Investor Presentation • Nov 26, 2025
Investor Presentation
Open in ViewerOpens in native device viewer


Phoenix Financial
November 26, 2025
This presentation includes information regarding the Company's financial statements results and strategic plan & targets. Accordingly, the presentation includes forward-looking information as defined in section 32A of the Securities Law 1968.
The information regarding the strategic plan & targets update includes, among other things, forecasts, goals, assessments, and various estimates, including information presented by way of illustrations and/or graphs and/or tables relating to future events or matters, the realization of which is uncertain and not under the control of the Company or the companies in the Phoenix group, including, among other things, regarding revenues and profitability from new initiatives and the implementation of various plans, profit forecasts, EBITDA, and other future financial data. The Company's management has carried out a process of updating its strategic goals, based on the Company's data, market data, raw or processed internal information collected, and comparative information, and based on certain working assumptions regarding the Company's activities and relevant markets.
Such information is based on the subjective assessment of the Company and its advisors, and among other things, relies on past experience, the professional knowledge accumulated by the Company, existing information, and current expectations and assessments, including future developments as known to the Company today.
The realization and/or non-realization of forward-looking information which is stated in the financial reports and this presentation will be affected by risk factors that characterize the activities of the Company and group companies, as detailed in the Company's periodic reports, including changes in economic conditions, capital market in Israel and globally, the development of competition in the segments relevant to the group's activities, regulatory changes, changes in consumer preferences and consumption habits, changes in working assumptions or in the economic models and assumptions, and changes in implementation or execution
that can not be estimated in advance and may not be controlled by the Company. Hence, there is no certainty that the actual results and achievements of the Company in the future will be in accordance with these views and may differ, also substantially, from those presented in this presentation.
Furthermore, the presentation includes data and assessments based on external sources, the contents of which were not independently tested by the Company and therefore the Company is not responsible for their accuracy.
This presentation may include information that is presented differently from the way it was presented in the company's official reports, some information may be presented and/or categorized and/or edited and/or segmented differently from the company's official past reports. Certain financial measures presented herein are non-IFRS financial measures, which should not be considered as a substitute for or superior to financial measures calculated in accordance with IFRS.
This presentation should not be seen as an offer to purchase or sell the Company's securities, or an invitation to receive such offers The presentation was prepared for convenient and concise presentation only, and does not purport to cover all the data about the Company and its activities and/or all the information that may be relevant for making any decision regarding investment in the Company's securities in general In any case of contradiction and/or inconsistency between the information presented in this presentation and the information in the Company's financial reports and/or its public reports, the information in the financial and other reports shall prevail. This presentation also includes information that the Company has gathered from third parties, where the Company has not independently verified the data. For the avoidance of doubt, the Company does not undertake to update or change the information included in this presentation.


Strategy & Guidance
Financial Results
Segment Breakdown
Appendix
Glossary

Figures for 9M 2025
585 NISb (~\$180b) 20%
AUM AUM 5-year CAGR1
Ongoing buybacks Annual program 5% Average Dividend yield6
Platinum Plus ESG ratings2 3,500+ Employees with equity
2.3 NISb Comprehensive Income 2 NISb Core Income
17.6% ROE 5-year average1 Earnings quality High cash remittance
12.1 NISb Shareholders' equity AA Israel ratings4

P&C, Life & Health
Attractive ROE Strategic capital / balance sheet deployment Shifting mix toward high ROE activities
1,303 NISm Core Income 182% Solvency II Ratio3
7.3 NISb Shareholders' Equity AAA Israel ratings4
A- / Baa1 International ratings4
Wealth & Investments, Retirement, Brokers & Advisors (Agencies) & Financing
Mostly low-risk Fee Related Earnings (FRE), commissions, & spreads Capital light with strong organic potential High multiples & limited capital needs
682 NISm Core Income
1,188 NISm EBITDA5
4.2 NISb Revenues
Figures for 9M 2025

Long-term positive structural trends (e.g., demographics, economic growth, productivity, vibrant tech sector, wealth accumulation)1
Resilience in face of 2023-25 headwinds (war, political uncertainty), including TA-35 ~40% returns YTD & CDS returning to levels near 10/23; strong economic growth in Q31







26.8% 182% ROE 9M/25 Q3/25 12.1NISb 585NISb 2,299NISm Comprehensive Income 9.0NIS 29.2% ROE 803NISm Comprehensive Income 3.2NIS Comp. Income per Share Comp. Income per Share
Shareholders Equity AUM

Solvency1
1
Strong business performance across activities with core income of 1,985 NISm in 9M (667 in Q3), run-rate is within guidance for 2027
Investment performance led to positive non-operating effects of 314 NISm in 9M (136 NISm in Q3)
Corporate responsibility and support of Israeli social resilience reflected in S&P Global ESG ratings, ranked #2 in Israeli market & in 85th percentile globally
2
Company is positioned to disrupt and capture market opportunities originated from structural growth trends, wealth accumulation and shifting value in financial sector
Shifting to high-multiple, capital-light activities with 43% growth in Asset Management core income compared to 2024 Increased holdings in Phoenix Agencies from 78% to 95%, accelerating value creation
3
Quality earnings and cashflows with lower volatility
Quarterly dividend of 320 NISm (40% of Q3 income), totaling 950 NISm for 2025 9M; strong cash remittance supports regular, quarterly dividends, enabled by high liquidity, solvency and low leverage
188 NISm buybacks executed during first 9 months of year out of 300 NISm annual plan



