AIG und die Zukunft
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Ich hoffe mal das es nicht so Schlecht / Langweilig läuft wie bei denn Q3 Zahlen...
In 2 min 10% runter und fertig.
Die wichtigen Daten des Tages kommen aus den USA. Sagt Ihnen der Name AIG noch etwas? Heute jedenfalls wieder, das Q4 steht an, Gewinn wird keiner erwartet. Aber wie hoch fallen die Abschreibungen aus?
Abschreibungen wird auch das Thema von Lloyds Banking um 09.00 Uhr sein. Acerinox (voestalpine)m Telefonica (Telekom Austria) und auch Europas Konjunkturzahlen verkommen heute in Österreich wohl zum Nebenschauplatz.
Doch bevor wir uns unserem High Noon nähern, der Nebenschauplatz:
11.00 gibt es Europas VPI für Jänner, der auf Jahresbasis von 0,9 auf 1,0 Prozent gestiegen sein soll.
Die USA ist dann wieder wichtiger:
15.45 der PMI Chicago soll im Februar 59,7 nach 61,5 Punkten anzeigen. Das Verbrauchervertrauen der Uni Michigan für Februar ist eine Folgeschätzung (73,9 Punkte) wie auch BIP (5,7% auf Quartalsbasis nach 2,2 und minus 0,7%), Privater Konsum (2,0%), nicht aber die Wiederverkauften Häuser im Jänner (5,5 nach 5,45 Millionen) im Jänner. Nach der Enttäuschung bei den Neubauverkäufen stimmt hoffentlich diesmal die Richtung.
http://www.be24.at/blog/entry/636361/...-treichl-stepic-rothensteiner
American International Group is due to report fourth quarter results February 26 before the opening bell, the last major public insurance company to do so. Judging by the drumbeat of positive publicity, the world’s worst-kept secret–that AIG is alive and getting well –is out.
An insurance blog had the headline, “American International Group May Be on the Road to Recovery.” It quotes Nomura Securities International‘s Managing Director David Havens, as saying that, “AIG has pulled out of what could have been a death spiral.”
Not previously known as a big fan of AIG, Bloomberg News reversed course when Bloomberg BusinessWeek ran a favorable article that Barron’s, with a note of jealousy, headlined “BusinessWeek Trumpets AIG’s Revival.” Bloomberg News then followed up with a second story, “AIG: There’s a Pulse.” The piece reinforced its positive view of the insurer’s core businesses: property casualty, life and commercial insurance. And in a third article, Bloomberg News said, “AIG is showing stable revenue for insurance units.”
Of course, the core businesses were never the problem, at least not until AIG got in trouble because of the portfolio of toxic mortgage-backed securities at its Financial Products unit. But even these seem to be doing better, according to recent reports, and AIG isn’t in a hurry to dump them anymore.
There are two wild cards that could cream what looks like a pretty good hand. One is AIG’s investment portfolio. Some insurers have done exceptionally well in the most recent quarter, based on their “alternative investments” with hedge funds and private equity, which have outperformed the market of late. No one knows how AIG has fared. The other is its property-casualty portfolio. Competing P-C insurers, such as Chubb, say that AIG is buying clients, even bad ones, for ridiculously low prices in an effort to raise revenue. That could ultimately prove costly if the insurer has to pay excessive future claims.
AIG will also have losses due to restructuring charges involved in getting rid of some of its unwanted foreign life insurance units, according to CNN Money. But that doesn’t generally worry investors, who look at ongoing operations rather than those a company is sloughing off.
AIG’s earnings report will, as usual, be complicated and difficult to understand. Only three analysts cover the troubled empire, and AIG doesn’t appear to be holding the usual conference call with investors (unless you consider the one it obviously had with Bloomberg). But the broad outlines are evident: The company is climbing out of the shadow of the valley of death.
That said, its stock is still only half the $56 a share it traded at last August when investors were excited about new CEO Robert Benmosche.
http://industry.bnet.com/financial-services/...ourth-quarter-results/
Wann genau haben wir denn mit den Zahlen zu rechnen? Muss nochmal weg heute ne Kiste Budweiser holen.
Obwohl der Kurs eh erst nach 15.30 gemacht wird,egal was kommt..
Gesten stand bei finanzen.net das Rating für AIG noch bei 2 Sterne, heute kann ich 4 Sterne vernehmen, seltsam hält man sich doch bei AIG im allgemeinen sehr zurück.
Nur so am rande..
Oregon Attorney General John Kroger and state Treasurer Ben Westlund said AIG caused the state pension fund to lose about $15 million because the value of the company's shares was inflated between 2000 and 2005.
The pension fund had a value of $51.5 billion as of Jan. 31.
American International Group Inc. was a major player in credit default swaps, cited as a catalyst for the market collapse leading to the recession in 2008 and 2009.
In a joint release issued Thursday, Kroger and Westlund said AIG used more swaps than the company could pay for and failed to properly account for that debt in regulatory filings.
AIG admitted no wrongdoing or liability as part of the Oregon settlement.
The agreement reserved the right for Oregon to participate in a federal class-action lawsuit against AIG.
The state lawsuit claimed that AIG repeatedly failed to disclose unethical and improper practices, including a bid-rigging scheme with other insurers.
The complaint said the value of AIG stock declined repeatedly after the corporate behavior was made public and after the company corrected what were then misleading corporate disclosure documents.
Oregon's public employee retirement system, or PERS, has about 320,000 working and retired members, including police officers, firefighters and teachers who rely on the pension fund.
AIG must pay the $8 million by Monday, according to the agreement.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.
http://www.katu.com/news/85453492.html
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLDE61P0KS20100226
und der hier noch:
http://www.google.com/finance?client=ob&q=NYSE:AIGNormalerweise kommt vorher was durch, dass Bewegung bringt.
Ist vielleicht Alles so erwartet und wir erleben einen langweiligen Tag?
Keine Angst, da wird heute sicherlich noch einiges passieren.
Hätte auch gestern nach Börsenschluss was "rauskommen" können.
ok,dann warten wir noch ein bißchen...
ist das nicht etwas mickrig?
Schließlich sind 180 Milliarden zurückzuzahlen...
In diesem Tempo würde das ja ca.6 Jahre dauern....
Gruß
DC.