Troubled insurer AIG reaches a deal to repay taxpayer billions

By Stephen Bernard, AP Business Writer

NEW YORK — AIG, which became a lightening rod for criticism of government bailouts, says it has struck a deal to repay billions of taxpayer dollars it received during the credit crisis.

The plan announced Thursday could return a sizable profit to taxpayers who footed the bill to save AIG (AIG) from collapse in September 2008.

American International Group was one of the financial companies hardest hit by the credit crisis and received the largest taxpayer-funded bailout. It received a package worth as much as $180 billion from the government, which received an 80% stake in the company in return.

The insurance giant was not undone by its traditional insurance business, but instead by making big bets in the complex derivatives and securities market that got so many financial companies into trouble.

As part of AIG's repayment plan, the U.S. Treasury Department will swap preferred shares it currently holds in AIG for common stock and then sell those shares over time. AIG will also repay loans it received from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

As of June 30, AIG still had $132.1 billion in outstanding aid from the government, including $49.1 billion in loans from the Treasury Department. The new shares will give the Treasury a 92.1% stake in AIG before it begins selling shares.

The government will receive about 1.66 billion shares of AIG common stock in exchange for the $49.1 billion in loans it provided AIG. Those loans were issued through the government's Troubled Asset Relief Program, which was launched to provide $700 billion to financial companies during the credit crisis.

The conversion price of the government's shares is equal to about $29.67 a share.

AIG shares rose to $37.61 in pre-opening trading Thursday. So if the government is able to sell shares at the current trading price, it would make a $13.14 billion profit.

To alleviate concern about the government flooding the market with new shares of AIG, the insurer will issue 75 million warrants to current common shareholders that will allow them to buy new stock for $45 a share.

AIG owes the Federal Reserve Bank of New York about $20 billion. It plans to repay that debt through earnings it generates and the sale of some its subsidiaries. AIG has been selling some units since it received the initial bailout in September 2008.

AIG said in a separate statement Thursday that it has reached a deal to sell two Japanese life insurance units to Prudential Financial for about $4.2 billion in cash.

Contributing: AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger in Washington and AP Business Writer Michelle Chapman in New York

http://www.usatoday.com/money/industrie ... plan_N.htm