AIG posts 1Q loss of $7.8B, plans to raise $12.5B
By STEPHEN BERNARD,
AP
Posted: 2008-05-09 00:09:25
NEW YORK (AP) - American International Group Inc. says it will
raise $12.5 billion in the coming months as the insurer looks to
shore up a capital base that has been rocked by deterioration in
the credit markets.
AIG shares tumbled $3.27, or 7.4 percent, to $41.45 in
after-hours trading Thursday after the company disclosed it needs
fresh cash and reported a first-quarter loss of $7.81 billion.
The capital raising effort will be a two-step process, with the
first portion estimated to raise $7.5 billion through an offering
of common stock and equity units. The equity units will consist of
subordinated debt securities and contracts that require the holders
to purchase AIG stock at a future date.
No pricing for the offerings, nor a final date for when the
offering will be completed, was disclosed.
Citigroup Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are managing the
offerings.
Once the $7.5 billion offering is completed, AIG will raise an
additional $5 billion through an offering of high equity
fixed-income securities. AIG, the world's biggest insurer, has yet
to disclose a timetable for when it will offer the securities.
All of the new capital is being raised in response to the hard
hits AIG has taken from deterioration in the credit markets, which
led the insurer to lose billions of dollars for the second straight
quarter.
As defaults sharply increased on mortgages beginning in the
middle of 2007, investors shied away from purchasing all but the
safest debt. Because of the illiquidity in the credit markets the
value of risky debt has plummeted, forcing companies like AIG to
reduce the value of their investments in products such as credit
default swaps and mortgage-backed securities.
"While we anticipated a difficult trading environment, the
severity of the unrealized valuation losses and decline in value of
our investments were beyond our expectations," Martin Sullivan,
AIG's president and chief executive, said in a statement.
Problems in the credit markets have forced other financial
services firms, including Citigroup and Merrill Lynch & Co., to
raise billions of dollars in new capital as well.
New York-based AIG lost $7.81 billion, or $3.09 per share,
during the quarter ended March 31, compared with earnings of $1.58
per share, or $4.13 billion, during the year-ago period. It lost
more than $5 billion during the final quarter of 2007.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial, on average, forecast a
loss of 76 cents per share in the latest quarter.
AIG lost $9.11 billion in its credit-default swaps portfolio
during the first quarter. The swaps promise to cover losses on $579
billion in bonds or other kinds of debt. Losses in its investment
portfolio, which includes debt backed by troubled mortgages,
totaled $6.09 billion.
AIG says it lost $352 million in its mortgage insurance
business, United Guaranty, which makes principal and interest
payments when borrowers miss mortgage payments.
Overall, the insurance writing business at AIG was relatively
flat compared with the first quarter last year. Net premiums
written fell less than 1 percent during the first quarter to $12.08
billion. AIG's net premiums written totaled $12.11 billion during
the same quarter last year.
Separately, the board of directors approved a 2 cent per share,
or 10 percent, boost to its quarterly cash dividend, to 22 cents.
The dividend will be paid Sept. 19 to shareholders of record on
Sept. 5.
The company also appointed Steven Bensinger vice chairman of
financial services. He previously served as executive vice
president and chief financial officer at AIG. He will continue in
his current role until a replacement can be found, the company
said.
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05/09/08 00:08 EDT