%tag% New-look AIG to Sell Both Life and P | Insurance | You can find everything popular in our life here! WoW! iPhone! Movie! CreditCards! AutoCars! and so on……

New-look AIG to Sell Both Life and P

Group Inc. will sell its operations in the U.S., , Latin America, South and Japan, a Bloomberg report announced this morning. CNN also is reporting that will sell some of its personal lines /casualty businesses. As of now, no definitive currently are in place for any of its or &C .

The company said will refashion itself into a global /casualty insurer with a stake in an overseas unit that sells policies in China, Korea and , CEO Liddy said today in a conference call with analysts.

"We won’t exactly be the of old, but we’ll have a very secure position," Liddy added. "This is going to be a formidable company that emerges from this."

Selling operations is a reversal for Liddy, who previously said staying in that was a priority. The firm has already borrowed about $61 billion of the credit line, two weeks after agreeing to give the U.S. a majority stake in for the loan.

Liddy said he prefers to sell "large slices" of to "brand-name" companies because that strategy will hasten divestitures and benefit customers and employees. He also will try to "monetize" in ’s credit-default swap portfolio, which are included in a subsidiary that hobbled with more than $25 billion in writedowns.

Liddy needs to reassure clients and employees of ’s long-term prospects while showing investors and the Treasury he can sell units fast enough to pay back debt, the Bloomberg report said. Liddy, appointed by the government to run , helped oversee the spinoffs of Allstate Corp., Discover , real estate broker Coldwell Banker Corp. and securities brokerage Dean Witter when he was an retailer Sears Roebuck & Co.

Housing Slump

almost collapsed last month from credit downgrades and writedowns tied to the U.S. housing slump. The insurer posted about $18.5 billion in net over three quarters, and its plunged more than 90% this year.

The insurer is working on a "number of alternatives" for the unit that sold credit-default swaps, the for debt investors that plunged in value as the securities they guaranteed declined, said in a statement.

’s /casualty units insure planes, shipping, factories and homes and protect commercial owners against terrorist . Liddy said he may sell ’s operation in the U.S.

, Airplanes

The company also owns a home lender, reinsurer Transatlantic Holdings Inc., and Lease Corp., the largest lessor of planes to . received .3% of its revenue last year from airline leasing. Second-quarter operating income from the unit rose 85% to $352 million as the company expanded its fleet and more to rent planes.

Bloomberg noted that competitors may want to buy units that remained profitable as was overwhelmed by units that originate, insure and invest in home loans. Billionaire Warren Buffett told CNBC Sept. 24 that his Inc. may consider buying some businesses, without naming which ones. operates in more than 100 countries.

Former CEO Maurice "Hank" also is reportedly interested in buying from . , who controlled the largest block of before the takeover through personal holdings and firms, cut the stake to just below % of the shares last month. The reduction may mean less scrutiny from the Department, should he try to purchase , said department spokesman David Neustadt.

Looking for

Munich Re also is reported to be " ;interested" in , CEO Nikolaus von Bomhard said yesterday in a Bloomberg . The Munich-based reinsurer said ’s seeking to expand its primary .

Toronto-based Manulife Corp. is looking the Asian of , the Globe and reported last week. Vienna Group and Tokio Marine Holdings Inc. also may be interested in units in their regions, said analyst David Bradford of Advisen Ltd.

INN reported earlier this week that has already agreed to sell its 50% ownership of to raise cash.

Blackstone Group LP and JPMorgan Chase & Co., both based in , are coordinating the , said.

agreed to payments for borrowed amounts on the two-year government credit line of 8.5% plus the three-month London interbank offered (LIBOR). On the unused balance, the insurer will pay 8.5%. The company also has to pay a $1.7 billion one- time fee on the loan. Three-month LIBOR rose to .33% from .88% the day the deal was announced as institutions hoard cash to meet future needs amid concern more companies will collapse.

Preferred

said will issue preferred worth 79.9% of the company to a trust of the U.S. Treasury. The shares will be issued without investor approval because would "seriously jeopardize" , the firm said. The U.S. gets the stake "even if the credit facility is repaid in full," said in a Sept. 26 filing.

The $1 trillion-asset company has about $48.7 billion in hard-to-value holdings, and had 116, employees as of Dec. 31, , compared with 97, two years earlier. In addition to selling and protecting , owns or manages about $25.7 billion of real estate including residential, industrial and retail properties. The company had private and hedge fund holdings of about $30 billion as of June 30, .

Sources: Bloomberg.com, CNNMoney.com

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Related posts

No Comments

Leave a reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.