Abacus Global Management, Inc. (“Abacus” or the “Company”) (NASDAQ:
ABL), a leader in the alternative asset management space, today
provided the following response to last week's false and misleading
short attack.
Our shareholders have been subjected to a false and uninformed
short attack. The short seller's report published on June 4, 2025
makes two key allegations: first, that Abacus relies too heavily on
a single life expectancy provider (Lapetus Solutions), and second,
that this reliance has significantly inflated our balance sheet
valuation. Both are incorrect.
Abacus remains resolute in our process, valuation methodology,
and the benefit we provide to both policyholders and investors. Our
market coverage analysts share this sentiment as well, and have
supported our process with published statements and maintained buy,
outperform, or overweight ratings on our stock:
-
Autonomous/Bernstein: "Abacus Global Management -
Morpheus Misleading," June 4, 2025 (with follow up on June 9, 2025)
- Rating: Outperform
- Price Target: $12
- BRiley: "Abacus
Global Management - Take Advantage of Oversold Position," June 5,
2025
- Rating: Buy
- Price Target: $15
- Piper Sandler:
"Shares sink on short report – stock reaction overdone and Abacus
responds," June 4, 2025
- Rating: Overweight
- Price Target: $12
- TD Bank: "ABL's
model, reliant on direct originations and a short holding period,
would seem to argue against overvaluation of policies." June 4,
2025 (with follow up on June 5, 2025)
- Rating: Buy
- Price Target: $14
- Northland: "Abacus
Global Management (ABL) Trends in Fair Value, Gains and Other Stuff
Tell Positive Story," June 5, 2025
- Rating: Outperform
- Price Target: $13.50
In addition to research analyst support, our auditor Grant
Thornton has also affirmed our mark-to-market valuation approach
for the policies we hold on our balance sheet, and has not seen any
reason to revise that opinion since the publication of the short
report. It is important to note that the report contained a
misleading statement attributed to a Grant Thornton UK CEO. The
UK-based company is a separate legal entity from our auditor, Grant
Thornton US, and each firm operates independently and manages its
own affairs.
Executive Summary
Section 1: Third-Party Analysis Confirms that Lapetus Is Not a
Meaningful Input to Our Valuation Model
Section 2: Mark-to-Market Valuation Depends On Much More Than
Life Expectancy
Section 3: The Most Recent Market Transactions Confirm the
Accuracy of Our Valuation Model
Section 4: Shareholder Commitment to Success of the Business and
Anticipated Additions to Russell 2000 and 3000 in August 2025
Section 1: Independent Third-Party Actuarial
Validation
A core claim of the short report is that "Abacus’ reliance on
Lapetus to value its portfolio presents a material risk to the $446
million in claimed life settlements on its books as of Q1 2025."
This is wrong in so many ways, most importantly that Abacus
does not "rel[y] on Lapetus to value its
portfolio." And to prove it, Abacus engaged Lewis and Ellis1, a
third-party actuarial firm, to review the entire policy balance
sheet as stated in our Q1 2025 10-Q filing (over 700 policies),
removing all Lapetus life expectancy estimates from the analysis.
For over 55 years, Lewis and Ellis has maintained a sterling
reputation and client list with testimonials from organizations
including the Ohio Department of Insurance, Arkansas Insurance
Department, Maryland Insurance Administration, Americo, Pacific
Guardian Life, American Life, American Fidelity, Michigan
Department of Insurance, Oklahoma Department of Insurance, and many
others.
To produce the valuation, Lewis and Ellis has utilized a
discount rate methodology to calculate the net present value of the
portfolio. Premium streams, life expectancies (not including
Lapetus Solutions), face values of policies and discount rates are
all inputs for their analysis. The professionals responsible for
producing this valuation are members and meet Qualification
Standards of the American Academy of Actuaries.
The new Lewis and Ellis valuation concurred with our prior
valuation, resulting in a total policy valuation of $449 million as
of March 31, 2025. The valuation provider aligned with a discount
rate and range of ±2% as disclosed in the Q1 2025 10-Q filing. The
Lewis and Ellis valuation of $449 million falls within a 1% margin
of error from our stated valuation of $446 million.
Section 2: The Short Report Confuses Individualized
Pricing with Portfolio-Wide Valuations, and Misstates the Relevance
of Life Expectancy to Each
Abacus Global Management has developed a sophisticated valuation
framework that optimizes for different business objectives at each
stage of the asset lifecycle. This dual approach uses life
expectancy for consumer-facing transactions while employing
market-based valuation for balance sheet management. Life
expectancy valuation models assume the value of the asset held to
maturity, and thus calculating the maturity date is critically
important. On the other hand, the market approach is based on the
price of policy sales between informed, intelligent and willing
buyers, and willing sellers.
