UPDATE: Treasury Sells $6 Billion AIG Shares; AIG Buys Half
09 March 2012 - 3:35AM
Dow Jones News
The U.S. Treasury Department sold a chunk of its shares in
American International Group Inc. (AIG) for $29 each Thursday
morning, further reducing the government's stake in the insurer
more than three years after it was rescued during the financial
crisis.
The sale of about 207 million shares will deliver roughly $6
billion to Treasury coffers. AIG, which has bounced back from the
brink of collapse and expects steady profits in coming years, has
agreed to purchase about 103.5 million shares worth about $3
billion.
That buyback could help prevent the Treasury's sale from
weighing on AIG's share price too heavily, though the stock was
down 3.5% to $28.41 in morning trading after the share sale was
announced.
Thursday's share sale reduces the government's holding of AIG's
common stock to 1.25 billion shares, or about 70%. That's down from
77% before the sale and 92% in early 2011.
The U.S. had wanted to sell off more of its holdings in late
2011, but the sale was delayed when the shares fell in the second
half of 2011 and traded below $28.73, the price taxpayers
effectively paid for the government's stake. AIG's rescue in 2008
was part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.
"We're continuing to move forward to wind down TARP and exit our
stakes in private companies as soon as practicable," said assistant
Treasury Secretary for financial stability Tim Massad. "Today is
another important step in our efforts to recover the taxpayer's
investment in AIG."
The stock turned around after AIG in late February said it was
freeing up tax credits it had accumulated as its losses mounted
amid the financial crisis. AIG said it would be able to use the
massive tax benefit because executives now believed the insurer was
likely to report sustainable profits in the years ahead.
Late Wednesday, when Treasury announced its plan to sell its
stake, it also said AIG will fully repay the government's remaining
$8.5 billion preferred interest in another bailout-era vehicle that
was collateralized by AIG's minority portion of Asian life insurer
AIA Group Ltd. (1299.HK) and other assets. The majority of the
funds AIG will use in the transaction will come from the sale of a
portion of its stake in AIA that was scheduled to close
Thursday.
In addition, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York has an
outstanding $9.3 billion loan to an investment vehicle known as
Maiden Lane III, which was formed to absorb AIG's toxic assets. The
loan is collateralized by assets that are now worth well more than
the outstanding loan.
The Bush administration launched the financial bailout in the
autumn of 2008 at the height of the financial crisis. Congress
authorized $700 billion in spending, though $414 billion wound up
being spent. The government has now recovered about $319 billion of
that money, the Treasury said.
At the height of the financial crisis, the Treasury and New York
Fed provided about a combined $182 billion in support to AIG. The
Treasury said its investment in AIG has now been reduced to $37.8
billion.
At its launch, the AIG bailout was the costliest rescue of the
financial crisis, but it has since been eclipsed by the federal
takeover of mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac
(FMCC). That rescue has cost taxpayers $153 billion to date and is
still climbing.
-By Alan Zibel and Randall Smith, Dow Jones Newswires;
202-862-9263; alan.zibel@dowjones.com
--Erik Holm and Serena Ng contributed to this article.
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