AIG Posts 2nd Consecutive Quarterly Profit

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STEPHEN BERNARD | 11/ 6/09 02:57 PM | AP

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NEW YORK — AIG said Friday it was profitable for the second straight quarter as its core insurance operations continue to stabilize after the company's bailout by the government last year.

American International Group Inc. also said the amount of its government financial assistance dropped by 4 percent during the third quarter. Its results got a lift from the increasing value of investments it still holds that soured last year and helped drive it to the brink of collapse.

While new insurance business stabilized compared with the second quarter, it is still sharply below year-ago figures as the economy remains weak and AIG struggles with its image after being bailed out by the government. A recovery in its core insurance operations is considered vital to AIG repaying the government.

CEO Robert Benmosche warned that earnings will remain choppy as the company executes its restructuring plan.

"We continue to focus on stabilizing and strengthening our businesses, but expect continued volatility in reported results in the coming quarters, due in part to charges related to ongoing restructuring activities," Benmosche said in a statement.

AIG said it plans to record a $5 billion charge in the fourth quarter as it proceeds with spinning off two major life insurance businesses. The insurer is shedding American International Assurance Co., or AIA, and American Life Insurance Co., also known as ALICO, as it looks to repay the government.

Shares of AIG fell $3.67, or 9.3 percent, to $35.61 in afternoon trading.

Len Blum, a managing partner at investment bank Westwood Capital, said "there is still tremendous risk" to owning the stock. AIG is still on very shaky footing because of the amount of changes it is undergoing and continued uncertainty about exactly how much it will be able to raise from selling assets, he said.

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Blum said the market for selling big businesses like AIG is attempting remains weak because of the struggling economy.

AIG shares have been extremely volatile since the company was bailed out last year. Shares, whose price has been boosted by a reverse split, hit a low of $6.60 in March, rose as high as $55.90 in late August, and then slipped again.

"It's a casino gamble," Blum said of the stock.

AIG was bailed out in September 2008 by the government as the financial crisis spiraled out of control. The insurer has received aid packages with a total value of more than $182 billion from the government. In return for that financial support, the government received an 80 percent stake in AIG.

The company was undermined not by its traditional insurance businesses, but instead by underwriting risky credit derivatives contracts. A collapse in the value of those contracts was the primary driver of AIG's near-collapse.

Recovering financial markets and changes in accounting rules have helped AIG write up the value of its remaining risky assets.

Blum said, however, those assets could again lose value or AIG could be forced to take losses as it sells them off. AIG had $1.1 trillion in derivative contracts sitting on its books as of Sept. 30, many of which are tied to risky mortgage debt.

AIG has been working for the past year to sell assets and streamline operations in an effort to repay the government debt. As of Sept. 30, AIG's outstanding assistance from the government totaled $122.31 billion, down 4 percent from the end of the second quarter.

Of that outstanding assistance, AIG owes the government $85.66 billion in loans and interest, a 2 percent decline from the end of the second quarter. The remaining $36.66 billion in outstanding assistance is tied the value of investments the government bought from AIG. As those investments pay off or rise in value, the government recoups more money.

The spinoffs of AIA and ALICO will help AIG reduce its outstanding assistance from the government by $25 billion. The government is taking preferred stakes in the two units as they are separated from AIG.

"Theoretically there's supposed to be enough assets that it can repay the government," said Cathy Seifert, an equity analyst at Standard & Poor's. It still remains to be seen if AIG's operations are worth as much as it owes the government, she added.

AIG is relying on improvement at its core insurance subsidiaries to generate profit to repay the government.

Net premiums written in AIG's general insurance business, which was rebranded in July as Chartis, rose 2 percent from the previous quarter to $8.08 billion, providing further signs that AIG's core insurance business is stabilizing. Rising claims in the division though weakened its profitability between the second and third quarter.

Premiums written in the general insurance business fell 13 percent from the third quarter last year. Life insurance premiums fell 16 percent from the year-ago period.

The year-over-year decline can be partly explained by the weak economy, but it does also indicate that customers remain nervous about AIG's long-term health, Seifert said. That concern can further erode the value of the company, which can hurt the price it gets when selling assets, she said.

Net income available to common shareholders was $92 million in the three months ended Sept. 30, compared with a loss of $24.47 billion, or $181.02 per share, during the same quarter last year – the quarter when it was initially bailed out.

Including the government's portion of the profit, AIG earned $455 million, or 68 cents per share, during the latest quarter.

Adjusted earnings, which excludes the government's stake and realized investment gains and losses totaled $385 million, or $2.85 per share.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, on average, forecast earnings of $1.98 per share for the quarter. Analysts estimates do not always include special charges.

During the second quarter, AIG's profit available to common shareholders was $311 million. Including the government's portion, AIG earned $1.82 billion.

