FIHL Earnings History
Fidelis Insurance Holdings Limited (FIHL) operates in the Financial Services sector, specifically the Insurance - Diversified industry, with a market capitalization near $2.45B, listed on NYSE, employing roughly 98 people, carrying a beta of 0.37 to the broader market. Fidelis Insurance Holdings Limited, together with its subsidiaries, provides insurance and reinsurance products in Bermuda, Ireland, and the United Kingdom. Led by Daniel Burrows, public since 2023-06-29.
Fidelis Insurance Holdings Limited has beat EPS estimates in 3 of the last 6 quarters.
| Date | EPS Est. | EPS Actual | Surprise | Revenue Est. | Revenue Actual |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aug 12, 2026 | 0.73 | N/A | N/A | $582.9M | N/A |
| May 13, 2026 | 0.75 | -0.41 | N/A | $903.2M | $610.5M |
| Feb 25, 2026 | 1.06 | 1.09 | N/A | $725.3M | $978.2M |
| Nov 12, 2025 | 1.21 | 1.21 | N/A | $676.8M | $650.2M |
| Aug 13, 2025 | -0.12 | 0.12 | N/A | $739.5M | $583.5M |
| May 14, 2025 | -0.43 | -0.41 | N/A | $607.9M | $577.5M |
What FIHL's Earnings History Tells Options Traders
Fidelis Insurance Holdings Limited has a mixed earnings record (3 beats out of 6 reports). Mixed beat rates make options sizing harder: pre-event IV typically reflects the elevated uncertainty, but the post-event move is less predictable, so directional structures (long calls or puts) may carry more edge than pure short-vol structures. Beat rate is one input to event-driven sizing; pair it with the implied-vs-realized volatility view, the current IV rank, and the put-call skew going into the print. Surprise magnitude matters as much as direction - an in-line beat with conservative guidance can produce a larger negative move than a missed quarter with raised forward guidance. The earnings table above shows the most recent six reported quarters; for the full multi-year history including revenue growth trajectory and EPS guidance trends, the per-ticker fundamentals view aggregates the underlying GAAP filings.
How Earnings Drive FIHL Options Pricing
Earnings events are the largest single driver of single-name implied volatility in equity options markets. Pre-event, IV inflates over the two-to-three week run-up as the binary uncertainty of the print compounds; the IV rank typically peaks the day before the announcement. Post-event, IV crushes back toward the realized-volatility baseline as uncertainty resolves. The magnitude of the crush depends on how stretched pre-event IV was relative to the eventual realized move - an oversized pre-event IV with an undersized realized move produces the cleanest premium-selling outcome, while a stretched IV that still under-prices a tail move on the print produces the cleanest long-vol outcome.
The catalyst calendar for FIHL matters beyond the headline EPS surprise. Forward guidance revisions, capital-allocation changes (dividend hikes, buyback authorizations, M&A announcements), and segment-level performance discussions can drive larger post-event moves than the headline beat or miss. Pair the earnings beat-rate read above with the upcoming-event calendar and the IV-rank view to size pre-event and post-event positioning; for short-vol structures the goal is to be long premium-rich and to harvest the IV crush, while for long-vol structures the goal is to own gamma cheap into a regime where the realized move is likely to exceed the implied move.