NEW YORK - The government and AIG, the giant insurer rescued with $182 billion at the depths of the 2008 financial meltdown, announced a plan Friday to end taxpayer involvement in the company over the next two years.
As part of the plan, AIG paid back its $21 billion outstanding balance to the New York branch of the Federal Reserve. The Treasury Department will now own a 92 percent stake in the company and begin unloading stock on the open market in March.
"Treasury remains optimistic that taxpayers will get back every dollar of their investment in AIG," Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in a statement.
In a separate statement, AIG President and CEO Robert H. Benmosche said: "Today, AIG, with the support of countless people, has accomplished a huge goal that many people once thought impossible: completely repaying the Federal Reserve Bank of New York."
The rescue package for American International Group Inc., which included loans and guarantees, was the largest of any U.S. company that accepted government help during the September 2008 financial crisis.
At the time, federal officials worried that a collapse of AIG, which worked with hundreds of financial institutions around the world, would be a death blow to already-fragile credit markets and possibly bring down the financial system itself.
The insurer became a touchstone for public outrage over excessive risk on Wall Street.
Under the plan announced Friday, the government will sell its stock over two years as market conditions allow.
The government holds roughly 1.67 billion shares of AIG now. Those shares were handed over to taxpayers at a value of just under $30 apiece and were trading Friday at about $54.
The two-year unwinding of the federal stake in the company is similar to an arrangement to end government involvement in Citigroup and in General Motors, which returned to the stock market this year after going through bankruptcy.
AIG's repayment plan is being paid for with proceeds from a series of asset sales. On Thursday, it agreed to sell its nearly full ownership in the third-largest insurance company in Taiwan for about $2.2 billion.
Last year, it sold an Asia-based life insurer to Britain's Prudential PLC for $35.5 billion.
Besides repaying the U.S. government, AIG is restructuring to focus on its property-, casualty- and life-insurance businesses.
by Pallavi Gogoi Associated Press Jan. 15, 2011 12:00 AM
Fed stake in AIG is set to end
Monday, January 17, 2011
Real Estate News
Reuters: Business News
National Commercial Real Estate News From CoStar Group
Latest stock market news from Wall Street - CNNMoney.com
Archive
-
▼
2011
(704)
-
▼
January
(53)
- Mortgage refinances may drop 77% by 2012 « Housing...
- Get the Report : Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
- Market Recap - Week Ending January 21, 2011
- Commercial-real-estate market registers positive c...
- 2010 Q4 Earnings: Season Starts With a JPMorgan Ba...
- El-Erian Says Opportunities Still Exist in Bond Ma...
- Get schooled on taxes
- BofA loses $1.6 billion in 4Q
- Scottsdale building activity off
- Outlook is dim as sales of homes hit 13-year low
- Real-estate franchisor eliminates executives
- High metal prices hike profit for Freeport
- Blue Sky plan is scaled down
- Apartments are planned for site of failed projects
- Loan Officer Compensation: Overtime Pay or No Over...
- Ariz. housing bust tests smaller towns
- Brokerage makes move in Southeast
- Fed stake in AIG is set to end
- Foreclosures to hit peak in '11
- Metro Phoenix bankruptcy filings are stable but st...
- PulteGroup to shutter Phoenix-area manufacturing f...
- NAHB: Housing starts to grow 21% in 2011 « Housing...
- Builders Brace for Obama’s Plans for Housing Subsi...
- When Will Housing Recover? UBS Makes 10 Prediction...
- Auction house REDC rebranding as Auction.com « Hou...
- Market Recap - Week Ending January 07, 2011
- China's weapons worrisome
- Mass. court rules vs. banks in pivotal mortgage case
- Gilbert paid millions too much for land, appraisal...
- Solis developer plans revision to Scottsdale condo...
- Phoenix-area brokers report an increase in leasing...
- Bank of America changes free-checking rules
- 1st lender now owns Tapatio Cliffs site
- Foreclosures mess is easing
- Commercial tenants get 5 days' notice of eviction
- Right Place principals approve settlement talks
- Condo plans for 44 Monroe in downtown Phoenix fall...
- ETFs give investors few surprises
- New Fannie interactive Web tool provides foreclosu...
- Bank of America settling buyback claims for bad ho...
- Stalled Sage condos preparing to sell homes
- Key to Real-Estate Rebound: Solid Economic Growth ...
- Market Recap - Week Ending Thursday, December 30, ...
- Phoenix lifts CamelSquare's zoning restrictions
- Banks look at personal credit in granting business...
- 6 financial bets for the new year
- 2011 look ahead: What the new year holds in store ...
- Scottsdale Waterfront site likely to offer luxury ...
- Economic signs good for strong surge in '11
- Valley banks, Habitat trim foreclosure-home inventory
- Home expert is optimistic about 2011
- H&R Block loses refund-loan partner
- Bill Gross Telling Bloomberg To "Avoid Dollar Deno...
-
▼
January
(53)