AIG und die Zukunft
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http://tata-aiggeneral.com/tagic/index.jsp
Aber bei jeden Deal den er macht hält er noch Anteile von der Firma die kauft.
Sagen tut er natürlich das wird auch Verkauft ,aber er wird warten ob die Anteile ihn profit bringen.
Wenn ja wird er ein scheiß verkaufen ,glaube sogar das er die Anteile noch ausbauen wird.
Was er da macht ,macht er gut echt gutes Poker.
Hat schon bei AIA gut gezockt unser Ben.
Rico du bleibst bei 29,50 $ ?
As DealBook reported Sunday, the American International Group agreed to sell a second major insurance unit, this one to MetLife for about $15.5 billion. It was the second deal the insurer has struck in one week, raising about $51 billion to repay its taxpayer-financed rescue.
Now comes the hard part, The New York Times’s Mary Williams Walsh and Michael J. de la Merced write.
Even after wiping away $51 billion of debt, A.I.G. will owe roughly $50 billion to the government. That amount is likely to keep slowly growing, because the government made large sums available — $182 billion in a number of forms — when it came to the rescue.
The company has not drawn down that full amount, but every few months it taps a billion or two billion more, to finance its restructuring or bolster its insurance units.
The boards of both companies met Sunday and approved the sale of the A.I.G. unit, the American Life Insurance Company, known as Alico, people briefed on the matter said told The Times.
The two latest deals involve selling what the insurance giant has called its “crown jewels,” leaving it with no obvious pieces to sell off to raise big blocks of cash to pay the rest of the debt.
If the company continues to draw on its government assistance, it will have to make the value of its businesses grow even faster, in order to stay ahead.
“There’s a lot going on and it’s still uncertain,” said Bill Bergman, a senior equity analyst at the market research company Morningstar. He said the company’s revenue, in the form of insurance premiums, seemed to have stabilized in the fourth quarter, “and that’s helpful.”
But under the surface, he said it was hard to know how profitable the new insurance policies written by the company would prove to be. The insurance business is considered soft at the moment, with companies unable to raise their prices to increase profitability.
One way for A.I.G. to repay the rest of its bailout would be to eventually convert the government’s existing holdings of preferred stock in A.I.G. into common shares that could then be sold over time, The Times said, citing a person briefed on the matter.
But investors’ appetite for A.I.G. stock is uncertain. A.I.G. was not profitable in 2009. About $5 billion of its approximately $11 billion loss for the year stemmed from a one-time accounting charge. Setting aside additional money in reserve to pay future claims caused $2.7 billion of its loss, the company said, something Mr. Bergman called “a red flag.”
But the purchase of Alico by MetLife also carries uncertainties. A. M. Best, a ratings firm that specializes in insurance companies, said in February that it was reviewing MetLife’s ratings, with a negative outlook, in light of the possible acquisition.
“There is uncertainty with respect to the impact on MetLife’s balance sheet, capitalization and financial metrics,” A. M. Best said in a statement.
Under the terms of the deal, MetLife will pay about $6.8 billion in cash, with the rest of the purchase being made in a mixture of common and preferred shares. The first $9 billion in proceeds from the sale will go toward redeeming preferred shares in Alico held by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, with the remainder to be used to reduce the New York Fed’s lending commitment to A.I.G, according to The Times.
For MetLife, the acquisition of Alico will give it instant access to dozens of international markets. Alico operates in more than 50 countries, with its largest operations in Japan and Britain. Other operations are in Latin America, the Middle East and other parts of Asia. It is expected to begin significantly adding to MetLife’s earnings per share in 2011, a person briefed on the matter said.
Stock analysts have said they will view MetLife’s foreign expansion favorably, because other big American life insurers like Prudential Financial and Aflac already have significant international presences. Through the sale, A.I.G. will initially hold about an 8 percent stake in MetLife, though it will essentially lack independent voting rights, these people told The Times. As A.I.G.’s preferred shares are converted into common stock over the next few years, that stake could rise to more than 20 percent.
The deal is expected to close by the end of 2010, these people said.
The MetLife agreement came just a week after A.I.G. accepted an offer for its other big overseas life insurer, American International Assurance, from Prudential, a British company that is not related to Prudential Financial. The British company offered to pay about $35.5 billion for A.I.A., and the first $15 billion will be used to redeem another block of preferred stock held by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The remainder will reduce the Fed’s lending facility to A.I.G.
