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    Home»Opinion»Why Does NRCP Trade at Just 2.4 Times Earnings?
    Opinion

    Why Does NRCP Trade at Just 2.4 Times Earnings?

    FinancialAdviser.phJune 16, 20264 Mins Read
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    Investors often search for hidden value among property developers, holding companies, and cyclical businesses. Yet one of the cheapest listed companies on the Philippine Stock Exchange today may be found in a far less glamorous industry: reinsurance.

    National Reinsurance Corporation of the Philippines (PSE: NRCP) currently trades at around ₱0.94 per share, giving the company a market capitalization of approximately ₱2 billion. At first glance, the stock appears almost forgotten by the market.

    What makes the situation interesting is that the company’s book value stands at approximately ₱3.69 per share, implying a price-to-book ratio of only 0.3 times. In other words, investors are currently paying about thirty centavos for every peso of net assets on the balance sheet.

    The discount becomes even more striking when viewed alongside profitability. NRCP generated approximately ₱809 million in net income over the last twelve months. Based on the current market capitalization, the stock trades at only about 2.4 times earnings.

    Such valuations are typically associated with companies facing severe financial distress, excessive leverage, or existential business risks.

    NRCP appears to face none of those conditions.

    More Than Just an Insurance Company

    Most investors think of NRCP as a reinsurance company. While that is technically correct, the balance sheet tells a broader story.

    The company manages more than ₱11 billion in investment assets spread across government securities, fixed-income instruments, and equity investments. The investment portfolio alone is several times larger than the company’s market capitalization.

    This means investors are not simply buying an insurance operation. They are also acquiring exposure to a substantial investment portfolio managed within a highly regulated financial institution.

    As of the first quarter of 2026, total assets stood at approximately ₱22.9 billion while shareholders’ equity reached approximately ₱7.8 billion.

    Yet the market values the entire company at only around ₱2 billion.

    A Unique Position in the Industry

    NRCP occupies a position that few listed companies can replicate.

    The company remains the Philippines’ only domestic professional reinsurer. Reinsurance is often described as insurance for insurance companies. Rather than selling policies directly to consumers, reinsurers absorb portions of the risks written by insurers.

    This gives NRCP visibility into industry trends, catastrophe exposures, pricing conditions, and underwriting developments across the broader insurance market. The company also retains a unique position within the domestic reinsurance ecosystem that has been built over decades.

    Unlike many financial institutions, NRCP does not need thousands of branches or a large retail distribution network to maintain its relevance.

    The Dividend That Demands Attention

    Perhaps the most obvious reason value investors have begun paying attention is the dividend.

    Based on the recent dividend of approximately ₱0.14 per share, the stock currently offers a yield of more than 12%.

    In a market where many investors struggle to find reliable income-producing assets, a double-digit dividend yield immediately stands out.

    More importantly, the dividend appears supported by profitability rather than excessive leverage. The company remains profitable, maintains a solid capital position, and continues to generate underwriting income from its core operations.

    So Why Is It So Cheap?

    The obvious question is why the market continues to assign such a low valuation.

    Part of the answer may be liquidity. NRCP receives relatively little investor attention compared with larger financial institutions. Daily trading volumes remain modest and the company rarely becomes the focus of market speculation.

    Another factor is the nature of the business itself. Reinsurance is inherently complex. Investors must evaluate catastrophe exposures, reserve adequacy, retrocession arrangements, investment portfolios, and regulatory capital requirements. Many investors simply choose to avoid businesses they do not fully understand.

    There is also the ever-present risk of catastrophic events. The Philippines remains one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world. A severe earthquake, typhoon, or other large-scale event could produce significant claims across the insurance sector. While NRCP actively manages these risks through diversification and retrocession arrangements, catastrophe risk can never be completely eliminated.

    A Different Way to Look at NRCP

    Viewed through a traditional growth-investing lens, NRCP may not appear exciting.

    Viewed through a value-investing lens, however, the numbers become difficult to ignore.

    A company trading at approximately 0.3 times book value, 2.4 times earnings, 1.4 times EV/EBITDA, and offering a dividend yield exceeding 12% would normally attract considerable attention from investors.

    The market may ultimately be correct in assigning such a large discount. There may be risks that justify a lower valuation than other financial companies.

    But the gap between what the company owns and what the market is willing to pay remains substantial.

    For investors willing to examine overlooked sectors, NRCP presents an intriguing question.

    Is the market correctly pricing the risks of the reinsurance business, or is one of the cheapest financial companies on the exchange hiding in plain sight?

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