top Ad Widget

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

AIG's bailout is being boosted to $150 Billion

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    AIG's bailout is being boosted to $150 Billion

    WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- The U.S. government and American International Group Inc. (AIG) have revised the terms of the insurance giant's September bailout, boosting the size of the package to $150 billion and including the Treasury Department paying $40 billion for another 2% stake in the company.

    The package appears to be the largest the U.S. government has ever provided to a single company, according to senior Federal Reserve officials.

    Meanwhile, the company posted a $24.47 billion net loss for the third quarter following huge investment losses and write-downs.

    Shares of AIG were up 14% at $2.40 apiece recently, as investors focused on the potential benefit of the bailout to them.

    The investment, from the Treasury's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, is larger than what any bank is getting from the up to $250 billion of capital being injected into that sector from the purchase of preferred stock and warrants of various companies.

    In addition, up to $70 billion in exposure to collateralized debt obligations will be purchased. AIG insured many billions of CDOs, securities that combined various types of loans, of which sliced-and-diced portions were sold. The CDOs' tumbling values were the source of AIG's woes and pushed the company to the brink of bankruptcy.

    The Federal Reserve said Monday it would lend up to $30 billion to a facility to purchase CDOs insured by AIG through credit default swap contracts. AIG would lend $5 billion to the facility.

    Senior Federal Reserve officials Monday said the new federal aid package is the ideal way they would have wanted to help the ailing firm. However, in September, when they initially agreed to throw AIG an $85 billion lifeline, the new $700 billion bailout program had not been enacted. Injecting capital into AIG, which the Treasury is authorized to do under the new government bailout program, is a much better way to stabilize a faltering company than just providing a loan, the Fed officials said.

    Meanwhile, Treasury officials said a representative from President-elect Barack Obama's team was briefed about the restructuring Sunday night.

    AIG Chairman and Chief Executive Edward M. Liddy said, "Today's actions send a strong signal to our policyholders, business partners and counterparties that AIG is on the road to recovery. Our comprehensive plan addresses the liquidity issues that threatened AIG, and gives us the financial flexibility to complete our restructuring process successfully for the benefit of all of our constituencies." Analysts called the program good news for AIG equity and bond holders. "We believe that it will help to restore confidence in AIG's global franchise," said CreditSights Inc. analyst Rob Haines on Monday.

    The terms of the federal loan extended to AIG has also been substantially eased, falling to 3% above the London interbank offered rate, a common short- term benchmark, from 8.5% plus Libor.

    The new package is a tacit acknowledgment that the original $85 billion rescue in September, combined with an additional $37.8 billion made available to the company last month, together haven't come close to stabilizing AIG. The giant insurer employs more than 100,000 people worldwide and touches business and finance at innumerable points throughout the global economy.

    The loan's term also has been extended to five years from two.

    AIG laid out a far-reaching plan in early October for selling off assets to pay back the first loan the government extended, which was for up to $85 billion. But the turmoil in the markets has made it difficult for potential buyers to secure funding.

    The revised structure is designed to improve both AIG's ability to sell assets for a decent price and the taxpayer's ability to recoup the money that has been pumped into the insurer. It also transfers to the government many of the risks once absorbed by AIG, potentially exposing the government to billions of dollars in future losses.

    Meanwhile, AIG reported a third-quarter net loss of $24.47 billion, or $9.05 a share, compared with year-earlier net income of $3.09 billion, or $1.19 a share. Excluding capital losses, the red ink amounted to $9.24 billion, or $3.42 a share.

    The latest results included $7.05 billion in unrealized losses at AIG Financial Products, source of the credit-default swaps and $18.31 billion in investment write-downs, of which $11.7 billion was from AIG's securities-lending program. That effort, which has caused major problems for AIG as the stock market swooned in recent months, is being winded down.

    Operationally, AIG's general-insurance business swung to a loss amid $1.39 billion in catastrophe losses, primarily related to hurricanes Gustav and Ike; falling investment income; and increased losses at United Guaranty. General- insurance net premiums dipped 0.8% to $11.73 billion.

    Life-insurance and retirement-services profits were more than halved by weak partnership and mutual-fund results.

    -By Kevin Kingsbury, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2136; kevin.kingsbury@ dowjones.com

    (Lavonne Kuykendall contributed to this report.)
    see link below:
    Last edited by HRx; 11-10-2008, 06:07 PM.
    Filed CH 7 9/30/2008
    Discharged Jan 5, 2009! Closed Jan 18, 2009

    I am not an attorney. None of my advice is legal advice in any way..

    #2
    This is exactly what most of us feared....the more that is provided in the bailout they will keep coming back for more.
    Filed CH 7 9/30/2008
    Discharged Jan 5, 2009! Closed Jan 18, 2009

    I am not an attorney. None of my advice is legal advice in any way..