NEW YORK — AIG said Friday it was profitable for the second straight quarter as its core insurance operations continue to stabilize after the company's bailout by the government last year. Amer...
NEW YORK — AIG said Friday it was profitable for the second straight quarter as its core insurance operations continue to stabilize after the company's bailout by the government last year. Amer...
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No more bailouts. No more too big to fail. more effort needs to be done to make work. Instead, unemployment keeps climbing as well as the deficit. Tax cuts and toehr stupid gimmicks aren't the answer.

hat tip to http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 PM on 11/09/2009
- illinoisan I'm a Fan of illinoisan 24 fans permalink
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Panic surrenders in the wake of the negative headlines provided the AIG companies with windfalls in surrender penalties. Many of those policyholders are buying new policies with plenty of up-front expense charges carried by subsidiaries who no longer advertise that they are owned by AIG. Consumer irrationality is the life blood of the financial industry.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 11/06/2009
- unionave I'm a Fan of unionave 64 fans permalink
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After AIG paid the Wall Street gang with our money it is amazing that they are showing a profit . Does this mean the Wall Street gang is buying more insurance ? If so , what is the name of this game ? More flim flam ?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:11 PM on 11/06/2009
- Furby2 I'm a Fan of Furby2 14 fans permalink
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My money's on flim flam.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 PM on 11/06/2009
- jinxed I'm a Fan of jinxed 38 fans permalink
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So that means they will be paying part of the bailout back, right? I hope these clowns don't expect a bonus!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:10 PM on 11/06/2009

AIG, the poster child for 'everything is wrong', 'everything is headed in a straight line for zero', 'the entire world is bankrupt' and 'the government is clueless about what happened or what to do to change things'.

biggest lesson of this most recent 'financial crisis'

most people are clueless. most predictions of the future are wrong full stop and that includes all predictions made during up cycles, down cycles and all points of change in between. and there is never any way to know which of the currently available prognostications has a higher probability of proving true or false until the postmortem is performed on the postmortem on the postmortem.

last but not least, while the internet could serve as the greatest source of reliable information available, it functioned as the greatest propagator of pointless misinformed/malformed opinion rather than information and did nothing to mitigate the impact of mass irrationality and clueless wrongness a phenomenon that has been repeatedly manifesting itself for five hundred years or more.

individually, there may be some growth in intelligence amongst the global population but collectively, there appears to be very little progress. we should be asking ourselves every day, what percentage of the on balance positives that are observed happened as the result of the law of large numbers more so than through some carefully crafted, skillfully executed plan/process.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:52 PM on 11/06/2009
- Furby2 I'm a Fan of Furby2 14 fans permalink
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I tried to do the math based on the earnings minus taxpayer contribution, and can't seem to come up with a number. Can anyone out there tell me what AIG netted without the bailout money? From my calculations, they netted a loss but I'm not sure.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 11/06/2009

Woo hooo I love job less recoveries..10.2% unemployment and the stock market is up anyway. I'm sure all the millions of unemployed would feel relieved to know the economy is finally growing even if there won;t be any jobs available to them due to outsourcing/insourcing technological efficiency, or greedy employers.
http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

We need a 2nd stimulus devoted only to JOBS

Stupid re.pukes and Milton Friendmanism keeping it from happening

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 11/06/2009
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Gee, just think how fast they could pay back Uncle Sam if we would just open up the sales desk at AIGFP. Now that there are executives there who actually know how to add and subtract, that unit could make a great deal of money on CDS.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:55 AM on 11/06/2009
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You think they could make money on CDSs? Just like they did . . . uhhh . . . when?


I'm sure if they figure out how to resurrect their little scheme that the Sr. Management and the Directors will be the ONLY ONES making money off CDSs (just like in the past).

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 11/06/2009

Your argument might be good enough to argue in favor of an indefinite number of federally or nationally funded Ph.D.s or post-docs in math or quantitative risk management.

But as a recommendation for the future of AIGFP it is like saying: wow, who says the Vietnam war is lost? We still have Rambo and the Deer Hunter, don't we?

Nota bene: the reason I have doubts about this proposal is because your problem is that you even fail to understand the moral of Rambo and the Deer Hunter.

To put it another way: you are under the suspicion of being among the people who fail to see the parallel between PTSD and the trader's option.

When ACDC came up with their album 'Highway to Hell' they were near their near-death experience with their hard lesson of death. I am talking about the death from suffocation. Of Bon Scott. Educate yourself, will you?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 11/06/2009

AIG must start paying back their bailout money immediately. All their profits should go towards paying for the bailout. There should be no bonuses for executives.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 11/06/2009
- Eidolas I'm a Fan of Eidolas 6 fans permalink

I don't disagree but given all of the statements about "stabilization" and "volatility", seems unlikely to happen for some time.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 PM on 11/06/2009

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