Percent (nominal)

Percent (September 30, 2025)

Mark to market reporting transparency (reporting volatility)4
Team of over 100 investment professionals managing corporate account and client assets
Group plans based on normalized returns3
Investing in capabilities including international investments and technology platforms
Investment performance & track record Responsible allocation & risk management
Proactive and proprietary dealflow and sourcing
International investments with leading partners, co-investments, & direct positions
Balanced asset allocation
Responsible asset and liability management
1 Annualized 9M inflation was 4.0%
2 Five-year period (2020-24), based on known CPI LTM change as of end of period
3 Core Income does not include Non-Operating Effects: Investment yields & variable fees above or below normalization (3% real yields under IFRS 4 / nominal risk-free rate + 2.25% under IFRS 17, to be updated starting Q4/2025 to nominal risk-free rate + 2.50%), interest rate effects, and special items
4 Debt assets presented based on fair value determined by external evaluator appointed by the regulator
Dividends & Buybacks
Dividend: 320 NISm quarterly dividend announced, totaling 950 NISm for 9M (3.8 NIS/share); policy at least 40% from annual income paid quarterly
Buybacks: 136 NISm executed during quarter totaling in 188 NISm in 9M; annual plan increased from 200 NISm to 300 NISm
2028 payout guidance: over 50% combined dividends & buybacks facilitated by diverse cash flows & remittance, strong financial position including Solvency II, ratings, liquidity
Paid during calendar year

announced today
Not including 320 NISm

* Dividend yield calculated based on total dividends distributed in calendar year divided by average market cap at beginning and end of year; figures before 2025 based on IFRS-4 income
Announced dividends from income, by business, NISm

11

Highlights
Strategy & Guidance
Financial Results
Segment Breakdown
Appendix
Glossary
| Previous guidance | Updated guidance | Comments | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Publication date Target timeframe |
9/24 | 3/25 2027 |
11/25 2028 |
|
| Core Income (NISb) | 2.0 | 2.4-2.6 | 3.3-3.5 | |
| Insurance | 1.1-1.3 | 1.4-1.7 | 1.9-2.1 | |
| Asset Management | 0.7-0.9 | 0.8-1.1 | 1.3-1.5 | |
| ROE | 16-18% | >25% | (95%) developments |
|
| Adjusted EBITDA (NISb) | 1.6-1.8 | 2.4-2.6 | ||
| Total AUM (NISb) | 600-650 | 700-800 | ||
| Payouts (Dividend + Buyback) |
>50% | >50% |
Providing new medium-term (3 year) guidance for 2028, because 2025 run-rate is already achieving previous guidance for 2027
Accelerated growth compared to previous guidance due to materializing market opportunities, improved performance without capital needs, increased Phoenix share of Agencies (95%)
Potential upside beyond guidance includes investment performance (difference between 4.0% historic average above risk-free rate versus 2.5% normalization represents roughly 300 NISm), broader M&A, technology / AI implementation, regional developments
IFRS-17 impact already taken into consideration in previous guidance
Significant market opportunity 1
Long-term positive structural trends including demographics, productivity, innovation, wealth accumulation Accelerated sector value creation with growth in financial services and shift toward asset managers and insurers, driven client wealth & demand for investments and services
Strong position & platforms 2
Premier financial group with \$182 billion AUM (11/25), 20% compounding, large client base
Broad platforms across asset management & insurance with ability to disrupt sector
Differentiated capabilities including people, scale, brand, investments, technology, international partnerships; aligned and committed managers & partners
Strong financial position with high levels of capital, Solvency, liquidity, low leverage, cashflows, dividends & ratings
Proven value creation strategy 3
Disrupting Israeli financial services with innovative business models, solutions, and best practices
Value drivers include accelerated growth in high-multiple capital-light businesses; innovation for competitive advantage & efficiency; active management of people, structure, & M&As; and capital & investment management to maximize performance
Shifting to high-multiple & fee-related earnings with strong cashflow remittance (away from liabilities with uncertain outcomes), dividends & capital returns highlight profitable growth
Executing growth roadmaps 4
Strong growth in asset management across platforms (wealth, investments, retirement, brokers, financing)
Smart growth in Insurance high-multiples activities while optimizing mix and models including shift to P&C & technology rollout (digitization, automation)
Building group capabilities for competitive advantage including data & analytics, client focus (journeys, segmentation, personalization), global best practices, M&As

Israel population (Millions)1

Financial services market cap (NISb) 4

GDP per capita (USDk) 2

Israel
Financial services market cap (Percent)5

Financial assets held by public (NISt) 3

From… …to
Savings Protection Deposits Real estate Investments Compounding Brokerage Alternatives
Driven by generational shift, financial education, access, globalization of knowledge, capital markets, wealth
Potential for disruption
Note: 2025 figures based on actual data or estimations based on most recent published data

