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Progressive (PGR) Stock After Hours: November 2025 Results, Analyst Price Targets, and What to Watch Before the Market Opens Dec. 18
18 December 2025
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Progressive (PGR) Stock After Hours: November 2025 Results, Analyst Price Targets, and What to Watch Before the Market Opens Dec. 18

Progressive Corporation (The) (NYSE: PGR) finished Wednesday’s session under pressure, even as investors sifted through fresh monthly operating data and a flurry of same-day analyst takes. The stock closed at $227.27, down 1.96% on the day, after trading in a wide range that saw shares dip to $218.83 before recovering toward the close.

In after-hours trading, the move was far more muted. Shares hovered close to the closing level—last seen around $226.80 later in the evening—signaling that the market’s initial reaction may have largely played out during regular trading hours.

With Thursday’s opening bell approaching, the setup for PGR now hinges on two things:

  1. how Wall Street interprets Progressive’s November results (especially policy growth vs. underwriting profitability), and
  2. how macro data—particularly U.S. CPI and jobless claims—shifts interest-rate expectations ahead of the open.

Below is what matters most from Wednesday night into Thursday morning.


PGR stock recap after the bell: a sharp intraday drop, a late recovery, and a quiet after-hours tape

Progressive stock had an unusually volatile session for a large-cap insurer. While it ended the day down about 2%, it spent part of the session materially lower before reversing. Official session data shows:

  • Close: $227.27 (–1.96%)
  • Day range: $218.83 to $227.46
  • Volume: ~5.50 million shares

That volume was elevated relative to typical recent trading levels, pointing to heavier positioning around the company’s monthly release and the wave of analyst commentary that followed.

The broader tape didn’t help. U.S. equities were risk-off on the day, with the S&P 500 down about 1.16% and the Nasdaq down about 1.81%, according to market recap data—conditions that often pressure financials and insurers when investors reduce exposure.

After the close, trading calmed. PGR’s after-hours quote remained near flat versus the close, suggesting no new incremental catalyst hit the tape after 4:00 p.m. ET.


The biggest company-specific news today: Progressive’s November 2025 results (and what the numbers really say)

Progressive’s key “after the bell” talking point isn’t an earnings call—it’s the insurer’s monthly performance snapshot, released Wednesday and also filed with the SEC via an 8-K. SEC+1

Headline November figures

For the month ended November 30, 2025, Progressive reported:

  • Net premiums written:$6.193 billion
  • Net premiums earned:$6.894 billion
  • Net income:$958 million
  • Diluted EPS:$1.63
  • Combined ratio:87.1

If you’re not steeped in insurance metrics: the combined ratio is a quick read on underwriting profitability. A ratio below 100 generally indicates an underwriting profit (before investment income). At 87.1, Progressive’s November underwriting result was strong by industry standards.

The policy-growth question investors keep coming back to

The other headline number: Policies in force rose 11% year over year to 38.4 million.

That sounds robust—and it is—but the market is increasingly sensitive to the pace and pattern of growth. Several analyst notes published Wednesday emphasized that November’s net policy additions slowed sharply versus October, especially in auto, which is Progressive’s core engine.

This is the key nuance for Thursday’s open: the stock can rally on profitable underwriting, but it tends to re-rate lower if investors conclude that growth is normalizing faster than expected (or that competition is intensifying).

Underwriting detail: catastrophe losses were not the story in November

Progressive’s monthly breakdown also suggests catastrophe costs were relatively contained in November, with a companywide net catastrophe loss ratio of 0.6 for the month.

That’s important because the market often punishes P&C insurers on “surprise” catastrophe severity. Wednesday’s debate was less about catastrophes and more about growth vs. retention vs. pricing discipline.


Year-to-date picture: bigger premiums, higher investment income, and double-digit billions in earnings

Monthly releases can be noisy, so many investors zoom out to the year-to-date (YTD) line. Through November 30, 2025, Progressive reported:

  • Net premiums written (YTD): $76.861 billion vs. $68.460 billion in the prior-year period
  • Net premiums earned (YTD): $74.540 billion vs. $64.082 billion
  • Investment income (YTD): $3.250 billion vs. $2.563 billion
  • Net income (YTD): $10.161 billion vs. $7.538 billion

On profitability, the company posted a YTD combined ratio of 87.5.

Two additional YTD data points worth flagging into Thursday:

  • Progressive reported a pretax annualized investment income book yield of 4.2% (helpful context if rate expectations shift on CPI).
  • The company’s balance sheet snapshot shows total investments of $97.391 billion, shareholders’ equity of $37.540 billion, and book value per share of $64.04 as of Nov. 30.

For a stock that trades heavily on underwriting cycle and rate environment, those investment and balance-sheet details matter more than they may look at first glance.


