AIG posts
Posted Jul 1st 2009 4:05PM by Jon Ogg
Filed under: Amer Intl Group (AIG), Rite Aid Corp (RAD)

Stocks opened up on the day and stayed up on the day, despite closing well off of the highs. We had three key economic reports hit at once as the Institute for Supply Management gave the June ISM Manufacturing data, while we saw pending home sales data and new construction spending data mixed for May. These actually
ended up being contradictory numbers, and then the
oil inventories did nothing to support higher oil prices.
Here were today's unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow 8,504.06 +57.06 (0.68%)
S&P 500 923.33 +4.01 (0.44%)
Nasdaq 1,845.72 +10.68 (0.58%)
Top Analyst Upgrades & DowngradesContinue reading Closing Bell: Kicking off Q3 with a win (AIG, BIIB, LDK, PIR, RAD)
Posted Jun 25th 2009 11:40AM by Mark Fightmaster
Filed under: Competitive strategy, Amer Intl Group (AIG), Initial public offerings
Earlier this morning, embattled insurer American International Group (NYSE: AIG) announced that it is going to reduce its outstanding federal loans by $25 billion by giving a preferred stake in two spin-off units to the government. The two subsidiaries, American International Assurance and American Life Insurance, will be spun off into "special purpose vehicles" ahead of initial public offerings. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York will receive interests in the special purpose vehicles (SPVs), both of which will eventually become independent companies after the IPOs are complete.
The $25 billion breaks down like this: the Fed will receive $16 billion in preferred assets in American International Assurance and $9 billion in American Life Insurance. Reportedly, the outstanding debt for AIG will be cut to $15 billion thanks to this move. AIG now has as much as $182.5 billion in funding available from the government, extending the original offer of $85 billion from back in September.
Continue reading AIG will spin off units in order to reduce debt
Posted Jun 10th 2009 5:00PM by Zac Bissonnette
Filed under: Bad news, Amer Intl Group (AIG)

Remember when the United States government took a bunch of your money and bought crap securities from Bear Stearns and
American International Group (NYSE:
AIG) -- and promised we wouldn't lose money? The securities were temporarily undervalued because of an "illiquid marketplace" and we'd earn handsome returns.
Ah, yeah. About that.
The Associated Press reports that "
The Federal Reserve lost $5.25 billion in the first quarter on the securities it acquired with last year's bailouts of
Bear Stearns and insurer
American International Group, according to a report Wednesday. The loss on the holdings, which include mortgage-backed securities, reflected a decline in their value as the recession carried over into the first three months of this year. The cumulative loss on the Bear and AIG holdings comes to $16.46 billion since they were taken over last year."
Continue reading Fed is already $5.25 billion in the hole on AIG, Bear Stearns 'investments'
Posted Jun 5th 2009 3:30PM by Bruce Watson
Filed under: Housing, Financial Crisis

