← FN FRT →
← All Tickers

FNF

FNF

Accumulate 2026-03-25
Model
DCF
Price at Report
$44.21
Base IV
$74.16
Bear IV
$43.39
Bull IV
$123.70
Entry Zone: 46-68 · Sell Above: 105
Bore Family Office
Bore Family Office
Valuation Report — Fidelity National Financial (FNF) • March 25, 2026
Unlevered DCF (FCFF @ WACC) • Discount Rate: 8.29% • Current Price: $44.21
Prepared by Lurch • Bore Family Office • Data: Finnhub, StockAnalysis.com, S&P Global Market Intelligence
🏢 Business Overview

Fidelity National Financial is the nation's largest title insurance company and a leading provider of title insurance, escrow, and other real estate transaction services through its Fidelity National Title Group subsidiary. The company also owns F&G Annuities & Life, Inc., a top-10 U.S. fixed annuity provider with $60B+ in assets under management. FNF processes approximately one-third of all U.S. real estate closings, giving it unmatched scale and data advantages.

FY2025 revenue was $14.4B with EBITDA of $2.5B. Net income of $602M ($2.21 EPS) was depressed by investment-related charges and cyclically weak housing volumes. Normalized earnings power is significantly higher — analyst consensus projects $6.08 EPS for FY2026 as housing transactions recover. FNF competes with First American (FAF) and Stewart Information (STC) in title insurance, while F&G competes with Athene, Global Atlantic, and traditional life insurers.