Both approaches have merit. When acquiring policies from
consumers, Abacus uses life expectancy estimates to ensure fair
pricing, which results in Abacus paying consumers an average of
20.4% of policy face value in 20232, prioritizing fair consumer
outcomes. But once policies enter Abacus's trading portfolio, the
company shifts to a market-based valuation system that prioritizes
actual market results.
Abacus values its balance sheet using the mark-to-market model.
Therefore, the blanket claim in the short report that "The Fair
Value Of Life Settlements Depends On Accurately Predicting Life
Expectancy" not only collapses the two distinct valuation
approaches, it leads the reader to conclude that Abacus values its
balance sheet primarily based on life expectancy data. But this
ignores the clear description of the Abacus valuation approach in
its Consolidated Financial Statements, included in the Company’s
most recent 10-K: "The Company determines fair value based on
assumptions that market participants would use in pricing an asset
or a liability in the principal or most advantageous market."
In accordance with U.S. GAAP, Abacus’ balance sheet valuation
model estimates the price it would receive on the sale of its life
settlement policies based on applying data it has from actual
policy trading activity, and then applies this and other data to
inform its assumptions of what a buyer would pay if it used
primarily a discounted cash flow and life expectancy analysis,
which results in the reported discount rate. As such our balance
sheet valuation model is not driven solely by life expectancy
estimates or forecasted discount rates3. Our calculation of fair
value for purposes of balance sheet valuation results from data
that we observe in the market for life settlement policies, drawing
on our experience of prior deals with our trading partners,
institutional and representatives of a large, growing market,
including the largest private credit asset managers, global
alternative asset managers, family offices, insurance companies,
and reinsurers.
Consumer Purchase Stage: Life Expectancy
Optimization
Why This Hybrid Approach Works
Traditional life settlement models suffer from a fundamental
mismatch: they use the same methodology (life expectancy
projections and selected discount rates) for both consumer fairness
and active trading portfolio accuracy. Abacus recognizes these
require different tools:
- Consumer Transactions Need
Predictive Models: Life expectancy estimates help ensure
fair pricing when purchasing from consumers who deserve
transparent, actuarially-sound offers.
- Trading Portfolios Need
Market Reality: Active trading strategies require balance
sheet valuations based on actual transaction history, not
theoretical projections that can shift with model updates.
This dual methodology perfectly supports Abacus's core strategy
as an active life settlement market-maker:
- High Portfolio Turnover: Target
balance sheet turn of ~2x annually, making market-based marks more
relevant than hold-to-maturity projections
- Daily Trading Activity: Real-time
valuation accuracy matters more than long-term actuarial estimates
for a short-term strategy
- Revenue Structure: Unrealized gains
require marks that reflect actual selling capability
The Strategic Result
Abacus has solved the life settlement industry's core valuation
dilemma by recognizing that consumer fairness and active balance
sheet accuracy require different approaches. This isn't a
compromise—it's an optimization that delivers better outcomes at
both stages.
Section 3: The Most Recent Market Transactions Confirms
the Accuracy of the Company’s Fair Value Approach
Abacus operates an active life settlement trading business,
continuously acquiring and disposing of life insurance policies to
optimize balance sheet returns and maintain target return on equity
metrics. This means it is ideally positioned to provide a check on
its own fair value accounting. And our actual realized results
support our valuation. This quarter, Abacus has sold polices at
prices that match its mark-to-market approach. In Q2, through June
2nd, Abacus sold 226 policies for a total $141.4 million. As of
March 31, 2025, those sold policies had an estimated balance sheet
value of $139.1 million. Not only was Abacus able to crystalize its
mark, but it has also realized an incremental gain of 1.65%.
As Abacus is continuously in the market buying and selling
policies, at any given time, a portion of its revenue will be
unrealized if it is still holding policies it hasn’t sold. Further,
if Abacus continues to grow its portfolio by recycling the capital
from policy sales, cash flow from operating activities will likely
be negative. This may change in the future.
Section 4: Executives and Shareholders Are Aligned on
Creating the Brightest Possible Future for Abacus
We appreciate the investor concerns around the coming expiration
of the share lock-up, which the short report described as an
opportunity for "cashing out." Jay Jackson, Sean McNealy, Scott
Kirby, and Matt Ganovsky collectively own approximately 46% of the
outstanding shares. They accepted two-year restricted lock-ups at
the time of the deSPAC transaction. This lengthy lock-up period was
double the average of any share lock-up compared to any other
company, both IPO and deSPAC. The lock-up expires on July 3, 2025.
The restriction period ends during a blackout period which will
continue until our post-earnings release which is expected in
August.
