F

Verisk (VRSK) 2025 — Grade F: Goodwill 720% of Equity, Insurance Data Monopoly

VRSK·2025·English

Grade: F — Major Red Flags

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed February 18, 2026, FY ended December 31, 2025) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: Deloitte & Touche LLP — Unqualified opinion

One-line verdict: Verisk's F grade is driven by two structural flags: cash covering only 44% of $4.9B in debt, and goodwill plus intangibles at 720% of equity — an extreme ratio caused by massive share buybacks that have compressed equity to just $309M. The underlying business is exceptional: 83% subscription revenue, 70% gross margins, CFFO/NI of 1.58, an M-Score of -3.04 deeply in the clean zone, and 6.6% organic revenue growth. Verisk is the dominant data analytics provider to the U.S. property and casualty insurance industry, with pricing power that borders on monopolistic. The F grade is a balance sheet construction issue — aggressive capital returns have created a technical equity hole — not an earnings quality issue. But the math is real: if goodwill of $1.9B were impaired, equity would go negative.

MetricResult
Red Flags**2** (Goodwill 720% of equity, cash 44% of debt)
Watch Items**0**
Checks Completed**16/18** (2 N/A: soft asset growth, impairment data)
Beneish M-Score**-3.04** (deeply clean; threshold is -2.22)
AuditorDeloitte & Touche LLP — Unqualified opinion

The Insurance Data Monopoly

Verisk is the essential data infrastructure for the U.S. property and casualty insurance industry. Per the filing: "We are a leading data analytics provider serving clients in the insurance markets. Using advanced technologies to collect and analyze billions of records, we draw on unique data assets and deep domain expertise."

The revenue model is remarkably sticky. Per the 10-K:

·83% of FY2025 revenue came from hosted subscriptions (up from 81% in FY2024)
·17% of revenue from transactional and advisory/consulting solutions
·Subscriptions are "generally paid in advance of rendering services either quarterly or in full upon commencement" for one to five year terms
·Subscriptions "automatically renewed at the beginning of each calendar year"

This is a prepaid annual subscription model with auto-renewal — the gold standard for revenue predictability. The filing states: "Unlike these businesses, our cash position is favorably affected by revenue growth, which results in a source of cash due to our customers prepaying for most of our services."

Profitability: Headline Numbers

MetricFY2023FY2024FY2025Trend
Revenue$2,681.4M$2,881.7M$3,072.7M+14.6% over 2 years
Operating Income$1,131.7M$1,253.9M$1,343.9M+18.7% over 2 years
Net Income (continuing)$768.4M$950.7M$908.3M-4.5% YoY
Gross Margin67.3%68.7%69.9%Expanding 3 years
Operating Margin42.2%43.5%43.7%Expanding
Net Margin29.6%33.2%29.6%Stable (2024 was anomalous)
EPS (diluted)$4.17$6.71$6.48-3.4% YoY

Revenue grew a healthy 6.6% in FY2025. Operating income expanded to $1,344M with a 43.7% operating margin — among the highest of any Nasdaq-100 company. Gross margin expanded for the third consecutive year to 69.9%.

Net income from continuing operations declined 4.5% to $908.3M despite revenue and operating income growth. The culprit: interest expense surged to $170.9M from $124.6M (+37%) as total debt grew from $3.2B to $4.9B. A $15.0M loss on early debt extinguishment and the disappearance of a $95.7M investment gain from 2024 (which included a $100.6M gain on settlement of non-public company investments) further compressed net income.

FY2024 EPS of $6.71 included $0.05 from discontinued operations and the large investment gain — normalizing for these, the underlying earnings trajectory is modestly positive.

Cash Flow: Verisk's Best Feature

MetricFY2023FY2024FY2025
Operating Cash Flow$1,060.7M$1,144.0M$1,436.0M
Net Income (continuing)$768.4M$950.7M$908.3M
**CFFO / Net Income****1.38****1.20****1.58**
CapEx$230.0M$223.9M$244.1M
Free Cash Flow$830.7M$920.1M$1,191.9M

Operating cash flow surged 25.5% to $1,436M, driving CFFO/NI up to 1.58. This is one of the strongest cash conversion ratios in the dataset. The prepaid subscription model means cash arrives before revenue is recognized, creating a structural CFFO advantage.