Business SegmentRevenue% of TotalYoY GrowthMarginNotes
Title Insurance & Services$8,500M59%+4.0%#1 U.S. title insurer; ~33% market share; highly cyclical with housing
F&G Annuities & Life$5,900M41%+12.0%Fixed annuities, indexed universal life; $60B+ AUM; high-growth segment
Blended Growth Rate100%+7.3%Weighted avg across segments
🔍 Quality Scorecard
MetricValueAssessment
ROIC7.6%<8% weak
FCF Margin17.2%≥10% strong
Debt / EBITDA1.8x≤2x conservative
Revenue TrendGrowing 3yr3-year directional trend
FCF Margin TrendStable (±1pp)Directional margin trajectory
Analyst RevisionsUpward revisionsLast 90 days consensus direction
✅ Quality profile supports the valuation
📊 Financial Snapshot
Metric20212022202320242025
Revenue ($M)$15,655$11,565$11,752$13,681$14,445
Rev YoY Growth-26.1%+1.6%+16.4%+5.6%
Gross Margin39.6%38.9%32.3%38.0%37.4%
EBITDA ($M)$4,104$2,336$1,460$2,690$2,483
EBITDA Margin26.2%20.2%12.4%19.7%17.2%
Operating Income ($M)$3,672$1,845$867$1,951$1,639
Operating Margin23.5%16.0%7.4%14.3%11.3%
Net Income ($M)$2,797$1,294$517$1,270$602
Net Margin17.9%11.2%4.4%9.3%4.2%
EPS (diluted)$9.75$4.67$1.91$4.65$2.21
Free Cash Flow ($M)$3,959$4,217$6,346$6,669$5,681
Annual DPS$1.560$1.770$1.830$1.940$2.020
Total Debt ($M)$3,100$3,200$3,900$4,300$4,400
⚙️ WACC Build (DCF)
InputValueNotes
Risk-Free Rate (Rf)4.30%10-yr US Treasury yield
Beta (β)1.040Market beta (Finnhub)
Equity Risk Premium (ERP)5.5%Damodaran US ERP
Cost of Equity (Ke)10.02%Ke = Rf + β × ERP
Pre-Tax Cost of Debt4.50%Interest exp / gross debt
After-Tax Cost of Debt (Kd)3.56%× (1 − 21%)
Weight Equity (We)73.3%Mkt cap $0.0B
Weight Debt (Wd)26.7%Gross debt $0.0B
WACC8.29%DCF discount rate
📈 DCF Scenarios
$43
🔴 Bear
$74
📊 Base
$124
🚀 Bull
$44.21
Current Price
$67
Analyst Avg PT
ScenarioStage 1 (Yrs 1–5)Stage 2 (Yrs 6–10)Terminal gWACCIntrinsic Valuevs Price
🔴 Bear1.0%1.5%2.0%9.79%$43▼1.9%
📊 Base4.5%3.5%2.5%8.29%$74▲67.8%
🚀 Bull8.0%5.0%3.0%7.29%$124▲179.8%
Intrinsic Value vs PriceFCF Projection
📋 Full 10-Year Projection Tables
Bear Scenario
Stage 1: 1.0%  |  Stage 2: 1.5%  |  Terminal: 2.0%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1Stage 1$1.11B$1.01B$1.01B
Year 2Stage 1$1.12B$0.93B$1.94B
Year 3Stage 1$1.13B$0.86B$2.80B
Year 4Stage 1$1.14B$0.79B$3.59B
Year 5Stage 1$1.16B$0.72B$4.31B
Year 6Stage 2$1.17B$0.67B$4.98B
Year 7Stage 2$1.19B$0.62B$5.60B
Year 8Stage 2$1.21B$0.57B$6.17B
Year 9Stage 2$1.23B$0.53B$6.70B
Year 10Stage 2$1.25B$0.49B$7.19B
TerminalTV=$16.3BPV(TV)=$6.4B (47% of EV)EV=$13.6B
Intrinsic ValueEV $13.6B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$43
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (9.79%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (2.0%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $16.3B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $6.4B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($7.2B) + PV of TV ($6.4B) = $13.6B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $11.8B, divided by shares outstanding = $43 per share.
Base Scenario
Stage 1: 4.5%  |  Stage 2: 3.5%  |  Terminal: 2.5%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1Stage 1$1.15B$1.06B$1.06B
Year 2Stage 1$1.20B$1.02B$2.09B
Year 3Stage 1$1.26B$0.99B$3.07B
Year 4Stage 1$1.31B$0.95B$4.03B
Year 5Stage 1$1.37B$0.92B$4.95B
Year 6Stage 2$1.42B$0.88B$5.83B
Year 7Stage 2$1.47B$0.84B$6.67B
Year 8Stage 2$1.52B$0.80B$7.47B
Year 9Stage 2$1.57B$0.77B$8.24B
Year 10Stage 2$1.63B$0.73B$8.98B
TerminalTV=$28.8BPV(TV)=$13.0B (59% of EV)EV=$22.0B
Intrinsic ValueEV $22.0B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$74
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (8.29%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (2.5%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $28.8B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $13.0B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($9.0B) + PV of TV ($13.0B) = $22.0B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $20.2B, divided by shares outstanding = $74 per share.
Bull Scenario
Stage 1: 8.0%  |  Stage 2: 5.0%  |  Terminal: 3.0%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1Stage 1$1.19B$1.11B$1.11B
Year 2Stage 1$1.28B$1.11B$2.22B
Year 3Stage 1$1.39B$1.12B$3.34B
Year 4Stage 1$1.50B$1.13B$4.47B
Year 5Stage 1$1.62B$1.14B$5.61B
Year 6Stage 2$1.70B$1.11B$6.72B
Year 7Stage 2$1.78B$1.09B$7.81B
Year 8Stage 2$1.87B$1.07B$8.88B
Year 9Stage 2$1.96B$1.04B$9.92B
Year 10Stage 2$2.06B$1.02B$10.94B
TerminalTV=$49.5BPV(TV)=$24.5B (69% of EV)EV=$35.4B
Intrinsic ValueEV $35.4B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$124
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (7.29%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (3.0%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $49.5B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $24.5B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($10.9B) + PV of TV ($24.5B) = $35.4B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $33.6B, divided by shares outstanding = $124 per share.
🔲 Sensitivity Table
WACC \ gT1.5%2.0%2.5%3.0%3.5%
6.3%$98$107$117$131$150
6.8%$88$95$103$113$126
7.3%$80$85$91$99$109
7.8%$73$77$82$88$95
8.3%$67$70$74$79$85
8.8%$61$64$67$71$76
9.3%$57$59$62$65$69
9.8%$53$55$57$60$63
10.3%$49$51$53$55$58

Green = >10% above current price. Red = >10% below. Gold = within ±10%.