The expiration of the lock-up period does not mean that the
founders and senior management are about to cut and run. Just the
opposite: these large shareholders are looking forward to the
expiration of the lockup not so they can "cash out," but so they
can take the company to its next milestone.
These shareholders and the Board understand that the Russell
2000 and Russell 3000 now require the expiration of the longest
lock-up period before a stock can be listed as part of their
indices. Abacus believes the positive impact of index inclusion
would be beneficial to shareholders. If Abacus maintains the
current course with respect to the lock-up expiration, we expect to
be added to these indices in August 2025.
Nonetheless, should these large block holders wish to sell
shares in the future, we are committed to working closely with our
shareholders and institutional investment partners on a purposeful,
transparent, and organized sale of shares if one were to occur. We
have committed over two decades of service to this company, and our
intent is to recognize the highest valuation possible. Our 2025
Board-approved compensation is heavily equity-based and
incentivized to increase value to our shareholders through both
increased revenue and adjusted net income, as well as company
market capitalization.
Conclusion
In summary, Abacus strongly refutes the misleading and incorrect
claims made by the short seller. We are supported by outside market
research analysts, third-party actuarial firms, our auditor, and
our transparent accounting methodology used in fair market
reporting driven by mark-to-market valuations.
Abacus is a leading alternative asset manager, market maker,
technology company, and growing private wealth manager. We will not
allow this distraction to slow our growth and expansion.
Forward-Looking Statements
All statements in this press release (and oral statements made
regarding the subjects of this press release) other than historical
facts are forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section
21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These
forward-looking statements rely on a number of assumptions
concerning future events and are subject to a number of
uncertainties and factors that could cause actual results to differ
materially from such statements, many of which are outside the
control of Abacus. Forward-looking information includes, but is not
limited to, statements regarding: Abacus’s financial and
operational outlook; Abacus’s operational and financial strategies,
including planned growth initiatives and the benefits thereof,
Abacus’s ability to successfully effect those strategies, and the
expected results therefrom. These forward-looking statements
generally are identified by the words "believe," "project,"
"estimate," "expect," "intend," "anticipate," "goals,"
"prospects," "will," "would," "will continue," "will likely
result," and similar expressions (including the negative versions
of such words or expressions).
While Abacus believes that the assumptions concerning future
events are reasonable, it cautions that there are inherent
difficulties in predicting certain important factors that could
impact the future performance or results of its business. The
factors that could cause results to differ materially from those
indicated by such forward-looking statements include, but are not
limited to: the fact that Abacus’s loss reserves are bases on
estimates and may be inadequate to cover its actual losses; the
failure to properly price Abacus’s insurance policies; the
geographic concentration of Abacus’s business; the cyclical nature
of Abacus’s industry; the impact of regulation on Abacus’s
business; the effects of competition on Abacus’s business; the
failure of Abacus’s relationships with independent agencies; the
failure to meet Abacus’s investment objectives; the inability to
raise capital on favorable terms or at all; the effects of acts of
terrorism; and the effectiveness of Abacus’s control environment,
including the identification of control deficiencies.
These forward-looking statements are also affected by the risk
factors, forward-looking statements and challenges and
uncertainties set forth in documents filed by Abacus with the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time, including the
Annual Report on Form 10-K and Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and
subsequent periodic reports. These filings identify and address
other important risks and uncertainties that could cause actual
events and results to differ materially from those contained in the
forward-looking statements. Abacus cautions you not to place undue
reliance on the forward-looking statements contained in this press
release. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they
are made. Readers are cautioned not to put undue reliance on
forward-looking statements, and Abacus assumes no obligation and,
except as required by law, does not intend to update or revise
these forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new
information, future events, or otherwise. Abacus does not give any
assurance that it will achieve its expectations.
About Abacus
Abacus Global Management (NASDAQ: ABL) is a leading financial
services company specializing in alternative asset management,
data-driven wealth solutions, technology innovations, and
institutional services. With a focus on longevity-based assets and
personalized financial planning, Abacus leverages proprietary data
analytics and decades of industry expertise to deliver innovative
solutions that optimize financial outcomes for individuals and
institutions worldwide.
Contacts:Investor RelationsRobert F. Phillips –
SVP Investor Relations and Corporate Affairsrob@abacusgm.com(321)
290-1198
David Jackson – Director of IR/Capital
Marketsdavid@abacusgm.com(321) 299-0716
Abacus Global Management Public
Relationspress@abacusgm.com
____________________
1 Since going public, Abacus has paid Lewis and Ellis a total of
$70,105, inclusive of this valuation engagement.2 Data as per The
Deal.3 Discount rates are an output imputed from our valuations,
rather than input for determining valuations.
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