    Comment


      #3
      Yep they will Starting, that's why it was dumb to bail them out in the first place. By bailing them out they did not make the fundamental changes necessary to make sure they wouldn't be in the same situation again. AIG and the other large corporations should be forced into Chapter 11 bankruptcy (or even Chapter 7s). Force them to make the hard restructuring choices needed to return profitability, or chop em up and sell em off.
      May 31st, 2007: Petition Filed by my lawyer
      July 2nd, 2007: 341 Meeting Held
      September 4th, 2007: Discharged and Closed.

      Comment


        #4
        Yep they will Starting, that's why it was dumb to bail them out in the first place. By bailing them out they did not make the fundamental changes necessary to make sure they wouldn't be in the same situation again. AIG and the other large corporations should be forced into Chapter 11 bankruptcy (or even Chapter 7s). Force them to make the hard restructuring choices needed to return profitability, or chop em up and sell em off.
        Letting AIG fail would have caused a worldwide panic and collapse of the world economic system, at least that is what we are told. But since this threat is never translated to how it would actually affect you, the common man, there is continued doubt about it's necessity. I don't know either; either the banking and treasury authorities are telling the truth and preventing a real crisis, or we are all getting scammed. Here's a better article from Bloomberg about AIG:

        AIG Gets Expanded Bailout, Posts $24.5 Billion Loss

        "Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- American International Group Inc. got a $150 billion government rescue package, almost doubling the initial bailout of less than two months ago as the insurer burns through cash at a record rate.

        AIG will get lower interest rates and $40 billion of new capital from the government to help ease the impact of four straight quarterly deficits, including a $24.5 billion third- quarter loss posted today by the New York-based company.

        Taxpayers will take on the extra risk to give Chief Executive Officer Edward Liddy more time to salvage AIG. The insurer, which needed U.S. help to escape bankruptcy in September, has posted about $43 billion in quarterly losses tied to home mortgages. Liddy's plan to repay the original $85 billion loan by selling units stalled as plunging financial markets cut into their value and hobbled potential buyers.

        ``It was obvious to me from Day One that the terms of that arrangement were really quite punitive in terms of the interest rate and the commitment fee and the shortness of it,'' Liddy said today in a Bloomberg Television interview. ``I started really about a week after I got here trying to renegotiate.''

        AIG advanced 17 cents, or 8.1 percent, to $2.28 at 4:01 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. A year ago the shares sold for more than $56.

        The first rescue plan wasn't sustainable, Liddy said during a conference call today. AIG's third-quarter loss equaled $9.05 a share and compared with profit of $3.09 billion, or $1.19, a year earlier, AIG said in a statement. Losses in the past year erased profit from 14 previous quarters dating back to 2004.

        Affordable Terms

        To improve AIG's chances of repaying its debts, the U.S. will reduce the $85 billion loan to $60 billion, buy $40 billion of preferred shares, and purchase $52.5 billion of mortgage securities owned or backed by the company, the Federal Reserve said today in a separate statement.

        The move extends the government's reach into the financial system amid the worst economic crisis in 75 years. The U.S. seized control of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, lenders that guarantee or own about 40 percent of the $12 trillion in U.S. mortgages, in September. The next month, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson unveiled a $250 billion program to recapitalize banks.

        ``This action was necessary to maintain the stability of our financial system,'' Neel Kashkari, the interim assistant secretary who heads the Treasury's office overseeing the bailout, said today at a Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association conference in New York.

        The new AIG package includes a freeze on the bonus pool for 70 top executives and imposed limits on severance benefits, the Treasury said in its statement. Lawmakers had said companies getting taxpayer bailouts shouldn't be using the money for multimillion-dollar pay packages.

        Securities Lending

        The U.S. reversed its opposition to a bailout of AIG when the Fed concluded that ripple effects from the insurer's failure could bring down more financial firms. The original $85 billion loan was disclosed on Sept. 16, a day after investment bank Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. was allowed to collapse. AIG got an additional $37.8 billion credit line on Oct. 8 to shore up its securities-lending program and then another $20.9 billion on Oct. 30 under the Fed commercial paper program designed to unlock short-term debt markets.

        The revised rescue may fix two AIG operations that are draining cash because of the collapse of subprime mortgage markets. In the first, the U.S. will provide as much as $30 billion to help buy the underlying assets of credit-default swaps that AIG sold to investors, including banks. AIG will contribute $5 billion and bear the risk of the first $5 billion in losses, the Fed said.

        Credit-Default Swaps

        The insurer guaranteed about $372 billion of fixed-income investments as of Sept. 30, compared with $441 billion three months earlier. AIG booked more than $7 billion in writedowns during the quarter on the value of the swaps.