Sensitivity Heatmap
📉 Long-Term Price Trend Channel

Log-linear trend fitted to full price history. ±1.5σ bands. Green shaded zone = bottom 25% of historical range — historically attractive entry.

Long-Term Trend Channel
🏦 Comparable Valuation
CompanyP/E (Norm)Div YieldROEBetaNote
FNF (current)7.3x4.68%7.6%1.04Title #1 + F&G Annuities; housing-levered
FAF (First American)9.5x3.8%9.2%0.95#2 title insurer; pure-play title
STC (Stewart Info)8.2x2.5%8.5%0.85#4 title insurer; smaller scale
FGL (F&G Standalone)N/AN/A12%N/AReference: F&G segment implied P/E ~8x
RLI (RLI Corp)22.5x1.2%18%0.55Specialty insurance; premium valuation
💰 Dividend / Distribution Analysis
MetricValue
Annual DPS$2.080
Current Yield4.68%
Consecutive Growth Years14
1-yr DPS CAGR+3.0%
3-yr DPS CAGR+4.4%
5-yr DPS CAGR+5.9%
10-yr DPS CAGR+6.5%
Payout Ratio (DPS/EPS)94.0% ⚠️
FCF Payout Ratio34.0%
Sustainability VerdictSafe
FNF's dividend is extremely safe on normalized earnings. The GAAP payout ratio of 94% ($2.08/$2.21) is based on cyclically depressed FY2025 earnings. On normalized FY2026E EPS of $6.08, the payout ratio is only 34% — one of the lowest among dividend aristocrats.

FNF has raised its dividend for 14 consecutive years, including through the 2020 COVID housing freeze and the 2022-2023 rate-shock housing downturn. The company maintained and grew the dividend even when EPS dropped to $1.91 in FY2023, demonstrating management's confidence in through-cycle earning power. At $2.08/yr, the dividend costs only ~$566M — well within FNF's $1B+ normalized cash generation.
Dividend History
🔮 Analyst Forecast Section
(a) EPS Consensus
YearLow / ActualAvgHigh# AnalystsType
2021$9.75Actual
2022$4.67Actual
2023$1.91Actual
2024$4.65Actual
2025$2.21Actual
2026$5.73$6.08$6.606Estimate
2027$6.32$6.75$7.286Estimate
(b) Revenue Consensus
YearLow / ActualAvgHigh# AnalystsType
2021$15.7BActual
2022$11.6BActual
2023$11.8BActual
2024$13.7BActual
2025$14.4BActual
2026$14.5B$16.2B$17.7B6Estimate
2027$15.5B$17.0B$18.4B6Estimate
(c) Individual Analyst Price Targets
AnalystFirmRatingPTUpside
Bose GeorgeKeefe Bruyette & WoodsBuy$71+60.6%
Terry MaBarclaysHold$63+42.5%
Analyst Forecast Confidence
Analyst Price Targets
💡 Investment Thesis
  • Dominant Title Insurance Franchise: FNF holds ~33% of the U.S. title insurance market — a natural oligopoly with high barriers to entry (regulatory, data, agent network). Title insurance has near-zero loss ratios (1-5%) compared to other insurance lines, making it one of the highest-margin insurance businesses.
  • Housing Recovery Leverage: At $44, FNF prices in a permanently depressed housing market. Current existing home sales (~4M/yr) are 30% below the 25-year average (5.3M). Any normalization drives significant operating leverage — title insurance is a high fixed-cost business where incremental revenue flows largely to the bottom line.
  • F&G Growth Engine: F&G Annuities is growing AUM at 15-20%/yr, benefiting from the massive Baby Boomer retirement wave and structural shift from DB pensions to individual annuities. This diversifies FNF beyond the housing cycle.
  • 14-Year Dividend Growth Streak: At $2.08/yr (4.7% yield), FNF has raised its dividend for 14 consecutive years through multiple housing cycles. The current payout ratio on normalized earnings ($6.08 FY2026E) is only 34%.
  • Key Risk — Housing Cycle Dependence: If mortgage rates remain elevated and housing transactions don't recover, FNF's title segment will continue to underperform. The company's leverage (~$4.4B debt) could become a concern if the trough extends beyond 2027.
⚖️ DCF Verdict: Accumulate — Fidelity National Financial (FNF)
Current price: $44.21 | Analyst Avg PT: $67.00
$43
🔴 Bear
$74
📊 Base
$124
🚀 Bull
TierPriceAction
Tier 1 — Starter≤$68Begin position
Tier 2 — Add≤$59Add on weakness
Tier 3 — Full≤$46Full allocation
Sell Alert≥$105Above fair value — consider trimming
How tiers are set: Tier 1 = Base IV × 0.92 (8% discount to base case). Tier 2 = midpoint of Bear & Base IV (building on meaningful weakness). Tier 3 = Bear IV × 1.05 (just above worst-case — maximum margin of safety). Sell alert = Bull IV × 0.85 (15% discount to bull case — above fair value range).

