AIG sees no signs of mortgage asset market rebound yet
By Lilla Zuill
NEW YORK (Reuters) - American International Group (AIG.N), after disappointing with a worse-than-expected loss on Thursday, did little to buoy investor spirits on Friday, telling shareholders it does not yet see signs of a rebound in the market for mortgage assets, which have cost it dearly over the past two quarters.
AIG posted a $7.8 billion first-quarter loss, surpassing the then-record $5.3 billion loss it posted in the fourth quarter, largely stemming from a decline in the value of assets linked to subprime mortgages. On Friday, shares fell more than 8 percent.
"The market is not going to look favorably on this quarter's results," said Goldman Sachs analyst Tom Cholnoky, in a note.
Over the past two quarters, AIG has recorded unrealized losses of about $20 billion in a credit swap portfolio, as the credit crisis all but closed the market for bonds that these swaps guaranteed.
AIG on Thursday said it plans to raise $12.5 billion to strengthen its balance sheet. Two ratings firms downgraded the insurer.
On a call with investors, Chief Executive Martin Sullivan said the downgrades will likely increase funding costs for some of its businesses, including its aircraft leasing operation, one of the few units to do well in the first quarter. The insurer also has to post $1.6 billion more in collateral.
AIG, which over nearly nine decades in business has grown into the world's largest insurer, is one in a procession of companies to write down bad assets. Analysts estimate that companies globally have recorded more than $300 billion in write-downs and raised more than $200 billion in fresh capital.
Disappointing results over the past two quarters have marred Sullivan's previous track record of posting profits in every period since he became CEO in 2005.
Now, analysts say Sullivan must work to stem losses, shore up capital, and regain investors confidence, which has fallen as potential losses from credit swaps have ballooned.
Last year, Sullivan assured investors that AIG was unlikely to see any actual losses from its CDS portfolio. But on Friday AIG raised its estimate of potential realized losses to $1.25 billion from a $900 million "worst-case scenario" disclosed in February.
An outside market-based analysis put AIG's potential actual losses in a much higher range -- between $9 billion and $11 billion, or roughly half the unrealized losses recorded to date. But Steve Bensinger, who is stepping aside as chief financial officer to assume another role at AIG, said "we continue to believe that a market-based analysis is not the best methodology (for) potential realized losses."
AIG's credit default swaps essentially insured subprime mortgage bonds and other assets against default.
RATINGS BLOW
The one-notch downgrades by Standard & Poor's and Fitch followed AIG's Thursday loss announcement.
Sullivan told investors the downgrade was "manageable." Continued...



