AIG investors cheer first capital return since bailout
AIG quarterly profit comfortably beats Wall Street estimates, along with 10 US-cent quarterly dividend, share buy back of up to US$1 billion
American International Group announced its first capital return since its 2008 bailout, through a dividend and share buyback, sending its shares up 6 per cent after the bell.
The insurer, which was almost wiped out by its derivative bets in the crash five years ago, reported a quarterly profit that handily beat Wall Street estimates, along with a quarterly divided of 10 cents and a share buy back of up to US$1 billion.
“Return of the quarterly dividend as well as the buyback is a clear affirmation of the progress AIG has made since the mortgage crisis,” Macquarie Equities Research analyst Amit Kumar said.
The company also reported strong growth at its property casualty insurance unit, indicating it was on track to improve profitability after a long-awaited turnaround.
The insurer has not paid dividends since receiving the first portion of a US taxpayer-funded bailout in 2008 that eventually topped US$180 billion. AIG finished paying back those funds early this year.
“AIG is a fundamentally different, simpler company than it was three years ago,” Chief Executive Robert Benmosche said.