Old Republic Opens New Company for Specialty Property

  Old Republic International Corporation said it is forming a new operating company, Old Republic Property, Inc., to underwrite specialized property insurance products through a national retail broker distribution network.



The company will be led by Patrick Hagerty as president. Hagerty brings over 20 years of extensive property underwriting and leadership experience, with a track record of building and leading underwriting teams.

Craig R. Smiddy, CEO of Chicago-based Old Republic, said property insurance “aligns well with Old Republic’s long-standing strategy and focus on diversified growth in Specialty Insurance.”

Old Republic Property is the seventh new specialty operating company that Old Republic has launched since 2021, adding further diversification, depth, and underwriting talent to the Old Republic Specialty Insurance Group.

The companies that typically make up the backbone of the US initial public offering market are eyeing the Iran war for signs volatility could boil over and wreck their plans. For banks, there’s a ray of hope — that SpaceX’s potential blockbuster listing could still go ahead, and make their whole year.

After a first quarter marked by stop-and-start activity for IPOs, talk has turned to the implications of the raging conflict and the lingering effect of artificial intelligence scares. No wonder many listing candidates are sitting on their hands as a possible IPO for billionaire Elon Musk’s rocket company, which could come as soon as June and dwarf every other debut, takes shape.

“The situation in Iran has thrown a wrench into things and AI disruption has been pronounced this year,” said Evan Riley, Americas head of equity capital markets at BNP Paribas SA. “You’ve had some hiccups in terms of withdrawn deals — you’ll see the complexion of IPOs change a bit.”

“But if you have mega IPOs come then that changes the entire year because you can easily have a full year of IPO volume in one deal,” he said in an interview.

A range of industrials firms are positioned to test investor appetite for a sector seen as relatively insulated from the pressure on consumers from the war. Indoor air quality firm Madison Air Solutions Corp., which is expected to seek at least $2 billion, and drone maker Aevex Corp. both filed publicly in recent weeks for IPOs. Others are being advised by bankers to stay ready in the weeks before financial results go stale in mid-May.

Activity in April will be critical for the second quarter as bankers seek to deliver on promises that this would prove to be a banner year. US IPO volume in the first three months of 2026 marked the best first quarter since 2021, with a weighted-average drop of roughly 3% outpacing about a more than 7% decline for the benchmark S&P 500 Index, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Still, seven of the companies behind the quarter’s 10 largest deals are trading below their IPO price, with a median decline of 28%, the data show.

The choppy performances and an uncertain backdrop have forced management teams to accept that while conditions aren’t perfect for an IPO, further waiting may not provide the clarity some are hoping for, bankers say.

“Issuers that paused a couple weeks ago may need to confront similar dynamics in early April,” said John Kolz, global head of ECM at Barclays Plc. “Do you have to take a little bit of a leap of faith and rely on a robust process to find long-term investors even with the chaos we’re dealing with?”

Mới hơn Cũ hơn