Start here if you're new
what it is
Progressive sells insurance, mostly for cars and trucks, and makes money by pricing risk better than the other guy.
how it gets paid
Last year Progressive made $87.7B in revenue. Personal auto - Direct was the main engine at $35.9B, or 41% of sales.
why it's growing
Revenue grew 16.3% last year. In the latest quarter, net premiums earned hit $21.1 billion, up about 10% from the prior-year quarter — volume plus pricing.
what just happened
Progressive printed $4.67 in quarterly EPS, beating the $4.27 estimate by 9.37%.
At a glance
A balance sheet — strong enough to weather a downturn
45/100 earnings predictability — expect surprises
10.6x trailing p/e — the market's not buying it — or you found a deal
0.2% dividend yield — small cash return; reinvestment has dominated the story
26.1% return on capital — every dollar works hard here
xvary composite: 72/100 — average
What they do
Progressive sells insurance, mostly for cars and trucks, and makes money by pricing risk better than the other guy.
Insurance float → premium money held before claims get paid → it lets Progressive earn on billions before the bill comes due. You can see the machine working: policies in force rose 10% vs. prior year, and long-term debt is just $6.9 billion, or 5% of capital. Cheap balance sheet, rising customers. That is a nasty combo for competitors.
insurance
large-cap
underwriting
pricing-power
auto-insurance
How they make money
$87.7B
annual revenue · their business grew +16.3% last year
Personal auto - Direct
$35.9B
Personal auto - Agency
$33.3B
Property and other specialty
$4.5B
The products that matter
writes and underwrites auto policies
Auto Insurance
~79% personal auto (direct + agency)
Segment mix is clear: personal auto direct ($35.9B) plus agency ($33.3B) are most of the $87.7B total, with commercial lines ($14.0B) and the rest in property and specialty. On top of mix, the 88% Q4 combined ratio is the underwriting scoreboard that matters.
entire business
Key numbers
$260
18-month target
That is 27% above $204.53, so you have a clear upside case if earnings stay near the current run rate.
10.6x
trailing p/e
P/E → price-to-earnings ratio → what you pay for each dollar of profit. At 10.6x, you are paying less than many slower businesses.
26.1%
return on capital
Return on capital → profit from the money used in the business → 26.1% says this company turns capital into earnings better than most.
$6.9B
long-term debt
That is only 5% of capital, which means the balance sheet is doing less gambling than the average financial stock.
Financial health
-
balance sheet grade
A — very strong financial position
-
risk rank
2 — safer than 80% of stocks
-
price stability
85 / 100
-
long-term debt
$6.9B (5% of capital)
-
return on equity
~35% — strong ROE vs. insurers that live in single digits
A — among the top-rated companies for balance sheet quality.
Total return vs. market
You invested $10,000 in PGR 3 years ago → it's now worth $16,040.
The index would have given you $13,880.
same period. same starting point. PGR beat the market by $2,160.
source: institutional data · total return
What just happened
beat estimates
Progressive printed $4.67 in quarterly EPS, beating the $4.27 estimate by 9.37%.
Net premiums earned for the quarter rose to $21.1 billion, up about 10% from the prior-year quarter. Policies in force also climbed 10%, which is the quiet part: more customers plus firmer pricing.
$21.1B
net premiums earned (quarter)
the number that mattered
$21.1 billion of net premiums earned in the quarter matters most because insurance volume pays for everything else, and that figure was up about 10% vs. prior year.
-
progressive ended a solid 2025 with good december-quarter results.
-
operating earnings, which exclude capital gains and losses from investments, came in at $4.67, which represented a 14% increase from the previous year’s tally.
the company’s growth for the fourth quarter was broad-based, with contributions from many different facets.
-
for one, net premiums earned advanced about 10% from the prior year, to $21.1 billion, thanks to new business wins and rate increases on existing policies.
-
policies in force (the aggregate dollar amount of policies that an insurer has on its books) increased 10% from a year ago.
-
progressive also benefited from a solid combined ratio of 88% for the period, implying that it generated $12 in pretax income for every $100 in policies insured.
gains were also achieved for both the commercial and personal businesses, owing to healthy policyholder renewals and a strong marketing campaign.
source: company earnings report, 2026
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What could go wrong
the story breaks if Progressive keeps growing policies while the underwriting math stops working. For this company, that usually shows up in the combined ratio before it shows up in the stock narrative.
claims inflation and catastrophe losses
if accidents get costlier or weather losses spike, insurer margins compress fast. Cheap stocks in insurance often look cheapest right before the claims hit the income statement.
the 88% combined ratio is the cushion. If that moves materially higher, profit on a $21.1B quarterly premium base shrinks in a hurry.
rate competition
Progressive grew policies in force 10%, but growth stops being impressive if competitors push pricing down faster than loss costs cool. More customers does not automatically mean better business.
you can grow the policy count and still earn less on each one. That's how an insurer turns market share into a margin problem.
investment portfolio volatility
the float helps total earnings when markets cooperate. Lower yields or market losses make reported profitability look worse even when underwriting stays respectable.
this matters less than underwriting, but it still matters because premiums are collected before claims are paid and that cash does not sit idle.
what would change our mind: the combined ratio moving back toward 100% for multiple quarters, especially if policy growth still looks good on the surface. That would suggest growth is being bought too cheaply.
source: institutional data · regulatory filings · risk analysis
Pay attention to
cal
earnings
next quarterly report
the next report should tell you whether the 88% combined ratio was a one-quarter flex or something management can keep repeating.
#
metric
combined ratio
this is the underwriting scoreboard. Below 100% means insurance operations made money before the investment portfolio added anything.
#
trend
policies in force
policy count grew 10% from a year ago. You want that growth to continue without the combined ratio giving back the gains.
!
risk
pricing discipline
watch whether rate increases keep up with loss costs. In insurance, market share bought too cheaply is just delayed bad news.
Analyst rankings
short-term outlook
average
momentum score 3. in human-speak, analysts do not see a strong near-term signal either way.
financial safety
above average
stability score 2 — safer than roughly 80% of stocks, helped by an A balance sheet and debt at 5% of capital.
chart momentum
average
technical score 3 — the chart is acting ordinary. The business just did something better than ordinary.
earnings predictability
45 / 100
earnings are less smooth than the brand feels. Claims, reserve development, and catastrophe exposure can move results around fast.
source: institutional data
Institutional activity
764 buyers vs. 940 sellers in 3q2025. total institutional holdings: 0.5B shares.
source: institutional data · 1q2025-3q2025
source: institutional data
Price targets
3-5 year target range
$178
$342
$260
target midpoint · +27% from current · range high: $342 (~+67% from current)
source: institutional data · analyst targets
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