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Craig W. Kliethermes -- President and Chief Operating Officer

Jonathan E. Michael -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Matthew Carletti -- JMP Securities LLC -- Analyst

Randy Binner -- B. Riley FBR -- Analyst

Jeff Schmitt -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Meyer Shields -- Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc. -- Analyst

Mark Dwelle -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

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