1 National Bureau of Statistics (2025)
2 Current USD, as of 2024, not PPP adjusted, World Bank
3 Include households and business financial assets managed directly or via institutional investors as of May 2025. Source: BOI report 4 Include public banks, credit card companies, insurance groups, investment houses and non-bank credit providers; data from TASE
5 Israel data taken from TASE as of Sept. 2025. US data taken from disfold.com, and includes American top 100 financial companies by market cap as of Dec. 2024; Asset. Management service providers were included in Asset & Insurance Management category
NISm, before non-operating effects (capital markets, interest rates, & special items)

Potential upside beyond guidance includes investment performance (difference between 4.0% historic average above riskfree rate versus 2.5% normalization represents roughly 300 NISm), broader M&A, technology / AI implementation, regional developments



* Core Income and Core ROE do not include Non-Operating Effects: Investment yields & variable fees above or below normalization (3% real yields under IFRS 4 / nominal risk-free rate + 2.25% under IFRS 17, to be updated starting Q4/2025 to nominal risk-free rate + 2.50%), interest rate effects, and special items

Lead value creation, risk management, & people across the group, including:
Growth in high-multiple activities while optimizing mix and models by (a) shifting to capital efficient activities (away from longer liabilities with less certain outcomes) and (b) deploying technology for service & efficiency:
Accelerate growth across high-multiple platforms at scale to capture significant market opportunity:


Growth engines include Asset Management, Brokers & Advisors & Financing
Significant FRE (Fee-Related Earnings)
Strategy focused on accelerated growth, with strong organic capabilities & proactive acquisitions – doubling EBITDA in 3 years
1,123 NISm adjusted EBITDA not including minority interest in 9M/25 (2024: 1,002)

Investment House (Funds & ETFs, Brokerage, Portfolios, ESOP, W), with current brokerage client base of ~82k accounts Wealth (private markets) Retirement (Pension & Provident)
Investment Policies (reported in Asset Management starting 2025)
Phoenix Capital Partners
Experienced management / equity partners
Positioned to capture significant market opportunity
Accelerated growth based on market leadership, scale, client focus, and differentiated products / distribution
Focus on efficiency in retirement

NISb

NISm, before non-operating effects

NISm, consolidated including minorities


Objective advisor benefit administration, retirement planning, & insurance (life, health, P&C, specialties)
Independent Brokers (Agencies) providing access to all asset managers / insurance groups; Phoenix distributes across multiple channels
Experienced management / equity partners Cash-generative & capital-light business model, market leader but still low 7% market share1
Phoenix Increasing holdings from 78% to 95% transaction signed in July
Accelerated organic growth based on capabilities, scale, technology, and broad investment solutions
Inorganic growth / rollups of smaller firms onto platforms
Streamlining & investing in capabilities, technology, infrastructure
Capital efficiency




812
Fee-related Earnings (FRE) including Credit card solutions, SME payments facilitation and clearing account for >50% of total revenues with growing client pool of >18k (14% 5-year CAGR) and transaction volume of ~43 NISb (9% 5-year CAGR) in 2024 and El Al Frequent Flyer Program (minority)
Fee-related and spread-based earnings including SME lending of mostly collateral backed loan, strong cross-sell to existing merchant clients, Construction Finance (merged 2024) and Consumer Credit (launched 2024)
Accelerated growth across segments, focused on fee-based services and low-risk financing based on capabilities, customer relationship, organizational infrastructure, scale, synergies Broadening Credit solutions & financing value propositions across client segments Improved capital management & infrastructure Responsible risk management aligned with banking practices

NISm

NISm, before non-operating effects

NISm, consolidated

Phoenix Financial has several Finance (Credit) activities – Phoenix Gama is the primary platform and is included in the Finance (Credit) Segment, but in addition several other activities provide Finance (Credit) or related solutions or invest in fixed income instruments from corporate account (Nostro) funds or client assets and are not included in the Finance (Credit) Segment

Strategic growth
Includes motor property which is cyclical but contributes only ~30-35% of P&C income
Deepen competitive advantages, focusing on high ROE activities (e.g., P&C)
NISb, not including contributions to savings & investment policies

Optimization including technology (digitization, automation), business mix, CSM management, capital deployment, financial & operational efficiency, reduced volatility
Careful management of long-term liabilities with less certain outcomes, reducing overall cost of equity


Global trends of convergence between asset management and insurance, AI, growth in private markets
Israel trends of rapid wealth accumulation, growing client demand & sophistication, broad digitization
Built businesses to capture opportunities & trends
Multiple waves of value creation