FNF at $44.21 is a Strong Buy with a Base DCF target of ~$67. The stock trades near its 52-week low at just 7.3x normalized forward earnings — deeply discounted for a dominant franchise with 14 years of dividend growth. The market is pricing in a permanently impaired housing market that is unlikely to persist.

With existing home sales near 30-year lows, the recovery potential is substantial. FNF's operating leverage means even a modest recovery in transactions drives outsized earnings growth. Meanwhile, F&G Annuities provides a growing, diversified earnings stream independent of housing.

Action: Strong Buy at current levels ($44). Full position size warranted below $48. Add aggressively on any pullback to $40-42 (near Bear case). Take partial profits above $65 (approaching analyst consensus).

🔧 Model Notes & Calibration
AssumptionRationale / Notes
Normalized FCFF — Insurance DistortionsReported FCF ($5.7B) is meaningless for valuation because it includes F&G Annuities policyholder cash flows (premium collections, annuity deposits, investment portfolio turnover). These are liabilities, not free cash flow. Normalized FCFF of $1,100M is derived from adjusted operating earnings: normalized EBIT ~$1,700M × (1-21%) = $1,343M + tangible D&A $200M - CapEx $147M ≈ $1,396M, adjusted down to $1,100M for mid-cycle normalization. This aligns with ~$4/share FCFF — reasonable for a company with $6 normalized EPS and significant reinvestment in the F&G growth platform.
WACCBeta 1.04 (Finnhub) — appropriately above 1.0 given housing cycle exposure. Ke=10.02%. Kd=3.56% after-tax. Market cap weighting 73/27. WACC=8.29%. This is the correct DCF discount rate for firm-level cash flows.
Earnings CyclicalityFNF's EPS has ranged from $1.91 (FY2023 trough) to $9.75 (FY2021 peak) — a 5x swing driven by housing transaction volumes. The normalized mid-cycle EPS of ~$5-6 is used for valuation. FY2025's $2.21 EPS was depressed by investment charges at F&G; the title segment alone earned closer to $4/share.
Sanity CheckAnalyst consensus PT $67. Base IV target within ±20% ($53.6-$80.4). Cross-check: $67 / $6.08 FY2026E EPS = 11x P/E — reasonable for a cyclical financial with 14 years of dividend growth and housing recovery upside.
Bore Family Office • Analysis generated by Lurch • Not investment advice.