A number of steps remain before the New York Fed receives the full $50 billion from these two transactions. But if all goes as planned, the Fed’s lending commitment to A.I.G. will shrink to about $10 billion, from $35 billion, where it has stood since Dec. 1. The commitment was $60 billion before that, but the Fed reduced it by swapping $25 billion of the commitment for preferred equity in the two subsidiaries now being sold.
The company continues to take on fresh debt even now, more than a year after its government rescue. A.I.G. still cannot roll over its commercial paper, even as most other large companies have been able to end their reliance on a special program set up by the Fed when the credit markets froze in the fall of 2008.
The Fed has been winding down that program, so A.I.G. recently drew $3.1 billion from its lending commitment from the Fed and used the money to pay back the Fed’s commercial paper program.
That transaction increased A.I.G.’s borrowings from its New York Fed lending commitment to a total of $21 billion, from $17.9 billion at the end of the year.
dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/08/after-metlife-deal-a-i-g-s-next-step-is-unclear/
Da ALICO nicht so groß wie AIA und AIG 20% an METL. hält . Würde es mich natürlich freuen
wenn ich mich irre.
Moqai a bissl was bleibt da schon noch übrig.
Zurück zur SmarTrend News & Market Analysis
AIG Vereinbarung über den Verkauf American Life Insurance für $ 15,5 Mrd. (AIG, MetLife MET) - 3/8/2010 7:00:19
Von Chip Brian, SmarTrend Analytics-Team
3/8/2010- AIG (NYSE: AIG) Sind übereingekommen, American Life Insurance Co. für MetLife Inc. zu verkaufen (NYSE: MET) Für 15,5 Milliarden Dollar, die der Gesellschaft im zweiten Veräußerung in diesem Monat ist laut Bloomberg.
MetLife wird $ 6,8 Milliarden in bar und 8,7 Mrd. USD in Aktien zahlen für die Division.
AIG zuvor gesagt, dass sie über 9 Mrd. $ aus dem Verkauf oder Börsengang der American Life Insurance Co. treffen werden, um Unterstützung erhielt sie von der Regierung zurückzuzahlen.
Mit diesem erneuten Verkauf war zu rechnen,
hoffe das auch die Käufer + Träumer in USA schlauer geworden sind.
Die letzte Veräußerung hat im Kurs nicht lange gehalten.
Fragt sich was am Ende in dieser Holding noch übrig bleibt ! ?
Kann diese Frage überhaupt einer beantworten? Ich glaube nicht.
Chartis, die Flugzeugsparte, noch was in Japan und was kommt dann???
Aig besitzt doch durch die cross border leasing Verträge z.B. ein Wasserwerk in NRW das 7 Millionen Menschen in Deutschland mit Wasser versorg. Es sollen ungefähr 100 dieses Verträge in Deutschland existieren.
Hat Aig auch cross border leasing verträge in z.B. Frankreich und so?
Ich glaub über cross border leasing hat sich hier noch keiner Gedanken gemacht.
Wer weiß was über die Einkünfte und den Wert solcher Vertäge?
1. American Home Insurance Company
2. National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh
3. New Hampshire Insurance Company
4. Lexington Insurance Company
5. Chartis Overseas, Inc.
6. AIU Insurance Company
7. American International Reinsurance Company Limited
8. American General Life Insurance Company
9. American General Life and Accident Insurance Company
10. The United Staats Life Insurance Company in the City of New York
11. The Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company
12. Western National Life Insurance Company
13. SunAmerica Annuity and Life Assurance Company
14. American Life Insurance Company (ALICO)
15. AIG Star Life Insurance Co., Ltd.
16. AIG Edison Life Insurance Company
17. American International Assurance Company, Limited
18. The Philippine American Life and General Insurance Company
19. International Lease Finance Corporation (ILFC)
20. AIG Financial Products Corp. and AIG Trading Group. Inc,
21. American General Finance, Inc.
22. AIG Consumer Finance Group, Inc.
23. AIG Credit Corp.
Ob ein Kurs von über $30 am Ende des Handelstages Realität sein
wird, wird man sehen.
Pre-Market Trade Reporting
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Wünschen würde ich mir einen stetigen Anstieg, mit kleineren Raketen ;-)