In a story that is sure to fill many American's with a warm sense of satisfaction,
American International Group (AIG) has agreed to sell two of its buildings in lower Manhattan. Although the deal hasn't been made public yet, an agreement has, apparently, been reached between buyer and seller.
The irony continues, as it appears that AIG's headquarters at
70 Pine Street may soon be the site of condominiums (presumably, they will not be purchased with subprime mortages). According to reports, the space was sold for approximately $100 million to an overseas company that plans to transform it into a mixed-use development including both retail and residential spaces.
Continue reading Delicious irony: AIG has to sell its home
Posted Jun 3rd 2009 11:00AM by Elizabeth Harrow
Filed under: Amer Intl Group (AIG), Options, Financial Crisis
Reports today indicate that American International Group, Inc. (NYSE: AIG) may need yet another bailout from the federal government. This time, The New York Post states that AIG will likely require additional government guarantees before it can successfully sell its International Lease Finance Corp. (ILFC) aircraft leasing business.
"Already, the government has agreed to guarantee $5 billion of debt, but those remaining in the auction now want either more government aid or support from airline manufacturers," reports the Post. The newspaper notes that ILFC carries a $30 billion debt load, portions of which will soon mature, along with $50 billion in assets. The unit, which has been up on the auction block since last September, has a book value of $7.5 billion.
AIG shares slipped more than 6% this morning to trade at $1.46, extending their 52-week swoon of 95.7%. After smacking into resistance from its 10-month moving average, the stock is now struggling to maintain a foothold atop its recently supportive 10-week trendline.
Even though the security is trading fairly low on the charts already, some traders are betting on continued losses from AIG. Despite a 16.4% drop in short interest during the most recent reporting period, shorted shares still account for a hefty 9.7% of the stock's available float. Plus, peak put open interest in the June series lies at the 2 strike, with 17,975 contracts in residence.
Elizabeth Harrow is an analyst and financial writer in the research department at Schaeffer's Investment Research. She is featured in the video series Schaeffer's Daily Q&A on SchaeffersResearch.com.
Posted Jun 2nd 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer
Filed under: Apple Inc (AAPL), Ford Motor (F), Market matters, Citigroup Inc. (C), Chubb Corp (CB), Amer Intl Group (AIG), DJIA, Cramer on BloggingStocks, Travelers Companies Inc. (TRV)
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says that it's the most conservative player in an industry filled with gunslingers. The keepers of the Dow Jones Industrial Average must have felt insurance-less after the defrocking of
AIG (NYSE:
AIG) (
Cramer's Take), so it's fitting that they added
Travelers (NYSE:
TRV) (
Cramer's Take) to the list, even as I would have preferred
Ford (NYSE:
F) (
Cramer's Take) or
Apple (NASDAQ:
AAPL) (
Cramer's Take).
They needed a financial that wasn't a bank and there aren't many out there that still trade at anything but desperate levels or weren't saved by the government.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Travelers is a fitting pick
Posted May 19th 2009 9:30AM by Jim Cramer
Filed under: Good news, Home Depot (HD), Market matters, Citigroup Inc. (C), Amer Intl Group (AIG), Lowe's Cos (LOW), Stocks to Buy, Housing, Cramer on BloggingStocks, Financial Crisis
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says some really good things are happening, but you wouldn't know it from reading the headlines. You want to shoot yourself when you read these headlines. "Local Banks Face Big Losses," is the lead story in
The Wall Street Journal, a fomented survey story telling us that commercial lending is going to sink local and community banks under a pile of $100 billion in bad loans.
This is news?
So what!
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Let's read some good news for once
Posted May 11th 2009 10:30AM by Elizabeth Harrow
Filed under: Amer Intl Group (AIG), Options, Financial Crisis
A report today in The Wall Street Journal [subscription required] indicates that the restructuring of American International Group, Inc. (NYSE: AIG) could be a multi-year process.
The paper cites an internal email sent to AIG employees on April 23, which describes an initiative known as "Project Destiny." The dreamily named plan involves a 45-day review of the insurance issue's various units, which is then meant to generate a longer-term road map for the future.
While the internal memo explains Project Destiny as an "effort to redefine the future of most of the major businesses within AIG," Chief Restructuring Officer Paula Reynolds described the initiative in terms indicating that all AIG needs to regain its joie de vivre is a torrid island affair with a younger man. "Simply put, we are going to get our groove back," she enthused.
Continue reading American International Group's restructuring could take years
Posted May 8th 2009 2:20PM by Sheldon Liber
Filed under: Good news, Rumors, Rants and raves, General Motors (GM), Scandals, Citigroup Inc. (C), Money and Finance Today, Amer Intl Group (AIG), Comfort Zone Investing, DJIA, Recession

The market has been leaving the doubters behind for the last nine weeks. If there is no pullback based on the bear market theories (that do make some sense), then all those folks who thought this push upward was phony are going to be sorry -- and poorer!
Bad news, modest earnings and even losses have not brought down the overall market. Low expectations for growth going forward, and the bankruptcies of major U.S. corporations only cause a short pause. Corporate scandals, shamed corporate executives and excesses have not shaken the market. Even multi-billion dollar con artists might make the headlines but they do not rattle anyone's nerves any more unless of course they had placed money in their slimy hands.
Over the course of the last year we have witnessed the dramatic collapse of the largest commercial bank in the world,
Citigroup (NYSE:
C), the largest thrift in the world; Washington Mutual; the largest insurance company in the world;
American International Group (NYSE:
AIG) and the largest automobile company in the world,
General Motors (NYSE:
GM) -- all U.S. based.
Continue reading Bear rally or not, investors seem shock-resistant
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