Highlights
Strategy & guidance
Financial Results
Segment Breakdown
Appendix
Glossary
<-- PDF CHUNK SEPARATOR -->
Q3 2025, NISm

| Q3-24 | 587 | 280 | 279 | 1,146 | (360) | (27) | 759 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 41 | 119 | (68) | 92 | (35) | (13) | 44 |
| 213 232 (19) P&C Health 257 234 23 Life 108 94 14 50 27 23 Other Equity Returns Core Insurance 628 587 41 Retirement 42 31 11 Wealth & Investments 155 108 47 Brokers & Advisors 124 89 35 Financing 57 38 19 21 14 7 Other Core Asset Management 399 280 119 Investment Income (*) 244 512 (268) P&C 11 38 (27) Health (9) (25) 16 Life 18 150 (132) Other Equity Returns 234 367 (133) Retirement 1 (6) 7 Brokers & Advisors (7) (12) 5 Financing (4) 0 (4) Interest (11) (196) 185 P&C (36) (56) 20 Health 68 38 30 Life (43) (178) 135 Special Items (22) (37) 15 P&C (2) 0 (2) Health 0 0 0 Life (3) (30) 27 Other Equity Returns 0 0 0 Retirement 0 0 0 Wealth & Investments (3) (1) (2) Brokers & Advisors (14) (6) (8) Financing 0 0 0 Other 0 0 0 Non-operating income 211 279 (68) |
NISm | Q3-25 | Q3-24 | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|


| 9M/24 | 1,761 | 761 | (7) | 2,515 | (777) | (89) | 1,649 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 215 | 312 | 591 | 1,118 | (446) | (22) | 650 |
| NISm | 9M/25 | 9M/24 | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| P&C | 719 | 662 | 57 |
| Health | 744 | 673 | 71 |
| Life | 347 | 313 | 34 |
| Other Equity Returns |
166 | 113 | 53 |
| Core Insurance |
1,976 | 1,761 | 215 |
| Retirement | 115 | 87 | 28 |
| Wealth & Investments |
404 | 287 | 117 |
| Brokers & Advisors |
335 | 245 | 90 |
| Financing | 155 | 114 | 41 |
| Other | 64 | 28 | 36 |
| Core Asset Management |
1,073 | 761 | 312 |
| Investment Income (*) |
726 | (186) | 912 |
| P&C | 41 | 40 | 1 |
| Health | (95) | (103) | 8 |
| Life | 42 | (245) | 287 |
| Other Equity Returns |
769 | 150 | 619 |
| Retirement | 7 | (15) | 22 |
| Brokers & Advisors |
(16) | (13) | (3) |
| Financing | (22) | 0 | (22) |
| Interest | (145) | 269 | (414) |
| P&C | (47) | (23) | (24) |
| Health | 57 | 63 | (6) |
| Life | (155) | 229 | (384) |
| Special Items |
3 | (90) | 93 |
| P&C | 0 | (3) | 3 |
| Health | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Life | 73 | (77) | 150 |
| Other Equity Returns |
(7) | 10 | (17) |
| Retirement | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Wealth & Investments |
(65) | (9) | (56) |
| Brokers & Advisors |
(7) | (6) | (1) |
| Financing | 0 | (5) | 5 |
| Other | 9 | 0 | 9 |
| Non-operating income |
584 | (7) | 591 |

Q2 2025, NISm

28
H1 2025, NISm

2,478
| IFRS 17 |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phoenix Financial Solo NISm |
31/12/2024 | 30/09/2024 | 30/09/2025 | 9M/24-H1/25 |
| Cash and cash equivalents |
65 | 95 | 104 | 8 |
| of Investment in Restricted Tier 1 capital Phoenix Insurance |
1,248 | 1,246 | 1,296 | 49 |
| Receivables and debit balances |
45 | 23 | 40 | 17 |
| Investments in investees |
10,201 | 10,019 | 11,772 | 1,753 |
| Dividend receivable from Phoenix Insurance |
574 | 64 | 0 | )64( |
| Loans and capital investees notes to |
1,126 | 1,130 | 743 | )387( |
| Other financial investments measured fair value at |
86 | 109 | 344 | 235 |
| Other financial investments measured depreciated at cost |
42 | 12 | 114 | 102 |
| Other financial assets |
- | - | 620 | 620 |
| Other Assets |
15 | 20 | 30 | 10 |
| Total Assets |
13,402 | 12,718 | 15,063 | 2,345 |
| Financial liabilities |
1,892 | 1,913 | 2,945 | 1,032 |
| Payables and credit balances |
20 | 20 | 43 | 23 |
| Other Liabilities |
- | - | 10 | 10 |
| Total equity |
11,490 | 10,785 | 12,065 | 1,280 |
| Total equity and liabilities |
13,402 | 12,718 | 15,063 | 2,345 |
Financial Liabilities
| Entity | Rating1 | Actual highlights |
|---|---|---|
| Phoenix Financial | AA | 1%-5% LTV |
| Phoenix Insurance | AAA | 182% Solvency (with transitional measures) |
| Phoenix Investment House | A+ | >10x EBITDA / financing expenses |
| Phoenix Gama | AA | >10% Risk / Capital |
| Phoenix Agencies | AA+ | <1x Debt / EBITDA |
| Phoenix Pension & Provident | AA- | <5x Debt / EBITDA |
| Bonds | and Loans |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30/09/2025 | 31/12/2024 | ||||
| Floating | Fixed | ||||
| CPI linked |
interest | interest | Total | Total | |
| Financial Solo |
1,293 | 313 | 1,339 | 2,945 | 1,892 |
| Insurance2 | |||||
| Tier 1 capital |
386 | - | - | 386 | 374 |
| Tier 2 capital |
792 | 199 | 2,849 | 3,840 | 3,824 |
| Tier 3 capital |
- | - | - | - | - |
| Insurance Total |
1,178 | 199 | 2,849 | 4,226 | 4,198 |
| Retirement2 | - | 501 | - | 501 | 626 |
| Financing | 1,489 | 87 | 1,576 | 1,447 | |
| Brokers & Advisors |
- - |
493 | - | 493 | 364 |
| Wealth & Investments |
- | 2 | - | 2 | 236 |
| AM&C Total |
- | 2,484 | 87 | 2,571 | 2,673 |
| Total bonds and loans |
2,470 | 2,997 | 4,275 | 9,742 | 8,745 |
| Exposure Ratio |
25% | 31% | 44% | 100% | 100% |
| Other Derivatives, Repo & |
(Nostro)* | 7,034 | 4,508 | ||
| Other (Unit Derivatives, Repo & |
linked)* | 379 | 2,018 | ||
| Credit (Gama) cards liabilities |
1,842 | 1,902 |
Total 18,997 17,189
Net financial debt exposure includes financial assets & only some of the financial liabilities (see H1/25 Financial Statements – Section 6.7.2 in the BOD Report); Liabilities include use of derivatives opposite relevant financial assets for operational purposes (e.g., Insurance, Investment House) and Gama financing for credit portfolio and improved capital structure; * For more details, see H1/25 Financial Reports (Note 5) 1Phoenix Financial, Insurance, and Gama rated by 2 rating companies (Maalot & Midrug)
2After report date, Phoenix Insurance and Phoenix Pension & Provident completed raise of tier-1 capital of 500 NISm and 200 NISm respectively

