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Insurance companies angle for bailout

Posted Nov 18 2008, 01:07 PM by Todd Harrison
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Insurance companies have now joined the growing list of American firms vying for a piece of the bailout pie. According to the Wall Street Journal, large insurance companies are snatching up small regional banks to speed up their transition to savings-and-loan holding companies, thereby qualifying them for capital infusions from Washington.

Like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, who recently made similar conversions, insurance companies are looking for billions of dollars in government money to shore up their battered balance sheets.

Over the last week, Hartford Financial Services purchased Federal Trust of Sanford, Florida; Genworth Financial bought a thrift in Maple Grove, Minnesota; and Lincoln National agreed to buy a tiny bank in Goodland, Indiana, which has a mere $7 million in assets. For Lincoln, a company with over $180 billion in assets, that’s just not very much money.

Insurance companies take in premiums from policy-holders, which they then use to buy up securities. As long as the income generated from those investments covers their payouts on claims, they turn a profit. Traditionally believed to be stogy, conservative firms, in recent years insurers dabbled in risky securities to juice profits. Using leverage, they added mortgage-backed securities to their core holdings of highly-rated corporate bonds.

The poster-child for these bad investments was, of course, AIG, which has now gobbled up almost $150 billion in taxpayer-funded bailout money.

And while AIG was the worst offender, its competitors have likewise seen the value of their investments erode in value in recent months. Last month, Met Life, the largest US insurer by assets, raised capital to cover expected losses. Investors initially cheered the move, optimistic that the firm could get money at all.

In the last month, however, Met Life shares have lost almost 50% of their value.

And the bailout money is running thin. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson has said he won’t petition Congress to release the second half of the $700 billion allocated for the bailout of the financial system. Confident the bailout is working, Paulson is urging lawmakers to hold on to the money for that proverbial rainy day.

The question, of course, is in what form the deluge will come. General Motors? General Electric? Or something else entirely?

Top Stocks blogging partner Todd Harrison is founder & CEO of Minyanville.com. This post was written by Minyanville Contributor Andrew Jeffery.

Related reading:

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Could GE Collapse?

Comments

 

12-21-12, Is GM rushing this date? I thought 12-21-12 was the end to how we know the world. I have 4 vehicles and only 2 drivers, how many cars can we afford.

Well all these companies are trying for the bailout. Who is gonna bailout or help us, the people. These companies may get help, but will not help them at all  when the people can't afford a roll of toilet paper these days nevermind a new car.

Bad companies with bad management should go down....its time to clean house .....all you fat cats at the top better figure it out ..thats why you get paid millions of dollars a year....The gravy train is all dried up boys....GM will go down and so will a major Airline.......America needs to shed non performing companies and move forward.....

My heart goes out to those who have and those who have yet to lose theirs jobs....it can't be stopped now ........thank all those CEO's for not planning for the future and taking bonuses on reccord profits in 2005-7

Question for someone smarter than I. What will prevent these insurance companies from seeling off these small banks after they satisfy their objective of getting a piece of the BAILOUT pie? Help me to understand. I'm just a poor unemployed ex-bank employee who was tossed under the bus.

time to cut the fat in private and public sectors of our economy.  stop with the open check books.  time to be accountable.  lets get our country back.  we don't need empty promises.

I think bail outs should be granted only when approved by the public by a national vote by the TAXPAYERS that can proove they pay taxes.

I hate Michigan right now! Help us

I hate Michigan right now! Help us

Isn't it funny that everyone that got filthy rich is gonna get even richer with more and more bailout money?  It seems to me that the only ones not getting bailed out are the US taxpayer.  When are we going to get a check Washington?  It seems to me that you want more and more from us, but we never see any raise in pay.  The idiots in Washington, the banks, the airlines and the auto industry gets our hard earned money.  Then all we see is waste, waste and more waste (ie. AIG execs and their trips using bailout funds).  I don't see my family or anyone else's family I know getting a free government paid trip to the spa for a week.  The way I see it is they ALL dug their own graves, let them crumble and fade away.

Has everyone lost thier minds? The insurance companies are the worst people on the planet!! My mom lives in FL. on a fixed income, has very little left to pay off her home, and now may loose it all when the insurance $#@$$## ARE RAISING her payments by 20%- BECAUSE they can!!!!!

I am just trying to wrap my head around all the BS they are trying to sell us. ENOUGH is ENOUGH.

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