Moody Aldrich Partners LLC, a fund that once held a $8.21 million stake in Palomar Holdings (PLMR), has liquidated its position entirely. The sale of 53,211 shares, disclosed in an October 21, 2025 SEC filing, marks a clean break from the insurer’s volatile, catastrophe-driven markets.
A Calculated Exit
The fund’s decision to divest its entire holding in Palomar Holdings during Q3 2025 speaks to the cold arithmetic of portfolio management. With shares trading at $115.34-a 9.2% gain year-to-date but trailing the S&P 500 by 5.5 percentage points-the move reads less as a verdict on the company’s future and more as a rebalancing of risk. Yet for the workers who service Palomar’s earthquake and hurricane policies, such shifts often arrive like thunder in a field of wheat: sudden, loud, and indifferent to their labor.
Broader Picture
Palomar’s business model-specializing in high-risk, low-margin markets-has always been a dance with entropy. Its underwriters, tasked with pricing storms and quakes, chase profits in calm years while bracing for the next disaster. Moody Aldrich’s exit leaves the fund’s top holdings in tech and finance, sectors where spreadsheets replace satchels and algorithms outpace intuition. The irony? These industries, too, are built on the backs of those who toil unseen-engineers, brokers, and claims adjusters-who, like the rest of us, are left to pick up the pieces when systems fail.
- CADE: $10.9 million (2.1% of AUM)
- INDB: $10.5 million (2% of AUM)
- PTGX: $9.5 million (1.8% of AUM)
- KTOS: $9.5 million (1.8% of AUM)
- PIPR: $8.4 million (1.6% of AUM)
The Man Behind the Machine
Palomar’s “catastrophe-exposed” focus is a double-edged sword. While it allows the insurer to profit from markets others avoid, it also binds its fate to the whims of nature and reinsurance markets. For the policyholders-homeowners in flood zones, small businesses in hurricane corridors-this volatility is not abstract. It is the cost of living in a world where risk is commodified and sold back to them in premiums.
Final Reflections
Moody Aldrich’s exit is a reminder: in investing, even the most calculated moves are often just tectonic shifts in the financial bedrock. The fund’s new allocations may promise stability, but they, too, are subject to the same cycle of growth and collapse. Meanwhile, the workers-those who build, insure, and rebuild-remain the silent scaffolding of the system. Their resilience, like the companies they serve, is tested not in boardrooms but in the quiet, unheralded hours. 🔄
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2025-10-22 00:53