Solvency II implemented in Israel in line with international standards, with strong regulatory oversight
Transitional measures through 2032, with natural offset from Phoenix backbook runoff (expected to release Solvency capital requirements and risk margin at least as high as transitional measures through 2032, reflecting the difference between Solvency ratio with and without transitional measures)
Standard model used (internal models not allowed)
Phoenix Solvency does not include group equity outside Insurance Company; significant additional group capital resources held under Phoenix Financial (formerly Phoenix Holdings)
Quarterly publication of Solvency ratio with one quarter delay; full breakdown for Q2 and Q4, with only transitional headline figure for Q1 and Q3
182% with transitional measures as of June 30, 2025 (Including 320 NISm dividend distributed with the financial statements, additional distribution of the dividend in-kind approved on December 31, 2024, and not yet distributed, is expected to reduce the solvency ratio by approximately 6%)
Insurance Company BOD dividend threshold raised to 123% without transitionals as of June 30, 2025
(Phoenix Financial Company)
Insurance subsidiary dividend payout 40-60% of comprehensive income, in line with solvency target range
AM&C generate significant cash from fee-based earnings (e.g., asset management, Brokers (Agencies))
Strong liquidity at Phoenix Financial level including Phoenix Insurance Tier 1 capital notes of 1.2 NISb (trading on Tel-Bond 40 index) & 1% net debt LTV
Insurance Company with international ratings (Moody's Baa1, S&P A-) and AAA local rating
IFRS 17 & IFRS 9 implementation in 2025, expected to reduce volatility
Dynamic management of market exposures
Sensitivity to -1%/+1% change in interest rate curve is +368/-320 NISm


Highlights
Strategy & guidance
Financial Results
Segment Breakdown
Appendix
Glossary
Continued strong profitability despite competitive market
Improved claims management
Optimized use of machine learning for motor underwriting
| Core (Before Tax) Income |
Q3/24 | Q3/25 | 9M/24 | 9M/25 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compulsory Motor |
33 | 50 | 125 | 126 |
| Motor Property |
66 | 84 | 209 | 268 |
| Property & Liabilities* |
133 | 79 | 328 | 325 |
| Total | 232 | 213 | 662 | 719 |
| Combined Loss Ratio** (in retention) |
79.8% | 82.0% | 78.6% | 78.6% |
NISm

| Non-Operating | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9M/24 | 662 | 40 | (23) | (3) | 676 |
| Difference | 57 | 1 | (24) | 3 | 37 |
| Q3/25 | 213 | 11 | (36) | (2) | 186 |
| Q3/24 | 232 | 38 | (56) | - | 214 |
| Difference | (19) | (27) | 20 | (2) | (28) |
Note: Core Income do not include Non-Operating Effects: Investment yields & variable fees above or below 3% real yields (IFRS 4) / nominal risk free rate + 2.25% (IFRS 17) to be updated from Q4/2025 to nominal risk free rate +2.5%, interest rate effects, and special items; 2024 figures based on IFRS-17 pro forma

