AIG posts
FeedPosted Nov 24th 2009 1:00PM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Management, Amer Intl Group (AIG)
While Timothy Geithner gets deservedly raked over the coals for handling the America International Group (AIG) "negotiations" with kid gloves, federal officials are pressuring executive pay czar Kenneth Feinberg to ease pay restrictions on the company for the year 2010.
The concern is that tight pay restrictions, while politically popular, might hurt AIG's ability to attract and retain competent people -- thereby putting the taxpayers' long-term investment in the company at even greater risk.
Continue reading Pay czar Feinberg pressed to ease AIG pay restrictions
Posted Nov 11th 2009 4:05PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: Motorola (MOT), Research in Motion (RIMM), Palm Inc (PALM)

This was a strange day with a half-participation as bonds and many government offices were closed due to this being the Veterans Day holiday. Stocks were up all day and this works out to be six straight days of a rally in the DJIA. We had no economic news to digest and here are today's unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow: 10,291.10 +44.13 (0.43%)
S &P: 1,098.52, +5.51 (0.50%)
Nasdaq: 2,166.90, +15.82 (0.74%)
Top day trader alertsTop analyst callsTop market rumorsAIG
(AIG) could have a key vacancy open at the firm. Its new CEO Benmosche has expressed to its board of directors that he may step down over frustration of working under the government and over salary restrictions. This would not be welcome as he is deemed one of the few who can run that show. A late day memo from the company said he is committed and the press is over pay for those at the company. Shares were 'only' down 0.7% at $37.30 right before the close.
Continue reading Closing Bell: A six-day rally (AIG, REGN, M, MOT, PALM, RIMM)
Posted Nov 10th 2009 4:00PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: Amer Intl Group (AIG), Sun Microsystems (JAVA), Electronic Arts (ERTS), MBIA Inc (MBI)

We had another bit of data showing
strong home sales in Q3, but as prices fell. Yet the only real thing to note was that the sell-off that was starting out this morning just didn't hold when you look at the broad indexes today. Some dollar directional changes may be part of the issue that kept the stocks from getting cheaper. There were still many losers on the day.
Here were today's unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow 10,247.88 +20.94 (0.20%)
S&P 500 1,093.04 -0.04 (0.00%)
Nasdaq 2,151.08 -2.98 (-0.14%)
Top Analyst Upgrades/DowngradesTop day trader stocksTop market rumorsContinue reading Closing Bell: What sell-off? (AIG, ABK, EPR, MBI, JAVA, ORCL, ERTS)
Posted Nov 10th 2009 12:30PM by Elizabeth Harrow (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Amer Intl Group (AIG), Options, Technical Analysis, Financial Crisis
Notorious insurance titan American International Group (AIG) is on the upswing today, after Moody's Investors Service reported late Monday that it expects AIG will be able to repay its government debt. The ratings agency observed that AIG has made progress with its restructuring plan, and the firm's latest quarterly earnings "show continued stabilization of the core insurance operations despite challenging market conditions."
The insurance issue has put many of its non-core assets up for sale during the past year to generate capital and pare its unwieldy size, but some of those plans have been iced by new CEO Robert Benmosche. Moody's likes the new chief's approach, with the firm observing, "We believe that the slower approach to restructuring could help AIG to generate more favorable values from its business portfolio than would be the case under rushed asset sales."
Continue reading American International Group rallies on Moody's report
Posted Sep 22nd 2009 8:30AM by Paul Foster (RSS feed)
Filed under: Amer Intl Group (AIG), Options
American International (NYSE: AIG) closed at $48.40. AIG options were active on volume of 380,937 contracts on September 21. October and November call option implied volatility is at 140, puts are at 152; above its 26-week average of 109, according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement. AIG puts are more expensive than calls because AIG is difficult to borrow.
UltraShort Financials ProShares (NYSE: SKF) is recently down 70 cents to $24.71. SKF is an exchange traded fund seeking daily investment results that correspond to twice (200%) the inverse (opposite) of the daily performance of the Dow Jones U.S. Financials Index. SKF October call option implied volatility is at 65, puts are at 59, November is at 63; below its 26-week average of 92, according to Track Data, suggesting decreasing price movement.
Option Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com
Posted Sep 14th 2009 5:00PM by Mark Fightmaster (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bank of America (BAC), Financial Crisis