Dividend and calendar: the next “known date” investors should mark

Progressive reiterated details around its capital return plan in the monthly commentary:

  • An annual common share dividend of $13.50 per share and a quarterly dividend of $0.10 per share
  • Both payable January 8, 2026, to shareholders of record as of January 2, 2026

The company also disclosed a concrete timeline for the next monthly update: December results are planned for release on Wednesday, January 28, 2026, before the market opens.

That January date is a key forward catalyst—particularly if investors believe policy-growth momentum is becoming choppier month-to-month.


Today’s analyst forecasts and price targets: bullish upside vs. growth skepticism

Wednesday featured multiple analyst updates that, taken together, show a market split: some firms see substantial upside based on profitability and scale, while others worry the “easy” phase of auto insurance growth is fading.

Bullish stance: BofA keeps Buy (even after trimming the target)

BofA Securities maintained a Buy rating while lowering its price target to $338 from $348. The reasoning wasn’t about underwriting weakness; it centered on policy growth dynamics and retention, with BofA highlighting a sharp cooldown in November’s policy counts compared to October’s surge.

Neutral/hold camp: Evercore and Mizuho stay measured

Evercore ISI maintained an “In Line” rating and a $250 price target, describing the setup as mixed and pointing to the policy-growth slowdown as a notable variable. Investing.com

Mizuho kept a Neutral rating with a $242 price target, also framing the data as “mixed” (stronger profitability elements alongside softer growth). Investing.com

Bearish angle: Morgan Stanley reiterates Underweight

Morgan Stanley reiterated an Underweight rating and a $214 price target, arguing that November’s policy growth decelerated significantly versus October. At the same time, the firm acknowledged underwriting efficiency—citing the combined ratio as better than it had expected.

Additional same-day target moves (headlines)

Two other changes were distributed via MT Newswires and surfaced in market headlines:

  • Piper Sandler: price target $272 (from $280), rating maintained Overweight
  • Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW): price target $250 (from $246)

Even without the full paywalled notes, the direction is revealing: one firm trimmed expectations, another nudged higher—again underscoring the push-pull between growth concerns and profitability confidence.


What to watch before the market opens Thursday, Dec. 18

Thursday morning has the kind of macro calendar that can move yields—and yields matter for insurers because investment income is a meaningful earnings driver.

1) U.S. CPI (November): 8:30 a.m. ET

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics schedule shows the Consumer Price Index for November 2025 is set for release Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025 at 8:30 a.m. ET.

For PGR investors, CPI is less about consumer demand and more about what inflation implies for:

  • future rate cuts, and
  • the trajectory of bond yields that feed insurers’ investment returns.

2) Initial jobless claims: 8:30 a.m. ET (same time)

Jobless claims hit at the same time. The economic calendar data shows Dec. 18 jobless claims are forecast around 224K, following a 236K prior reading.

3) Philadelphia Fed manufacturing survey: also on the morning docket

The New York Fed’s national economic calendar lists the Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Survey alongside CPI at 08:30 on Dec. 18.

4) Fed messaging remains a background variable

Rate expectations have also been influenced by Fed commentary. On Wednesday, Fed Governor Christopher Waller said policy remains restrictive and suggested there is room to cut rates, according to Reuters reporting.

If CPI surprises in either direction, that kind of “rates path” messaging can amplify market moves—potentially swinging PGR with the broader financials complex even if no company-specific news breaks.


A practical checklist for PGR holders into Thursday’s open

Here’s what’s most likely to matter at the open and into the first hour of trading:

  • Does the market reward underwriting strength? November’s 87.1 combined ratio is objectively solid. The question is whether investors treat it as sustainable pricing discipline or as a momentary benefit from benign losses.
  • How “real” is the policy-growth slowdown? Multiple analysts flagged the November step-down in policy additions. If investors view it as seasonality, the dip may be bought. If they view it as competition, the multiple can compress. Investing.com+1
  • Do yields move sharply after CPI? Progressive’s investment base and 4.2% pretax annualized investment income book yield keep the rate backdrop relevant.
  • What’s the market’s near-term volatility expectation? Options-implied “expected move” measures suggested a modest near-term range into Friday’s expiration earlier in the day, a reminder that volatility expectations can shift quickly after a large intraday swing. OptionCharts

Bottom line: After-hours calm, but Thursday morning isn’t set up to be quiet

Progressive stock may look steady after the bell, but the ingredients for Thursday volatility are already on the table: a major inflation print, labor-market data, and a stock that just showed it can swing hard intraday on what is, in theory, “routine” monthly insurance reporting.

If you’re watching PGR into the open, focus less on the after-hours quote and more on the two narratives battling for control:

  • Profitability discipline (bull case): strong combined ratio, large-scale premium engine, rising investment income.
  • Growth normalization (bear case): policy growth may be cooling, competition may be rising, and some analysts still see downside to fair value.

Either way, Thursday’s CPI print at 8:30 a.m. ET is likely to set the tone before the opening bell—both for the market overall and for rate-sensitive sectors like insurance.

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