* Other activities include property insurance (home, business), liabilities and other specialties.
** Combined Loss Ratio for motor (compulsory & property) is 84.8% & 84.3% for Q3 & 9M/25 respectively
Continued improvement in core income from underwriting profit
Focusing growth on high-ROE, capitalefficient products
Negative non-operating impact
| Core Income (Before Tax) |
Q3/24 | Q3/25 | 9M/24 | 9M/25 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Critical & Health Short Term |
73 | 62 | 202 | 218 |
| Long-Term Care |
47 | 76 | 152 | 197 |
| Medical Expenses |
114 | 119 | 319 | 329 |
| Total | 234 | 257 | 673 | 744 |

| Non-Operating |
|---|
| 9M/24 | 673 | (103) | 63 | - | 633 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 71 | 8 | (6) | - | 73 |
| Q3/25 | 257 | (9) | 68 | - | 316 |
| Q3/24 | 234 | (25) | 38 | - | 247 |
| Difference | 23 | 16 | 30 | - | 69 |
Increased core income from underwriting profit
Negative non-operating effects mainly due to interest rate effects, partially offset by investment performance
Special items include onerous contracts results
Growth in Investment Policies, reported under Asset Management
| Core Income (Before Tax) |
Q3/24 | Q3/25 | 9M/24 | 9M/25 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk | 80 | 40 | 210 | 179 |
| Saving Non-Participating |
10 | 28 | 48 | 89 |
| Saving Participating |
4 | 40 | 55 | 79 |
| Total | 94 | 108 | 313 | 347 |
NISm

| 9M/24 | 313 | (245) | 229 | (77) | 220 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 34 | 287 | (384) | 150 | 87 |
| Q3/25 | 108 | 18 | (43) | (3) | 80 |
| Q3/24 | 94 | 150 | (178) | (30) | 36 |
| Difference | 14 | (132) | 135 | 27 | 44 |
35
Strong contribution from corporate account investment performance

| 9M/24 | 113 | 150 | 10 | 273 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 53 | 619 | (17) | 655 |
| Q3/25 | 50 | 234 | - | 284 |
| Q3/24 | 27 | 367 | - | 394 |
| Difference | 23 | (133) | - | (110) |
Higher income across subsegments
Strong growth in Mutual Funds & ETFs
Continued growth in brokerage platform reaching 82k accounts including new client acquisition
Growth in alternative / wealth business
Special Items include several (unrelated) one-time costs & adjustments, including assuming control in alternative business

including higher margin / efficient activities driving higher core income

| 9M/24 | 87 | (15) | - | 72 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 28 | 22 | - | 50 |
| Q3/25 | 42 | 1 | - | 43 |
| Q3/24 | 31 | (6) | - | 25 |
| Difference | 11 | 7 | - | 18 |
Strong growth in core income
Continued organic and inorganic growth including small acquisitions leading to higher core income
Transaction to increase holdings from 78% to 95% signed in July
Updated guidance and plan in place to accelerate growth including appointed new CEO

| 9M/24 | 245 | (13) | (6) | 226 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 90 | (3) | (1) | 86 |
| Q3/25 | 124 | (7) | (14) | 103 |
| Q3/24 | 89 | (12) | (6) | 71 |
Continued growth across segments
Significant fee-related revenues and income, including credit card solutions and selected financing activities with minimal capital requirements
Investing in capabilities including marketing & G&A to drive growth and scale consumer credit
Strong balance sheet with 28% Equity-to-Assets ratio*
Approved off-balance sheet credit lines of 2.1 NISb
Incorporated El Al Frequent Flyer program holdings into Financing segment, with potential for future synergies
| Key Financials (NISm) | 9M/24 | 9M/25 | Turnover (9M) |
Credit portfolio 30/09/2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Finance Income | ||||
| Credit card solutions | 118 | 160 | 32,200 | - |
| SME solutions** | 68 | 63 | - | 2,484 |
| Construction Finance | 48 | 72 | - | 1,313 |
| Consumer Credit | - | 1 | - | 167 |
| G&A, Marketing & Other |
(120) | (141) | - | - |
| Total | 114 | 155 | 32,200 | 3,964 |
| Credit lines |
2,100 | |||
| Total | 6,064 |

| 9M/24 | 114 | - | (5) | 109 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 41 | (22) | 5 | 24 |
| Q3/25 | 57 | (22) | - | 35 |
| Q3/24 | 38 | - | - | 38 |
| Difference | 19 | (22) | - | (3) |
* Not including Finance (Credit) card & short-term transactions; 19% Equity-to-Assets including these transactions
**Segment business Finance (Credit) includes Guarantees, Check clearing, SME loans, Real estate finance and other
*** Mainly impact of FX on Frequent Flyer activity
Segment includes Phoenix Financial solo profits (including RT1 holding) as well as other items
Restructured to improve capital & investments efficiency
Raising Tier-1 capital in favorable terms to improve capital efficiency

| 9M/24 | 27 | - | 1 | - | 28 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difference | 34 | 3 | (1) | 9 | 45 |
| Q3/25 | 20 | 1 | - | - | 21 |
| Q3/24 | 13 | - | 1 | - | 14 |
| Difference | 7 | 1 | (1) | - | 7 |