        The New York Fed also will lend as much as $22.5 billion to a new limited-liability company to fund the purchase of residential mortgage-backed assets from AIG's U.S. securities- lending collateral portfolio. AIG will make a $1 billion subordinated loan to the new entity and bear the risk for the first $1 billion of any losses, the Fed said. The securities lending operation and the previous $37.8 billion credit line from the Fed will be shut down, AIG said.

        AIG had about $11.7 billion in writedowns in the third quarter tied to the program, in which the insurer loaned securities to third parties and then used the collateral to invest in mortgage-linked assets that plunged in value. AIG ``changed the leadership'' of that operation, Liddy said on the call, without providing further details.

        Breathing Room

        The interest rate on the $60 billion credit line will be reduced to the three-month London interbank offered rate plus 3 percentage points, from a previous spread of 8.5 percentage points in the original rescue plan, the Fed said. AIG's assets continue to secure the loan.

        ``This gives AIG much more breathing room,'' said Robert Haines, an analyst at CreditSights Inc. ``Now they have the time and flexibility to sell assets for closer to their intrinsic value rather than fire-sale prices.'' The news is a ``big positive'' for bondholders, he said.

        AIG will still have access to the $20.9 billion commercial paper program, which has about $5.6 billion left unused, the insurer said. The company renewed doubt about its prospects today by saying in a federal filing that it might not survive.

        The Treasury will buy the newly issued preferred shares from the insurer using the agency's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, a financial rescue package that Congress passed in early October. The company agreed to turn over a 79.9 percent stake to the U.S. in exchange for the initial loan in September.

        Biggest Fear

        ``My biggest fear is that they're throwing taxpayer money away,'' said Donn Vickrey, analyst at research firm Gradient Analytics Inc. ``Based on their assumptions, they assume the performance on those loans is pretty abysmal.''

        The Fed's loan rates to the special facilities may subsidize AIG. For example, if AIG packaged the assets into a vehicle and sold asset-backed commercial paper against them, the best rate it could obtain from the Fed's Commercial Paper Funding Facility for 90-day notes would be 3.53 percent. The Fed's AIG securities facilities will be financed at 2.54 percent based on today's one- month London Interbank offered rate.

        Attractive Return

        AIG will pay 10 percent annual interest on the $40 billion in preferred shares it is issuing to the U.S. The new bailout will give U.S. taxpayers ``a very attractive return'' on the shares and potential gains on the mortgage-backed securities the U.S. will buy, Liddy said in the conference call.

        The biggest insurers in North America posted more than $120 billion in writedowns and unrealized losses linked to the collapse of the mortgage market from the start of 2007, with AIG representing about half that total. The company has units that insure, originate and invest in home loans.

        Liddy, 62, plans to sell life insurance operations in the U.S., Europe and Japan, along with the firm's reinsurer, airplane lessor, consumer finance unit and asset manager. The former CEO of Allstate Corp. was appointed by the U.S. as a condition of AIG's bailout. Liddy said he expects to announce ``several'' unit sales in the fourth quarter.

        To contact the reporters on this story: Hugh Son in New York at [email protected]; Craig Torres in Washington at ctorres3@bloomberg

        http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aoj_ojzEcu9w
        Last edited by WhatMoney; 11-10-2008, 06:03 PM.
        “When fascism comes to America, it’ll be wrapped in a flag and carrying a cross” — Sinclair Lewis

        Comment


          #5
          I don't worry about the world WhatMoney, no where in our Constitution does it say we are responsible for the rest of the world.

          By continuing to bailout and give increasingly more and more money to AIG we are basically putting the taxpayer on the dole for bad business decisions made by management staff that are still running AIG. I could get the same result if I took said money and flushed it down the toilet.
          May 31st, 2007: Petition Filed by my lawyer
          July 2nd, 2007: 341 Meeting Held
          September 4th, 2007: Discharged and Closed.

          Comment


            #6
            Whatamess. Let's just hope that like Chrysler, we get principal and interest back.

            It is not in our constitution to help the world, it is in our American make up.
            The bulk of charity comes from private donors, not the government.

            Get a dollar, give a dime. A great mantra to live by.

            Comment


              #7
              What good does it do to have a stake in them if they are so poorly run they have to come every 3-4 weeks for more money. I mean maybe if AIG hadn't blown their first round of money on executive perks and bonuses perhaps I'd feel more sympathetic to them.
              May 31st, 2007: Petition Filed by my lawyer
              July 2nd, 2007: 341 Meeting Held
              September 4th, 2007: Discharged and Closed.

              Comment


                #8
                They just got caught again. A 340K party after the last incident.

                Comment


                  #9
                  This is why you feed the pigs only twice a day, if you keep filling the trough they will just keep eating and eating...
                  "I'm old enough to know better, but too young to care"
                  Filed Chapter 7 January 25th 2010
                  341 Hearing March 4th 2010
                  Discharged May 10th 2010

                  Comment

                  bottom Ad Widget

                  Collapse
                  Working...
                  X