Free cash flow of $1.2B is also strong, growing 30% YoY. CapEx of $244M (8% of revenue) is "predominantly related to internal-use software and are capitalized in accordance with ASC 350-40" — essentially investment in the data platform.

The negative accruals ratio of -8.5% is the most deeply negative in this batch of companies — a strong indicator of conservative accounting. When accruals are deeply negative, it means cash flow substantially exceeds reported earnings, which is the opposite of manipulation.

Capital Returns: The Equity Destruction Machine

The filing reveals aggressive capital returns:

FY2023FY2024FY2025
Share Repurchases$2,762.3M$1,005.0M$624.0M
Dividends$196.8M$221.3M$251.1M
**Total Returns****$2,959.1M****$1,226.3M****$875.1M**

Cumulative buybacks since IPO: 92,798,595 shares (with 405,605,329 shares held as treasury stock). This massive buyback program has compressed equity to just $309M — while total assets are ~$8B. The company has literally bought back more stock than it has equity, creating the extreme goodwill-to-equity ratio that triggers the D1 flag.

Buyback pace slowed dramatically: $2.8B (2023) to $1.0B (2024) to $624M (2025). This likely reflects the increase in debt ($3.1B to $4.9B) as the company chose to fund acquisitions rather than buybacks.

The 18-Point Screening

Revenue Quality

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSO ChangeDSO 49 days, -4 days YoY (improving)
A2AR vs Revenue GrowthAR -2.0% vs revenue +6.6%
A3Revenue vs CFFORevenue +6.6%, CFFO +25.5%

Revenue quality is pristine. DSO improved from 53 to 49 days. Accounts receivable actually *declined* 2% while revenue grew 6.6% — the gold standard of revenue quality. Operating cash flow grew four times faster than revenue (25.5% vs. 6.6%), confirming that revenue growth translates into real cash collection.

Expense Quality

#CheckResultDetail
B1Inventory vs COGSNo material inventory (data company)
B2CapEx vs RevenueCapEx +9.0% vs revenue +6.6%
B3SG&A RatioSG&A/Gross Profit = 21.3%, excellent
B4Gross Margin69.9%, +1.1pp, expanding

All expense checks pass. SG&A/Gross Profit of 21.3% is excellent — well below the 30% threshold. Gross margin expanded for the third consecutive year (67.0% to 68.7% to 69.9%), reflecting the scalability of a data analytics platform where incremental revenue carries near-zero marginal cost.

Cash Flow Quality

#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs Net IncomeCFFO/NI = 1.58. Excellent
C2Free Cash FlowFCF $1.2B, FCF/NI = 1.31
C3Accruals Ratio-8.5%. Deeply negative — very healthy
C4Cash vs DebtCash $2.2B covers only 44% of debt $4.9B

C4 — Cash shortfall. Cash of $2.2B (up dramatically from $291M in 2024) covers only 44% of $4.9B total debt. The large cash increase is partially explained by the $1.7B increase in debt during the year — the company raised debt and parked some proceeds as cash temporarily. Debt/EBITDA of 2.9x and interest coverage of 7.9x confirm adequate servicing capacity.

The filing notes total debt "primarily consists of senior notes issued in 2025, 2024, 2023, 2020, 2019, and 2015." Multiple debt vintages at different rates create refinancing risk as older, lower-rate notes mature and must be replaced at current rates.

Balance Sheet

#CheckResultDetail
D1Goodwill + Intangibles$2.2B = 720% of equity
D2LeverageDebt/EBITDA = 2.9x
D3Soft Asset GrowthInsufficient data
D4Asset ImpairmentNo write-off data available

D1 — The 720% ratio requires explanation. Goodwill of $1,878M and intangibles of $347M total $2,225M against equity of just $309M. This extreme ratio is *not* driven by massive acquisitions (Verisk's goodwill is relatively modest) but by massive share buybacks that have compressed equity. Total treasury stock on the balance sheet is 405.6 million shares.

To put this in perspective: Verisk's total assets are approximately $8B, of which goodwill and intangibles represent about 28% — a reasonable ratio. The 720% figure is an artifact of the equity denominator being artificially small due to buybacks, not an indicator that the asset side is inflated.

However, the mathematical risk is real: if Verisk needed to write down goodwill, even a modest impairment would push equity negative. The company performs annual impairment testing as of June 30 and reported no impairment in FY2025.