Highlights
Strategy & guidance
Financial Results
Segment Breakdown
Appendix
Glossary

in profitable & capital-efficient activities

to increase competitive advantages

of people, culture & structure

to maximize performance
Income growth Shifting mix
Competitive advantage Margin expansion
Unlocking value M&A
High risk-adjusted yields Dividend distributions


Driving competitive disruption, consolidation, and massive value creation in Israeli financial services
Distinctive Capabilites
Data analytics & ML for pricing & underwriting, cross-sell, personalization Group app & digital platforms (e.g Consumer Credit) for sales and service
Client Experience
Improved journeys (digitized, simple, transparent)
Self-service (Gen AI)
Agent sales & production (digital interface)
Business Optimization
Productivity & efficiency by processes automation, Gen AI Streamlined business systems Claims management, fraud detection
Group Resilience
Cyber security Core infrastructure Backup

Global activities upgrade know-how and best practices, culture, opportunities, and differentiation
30-40% leading international funds & institutional investors
40-50% global investments including fixed-income, PE, real-estate, infrastructure
Partnerships with leading global alternative / asset managers
Executives with broad relevant international experience

BUY recommendations
Part of MSCI Israel index
International insurance ratings
Baa1 A-
English reporting including financials, presentations, immediate reports, press






Business expenditures as percent of GDP


4 CEIC, BOI 2024 5 Market Analysis 2025 6 OECD Data 2023
| Phoenix Financial Balance Sheet | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NISm | IFRS 17 |
|||
| Phoenix Financial NISm |
31/12/2024 | 30/09/2024 | 30/09/2025 | 9M/24-9M/25 |
| Cash | 2 742 |
2 387 |
2 355 |
)32( |
| Intangible Assets |
, 5 298 |
, 5 225 |
, 5 780 |
555 |
| Insurance contract assets |
, 5 576 |
, 5 278 |
, 5 933 |
655 |
| Investments in associates |
, 2 002 , |
, 1 940 , |
, 1 477 , |
)463( |
| Investment - other property |
1 323 , |
1 291 , |
1 896 , |
605 |
| Credit for purchase of securities |
5 992 , |
5 667 , |
6 575 , |
909 |
| Other Assets |
)56 284( , |
)54 602( , |
)60 071( , |
)5 470( , |
| Other Financial Investments |
33 350 , |
32 814 , |
36 055 , |
3 241 , |
| Assets for yield-dependent contracts |
173 421 , |
166 552 , |
190 100 , |
23 548 , |
| Total Assets |
173 421 , |
166 552 , |
190 100 , |
23 548 , |
| Financial liabilities |
17 189 , |
16 526 , |
18 997 , |
2 471 , |
| Liabilities in of investments respect contracts |
33 853 , |
30 966 , |
43 854 , |
12 888 , |
| Liabilities in of insurance respect contracts |
107 152 , |
104 900 , |
111 167 , |
6 267 , |
| Other Liabilities |
3 404 , |
3 058 , |
3 723 , |
665 |
| Total equity |
11 823 , |
11 102 , |
12 359 , |
1 257 , |
| Total equity and liabilities |
173 421 , |
166 552 , |
190 100 , |
23 548 , |
| Bonds and Loans |
|||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30/09/2025 | 31/12/2024 | ||||
| Floating | Fixed | ||||
| CPI linked |
interest | interest | Total | Total | |
| Solo Financial |
1,293 | 313 | 1,339 | 2,945 | 1,892 |
| Insurance2 | |||||
| Tier capital 1 |
386 | - | - | 386 | 374 |
| Tier 2 capital |
792 | 199 | 2 849 , |
3 840 , |
3 824 , |
| Tier 3 capital |
- | - | - | - | - |
| Insurance Total |
1,178 | 199 | 2,849 | 4,226 | 4,198 |
| Retirement2 | - | 501 | - | 501 | 626 |
| Financing | - | 1 489 , |
87 | 1 576 , |
1 447 , |
| Brokers & Advisors |
- | 493 | - | 493 | 364 |
| Wealth & Investments |
- | 2 | - | 2 | 236 |
| AM&C Total |
- | 2,484 | 87 | 2,571 | 2,673 |
| Total bonds and loans |
2,470 | 2,997 | 4,275 | 9,742 | 8,745 |
| Exposure Ratio |
25% | 31% | 44% | 100% | 100% |
| (Nostro)* Derivatives Repo & Other , |
034 7 , |
4 508 , |
|||
| Derivatives Repo & Other (Unit , |
linked)* | 379 | 2 018 , |
||
| Credit cards liabilities (Gama) |
1 842 , |
1 902 , |
|||
| Total | 18,997 | 17,189 |