Let's dive into the world of breaking news here, as the New York Attorney General's office has decided to mark the one-year anniversary of the financial meltdown by
preparing charges against some
Bank of America (NYSE:
BAC) executives. Reportedly, the charges stem from the failure to disclose details about the company's acquisition of Merrill Lynch.
The Attorney General (Andrew Cuomo) is likely to file charges against the executives because of their failure to alert shareholders to mounting losses and accelerated bonus payments at Merrill. Earlier, a federal district judge rejected a $33-million settlement between BAC and the SEC over the same executive bonuses. This settlement was in relation to the fact that BAC did not inform shareholders of an agreement to pay Merrill Lynch execs billions of dollars worth of bonuses, the deal was struck before BAC acquired Merrill.
Continue reading Bank of America execs facing charges
Posted Sep 14th 2009 2:20PM by Kevin Kersten (RSS feed)
Filed under: Citigroup Inc. (C), Bank of America (BAC), Amer Intl Group (AIG), Federal Reserve, Financial Crisis
It has been about a year since Lehman Brothers failed and this financial crisis started, and it has hit many of the banks hard including Bank of American (NYSE: BAC), Citigroup (NYSE: C) and America International Group (NYSE: AIG).
There has been one thing that has been bugged me in the coverage of it since then. Frequently, reporters use words like unprecedented or unparalleled to describe it. That is false! Financial crises, panics, crashes, bubbles, and bank failures are really about a dime a dozen.
Continue reading Are we going to crash again?
Posted Sep 8th 2009 11:20AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, General Electric (GE), Amer Intl Group (AIG), Harley-Davidson (HOG), Analyst initiations
Analyst upgrades:
- Bernstein upgraded Lincoln National (NYSE: LNC) to Outperform from Market Perform based on relative valuation and expectations the company will repay TARP without a capital raise. The firm raised its target to $34 from $26.
- Thomas Weisel upgraded Ticketmaster (NASDAQ: TKTM) to Overweight from Market Weight and raised its target to $12 from $8 citing dynamic ticket pricing and the potential merger with Live Nation (NYSE: LYV).
- Citigroup upgraded Harley-Davidson (NYSE: HOG) to Hold from Sell after channel checks indicated retail sales have improved since Q2. The firm raised its target on shares to $26 from $14.
- McDermott (NYSE: MDR) was upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse.
- Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) was upgraded to Hold from Sell at Deutsche Bank.
- General Electric (NYSE: GE) was upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan.
Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: AIG, DFS, ERIC, GE, HOG, SYMC ...
Posted Sep 3rd 2009 9:30AM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Amer Intl Group (AIG)

Robert Benmosche has been CEO of
American International Group (NYSE:
AIG) for less than a month, but he's already established a reputation as an arrogant jerk -- which is exactly not what AIG needs at this particular moment in history.
Benmosche drew some sharp criticism for his comment that New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo "doesn't deserve to be in government" and his comment that he will deal with "all those crazies down in Washington."
Those are pretty ambitious comments given that he and every single AIG employee around the globe literally owe their jobs to an unprecedented episode of taxpayer largesse -- brought to you by, at the expense of much well-deserved populist resentment, those "crazies down in Washington."
Continue reading Will AIG slap around its obnoxious new CEO?
Posted Sep 2nd 2009 4:40PM by John Jagerson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Commodities, Recession
Gold usually has an inverse relationship with the dollar. When the USD goes up, gold goes down, because theoretically a stronger dollar can buy more gold. Additionally, commodities in general tend to fall on a stronger dollar because it is often correlated with lower expectations for growth.
This week we saw a major correction in equities with banks leading the way. American International Group, Inc. (NYSE: AIG) was down more than 20% on Tuesday alone. This is a fear-driven decline, and we can see evidence of that in a positive correlation between gold and the dollar.
Continue reading Gold is up as investors seek shelter from the storm
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