Acquisition Risk

#CheckResultDetail
E1Serial Acquirer FCFFCF after acquisitions positive
E2Goodwill SurgeGoodwill+Intangibles +5% YoY

Verisk is not a serial acquirer in the Roper mold. Acquisitions consumed only $185M in 2025 (Simplitium Limited and SuranceBay, LLC — both small). These "constitute less than 1.0% of total assets and less than 0.5% of revenues" per Deloitte's report. FCF after acquisitions was a healthy $1.0B.

Manipulation Score

#CheckResultDetail
F1Beneish M-Score-3.04 (deeply clean; threshold: < -2.22)

M-Score of -3.04 is one of the cleanest in the entire dataset. The AQI (Asset Quality Index) of 0.719 is notably low — meaning asset quality is *improving*, consistent with the company's transition from a conglomerate (it divested its Financial Services and energy businesses) to a pure-play insurance analytics company. TATA (Total Accruals to Total Assets) of -0.085 confirms deeply conservative accruals.

Altman Z-Score: 6.11 (deeply safe). The high Z-Score reflects strong profitability (EBIT/Total Assets of 0.217) and, paradoxically, the high retained earnings despite small equity. The Z-Score formula treats retained earnings differently from total equity.

Key Risks from the 10-K

1. Insurance Industry Concentration

Verisk is essentially a one-industry company. The filing states it serves "clients in the insurance markets" — specifically U.S. property and casualty insurance. If the P&C insurance industry faces a structural downturn, consolidation that reduces the number of customers, or regulatory changes that limit data usage, Verisk's revenue base is directly exposed.

However, this concentration is also the source of Verisk's moat: decades of accumulated data, industry-standard databases (ISO, PCS, AIR), and deep integration into insurer workflows make switching costs extremely high.

2. Rising Debt Load

Total debt increased from $3.1B (2023) to $3.2B (2024) to $4.9B (2025) — a 58% increase in two years. Interest expense rose to $170.9M from $115.5M over the same period. The filing notes debt maturities extending across multiple years with rates reflecting different issuance periods. Refinancing older, lower-rate debt at current market rates will increase interest costs.

3. Cybersecurity as a Core Business Risk

The Risk Factors devote extensive attention to cybersecurity: "cybersecurity threats are rapidly evolving and we may not be able to anticipate, prevent or detect all such attacks and there is no guarantee that a future cybersecurity incident would not materially affect our business strategy, results of operations, or financial condition." As a custodian of billions of insurance records, personal data, and proprietary analytics, a material data breach could damage Verisk's reputation and client relationships.

4. Post-Divestiture Transition

Verisk completed significant divestitures in recent years, exiting its Financial Services and energy businesses. The 2023 results include a $154M loss from discontinued operations, and 2024 includes $6.8M in gains from discontinued operations. The filing notes that the AER (Atmospheric and Environmental Research) business was sold in 2023. These divestitures simplify the business but also mean Verisk is now a narrower company — 100% dependent on insurance analytics.

5. Competition and AI Disruption

While Verisk's historical data moat is deep, the rise of AI-driven analytics creates potential competitive threats from both startups and large technology companies. Verisk's response, per the filing, is to invest in "advanced technologies to collect and analyze billions of records" — but the pace of AI innovation could erode switching costs if competitors can replicate or approximate Verisk's insights with alternative data sources.

Summary

Grade: F. A structurally excellent business with a buyback-compressed balance sheet that triggers mechanical red flags.

Verisk's earnings quality is among the best in the Nasdaq-100: CFFO/NI of 1.58, -8.5% accruals ratio, M-Score of -3.04, 83% subscription revenue, 69.9% expanding gross margins, and clean revenue quality with declining DSO and AR. Deloitte issued an unqualified opinion with no material concerns beyond routine.

The F grade is driven by two mechanical flags: (1) cash at 44% of $4.9B debt, and (2) goodwill at 720% of equity — the latter being an artifact of $5B+ in cumulative share buybacks compressing equity to $309M. The goodwill-to-total-assets ratio (28%) is perfectly normal; it is the equity denominator that is extreme.

The real forward risk is the rising debt trajectory ($3.1B to $4.9B in two years) and the interest expense burden ($171M) that is beginning to weigh on net income growth despite strong operating income expansion. Verisk's insurance data monopoly generates excellent cash flows, but the capital structure is being stretched to fund both buybacks and debt service.

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

Verisk (VRSK) 2025 — Grade F: Goodwill 720% of Equity, Insurance Data Monopoly — EarningsGrade