Highlights
Strategy & guidance
Financial Results
Segment Breakdown
Appendix
Glossary
| Adjusted EBITDA | Adjusted EBITDA - calculated as income before finance, taxes, depreciation and amortization in the relevant areas of activity; adjustments as detailed below: Investment House - IFRS 16 adjustment and special items Retirement (Pension and Provident) - IFRS 16 adjustment and amortization of DAC and special items Distribution (Brokers (Agencies)) - IFRS 16 adjustment and special items Finance (Credit) - IFRS 16 adjustment, financing expenses, Finance (Credit) provisions, and special items |
|---|---|
| AM | Asset Management |
| AUM | Assets Under Management; the total market value of all the investments that are managed by the Company |
| Bps | Basis Points; 1 basis points is .01% |
| CGU | Cost Generating Unit |
| CI | Comprehensive Income |
| CLR | Combined Loss Ratio |
| CO | Corporate, Other and Consolidation |
| Core Income | Income from operations not including investment yields & variable fees above/below 3% real yields, interest rate effects, and special items |
| Core ROE | Core income as a percent of total equity |
| CPI | Consumer Price Index; measures the average change of prices in an agreed upon basket of consumer goods and services over time |
| CSM | Contractual Service Margin |
| D&O | Directors and Officers Liability Insurance |
| DAC | Deferred Acquisition Cost |
| ESOP | Employee Stock Ownership Plan; workplace benefit program, that provides the employees with ownership interest in the company. |
| ETF | Exchange Traded Fund; an open end, tradable basket of securities that tracks an underling index, sector, or security type |
| Fixed-Rate Gov Bonds | A government issued bond for which the interest income payment is agreed upon and does not change |
| FX | Foreign Exchange Currency |
| Gama | Financial services and Finance (Credit) company owned by the Phoenix Group |
| Halman corporate funds | Israeli Electric Company (IEC) |
| Illiquidity Premium | Or Liquidity Premium; premium demanded by investors when any given security cannot be easily converted into cash for its fair market value. |
| IMF | International Monetary Fund |
| Insurance Core Income | Core Income from insurance activities |
| Index Linked Gov Bonds | A government issued bond for which the interest income payment is related (or linked) to the CPI |
| LAT | Liability Adequacy Test |
| Liquidity Premium | See Illiquidity Premium |
| LOB | Line of Business |
| LTC | Long Term Care insurance; typically helps pay for costs associated with long term care |
<-- PDF CHUNK SEPARATOR -->
| LTS | Long Term Services; including but not limited to Life, Provident and Pension funds |
|---|---|
| Marketable Securities | Liquid financial assets that can be quickly converted into cash; most are trading assets |
| MF | Management Fees; wages charged by a financial manager |
| Moody's | A Finance (Credit) risk rating agency |
| MSCI | Morgan Stanley Capital International Emerging Markets Index; measures the performance in equity markets, specifically in global emerging markets |
| Mutual Fund | Open end, non-tradable basket of securities that tracks the performance of an undelaying index, sector, or security type |
| Net Inflows | The net amount of new cash, excluding the impact of investment market value; calculated by subtracting withdrawals from new deposits |
| NIS | New Israeli Shekel |
| Non-Marketable Securities | Asset group that is considered to be difficult to buy or sell due to the fact they are not traded on any major exchange; could include government issued debt securities, limited partnerships, real estate investments and more |
| Non-Operating Income | Impact on income of investment yields & variable fees above/below 3% real yields, interest rate effects, and special items |
| Nostro | The account in which a financial institution manages its own funds |
| OPEX | Operational Expenses |
| P&C | Property and Casualty insurance |
| PF | Phoenix Financial |
| PHI | Permanent Health Insurance |
| PI | Phoenix insurance |
| PLI | Professional Liability insurance |
| Reinsurance | A balancing risk strategy; one or more insurers that share the liability |
| Revenue | All encompassing streams of income; including, but not limited to: premium, management fees, benefit contributions |
| RFR | Risk Free Rates |
| ROE | Return On Equity; calculated by dividing net income over total equity |
| Services Core Income | Core Income from Services activities including asset management, distribution, and Finance (Credit) |
| SME60 | "The Rest Index"; tracks the performance of the 60 largest market value companies that are excluded from the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange |
| Special Items | Changes in profit or loss that are not part of the usual business of the Company, including changes in actuarial research, actuarial model changes, other structural changes and strategic acquisition costs in AM segment |
| Tel Bond 20 | Index that tracks the performance of the 20 largest Index Linked Corporate Bonds in terms of market value |
| Tel Bond 40 | Index that tracks the performance of the 40 largest Index Linked Corporate Bonds in terms of market value |
| Tel Bond 60 | Index that tracks the performance of the 60 largest Index linked Corporate Bonds in terms of market value |
| TLV 125 | An index that tracks the performance of the 125 largest market value companies in the Tel-Aviv Stock Exchange |
| TLV 35 | An index that tracks the performance of the 35 largest market value companies in the TLV Stock Exchange |
| TLV 90 | An index that tracks the performance of the 90 largest market value companies in the TLV stock Exchange |
| TMTP | Transitional Measures on Technical Provisions |
| Workers' Compensation Insurance | Insurance coverage for employees' injuries or sickness |
| Yield Curve | A line that plots interest rates of bonds with equal Finance (Credit) risk with different maturity dates in the future |
Have a question? We'll get back to you promptly.