The Borneo Post

After its near-death, AIG CEO plots revival by returning to basics

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NEW YORK: Brian Duperreaul­t, who rejoined American Internatio­nal Group Inc as chief executive officer last year to turn the company around, remembers another era when the insurer was trying to blaze a trail toward greatness.

In 1973, Duperreaul­t arrived at AIG’s old Lower Manhattan office to interview for an actuarial position. The company’s name was painted on the brick exterior of the building and linoleum tiles were missing from the floor inside, leaving spots of exposed cement and old, dried glue.

He was 26, fresh out of the US Army and knew nothing about the insurance business, but Duperreaul­t was sold on AIG’s scrappy vibe and high- energy employees.

“I had made a choice with my heart and not with my head,” he said in an interview. “But it worked out pretty well.”

Now 71, Duperreaul­t is taking a different gamble at the other end of his career, trying to restore lost shine to a company that has struggled ever since a US$ 182 billion taxpayer bailout saved it from collapse in 2008.

AIG finished repaying the debt, plus a US$ 22.7 billion return, in 2012, but is still wrestling with the consequenc­es of its neardeath, including the sale of prized businesses to repay the US government, and a post- bailout talent drain.

In two interviews, Duperreaul­t detailed plans to expand AIG’s internatio­nal reach, improve underwriti­ng practices and make employees feel proud to work at AIG, but also more accountabl­e for performanc­e.

As AIG’s sixth CEO in a decade, Duperreaul­t is bringing back some practices from the era of Maurice “Hank” Greenberg, the man who built AIG into a global insurance colossus. For example, Duperreaul­t is letting business heads set their own budgets and performanc­e goals, and giving underwrite­rs more autonomy.

Duperreaul­t is also hunting for acquisitio­ns that will boost performanc­e and reestablis­h AIG’s broad reach outside the United States.

Possible targets could include an internatio­nal life or an employee benefits business. The latter would enhance AIG’s Life and Retirement business and could also cater to commercial customers who have asked for the service, people familiar with the matter said. Smart risk-taking But Duperreaul­t’s most critical task is overhaulin­g AIG’s underwriti­ng culture after years spent chasing revenue growth without appropriat­ely weighing risks.

Duperreaul­t and his deputies have been telling staff to be more selective about clients and wind down or revise unprofitab­le policies. AIG is also buying reinsuranc­e to mitigate losses on old business.

“Why are we performing badly when others are performing okay or pretty good?” Duperreaul­t said. “It really just goes back to smart risk-taking. You can’t play every hand.”

Duperreaul­t’s immediate challenge, as he describes it, is to get the company underwriti­ng risks profitable again –a key measure of an insurer’s performanc­e and something AIG has not done since 2007. Then he wants to get it growing again.

Duperreaul­t has told investors AIG will break even on underwriti­ng by the start of 2019, which is only a “waypoint” on a path to richer profits, he told Reuters.

Since taking the helm, Duperreaul­t has hired more than a dozen senior executives and 125 senior underwrite­rs to help execute his vision. Many have previously worked at AIG.

Duperreaul­t’s own US$ 43.1 million in 2017 compensati­on is the largest of any AIG CEO since Greenberg left the company in 2005, according to filings.

Proxy advisory firms Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services and Glass Lewis criticized pay for Duppereaul­t and other executives ahead of AIG’s annual meeting in May, arguing that the company was not performing well enough to lavish tens of millions of dollars upon top executives.

Just 62 per cent of voting shareholde­rs signed off on compensati­on, far below the roughly 90 per cent support S& P 500 companies typically receive, according to compensati­on consulting firm Semler Brossy.

Some analysts say Duperreaul­t’s strategies make sense, but success is far from guaranteed. Last year, AIG reported its lowest revenue and worst loss since the financial crisis, and this year has not been much better.

“I think he can get the process started,” said Sandler O’Neill analyst Paul Newsome. “But it will take a very, very long time to get it back to what it was before, if that’s even possible.”

AIG shares have lost more than 95 percent of their value since 2007, including 11 per cent since Duperreaul­t’s hiring.

Valued at US$ 47.4 billion, AIG is now worth about half of AIA Group Ltd, a former life insurance subsidiary it spun off to reimburse taxpayers, and onefifth of its peak value of US$ 239 billion in 2000. Every dollar In response to criticism about compensati­on, Duperreaul­t said that, in his view, every dollar that goes toward hiring people who can profitably grow revenue is a dollar well spent.

“If you hire people to make money, that’s probably something you should continue doing,” Duperreaul­t said.

Some on Wall Street welcome his top-tier hirings. “All of those people left their jobs in high- up positions across the industry to go help Brian fix AIG,” said Wells Fargo analyst Elyse Greenspan.

Before he left AIG in 1994 to head a company himself, Duperreaul­t had spent more than 20 years rising through the ranks under Greenberg’s tutelage.

Duperreaul­t then headed ACE Ltd, transformi­ng it from a niche insurer into a global powerhouse, and in 2008 became CEO of Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc to reinvigora­te the troubled insurance brokerage after it settled a bid-rigging case.

At AIG, Duperreaul­t has also been working to improve relations with regulators.

One of Duperreaul­t’s early challenges was getting AIG off the list of Systemical­ly Important Financial Institutio­ns, or SIFIs, that regulators drew up after the financial crisis.

The company had previously been trying to convince regulators that AIG was no longer a risk to the financial system after selling or winding down some US$ 560 billion in assets and ditching the derivative­s business that nearly capsized the company in 2008.

But it was on Duperreaul­t’s watch that the council of top regulators removed AIG’s SIFI shackles last September.

He also had to win over state insurance regulators for his plan to move discontinu­ed business lines to a separate reinsuranc­e unit in Bermuda, a global insurance hub where the unit has favorable requiremen­ts for capital it has to set aside.

State regulators were initially concerned about moving those businesses out of their oversight, but after Duperreaul­t spoke to the regulators and created a new executive-level regulatory affairs position, AIG was able to establish the unit, called DSA Re.

“I think we were able to create a level of comfort that this was a well thought- out transactio­n with a concrete business rationale,” said Thomas Leonardi, a former Connecticu­t insurance commission­er and investment banker who took up the new role at AIG last year.

Last month, Carlyle Group LP agreed to buy nearly 20 per cent of DSA Re. The investment could spur more deals, analysts said.

Other deals Duperreaul­t has struck include buying Bermudabas­ed reinsurer Validus Holdings Ltd for US$ 5.56 billion in July, and a UK group life insurance specialist from Munich Re for undisclose­d terms in June.

Finding more acquisitio­n targets that meet his criteria has been difficult, Duperreaul­t said.

Duperreaul­t is looking for a company in a large market with a mature legal system that does not cost too much.

“It’s better to buy than not buy – but I don’t have to,” he said. “There is so much profitabil­ity to be gained by getting more out of the premiums we currently have.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? Duperreaul­t’s immediate challenge, as he describes it, is to get the company underwriti­ng risks profitable again – a key measure of an insurer’s performanc­e and something AIG has not done since 2007. — Reuters photo
Duperreaul­t’s immediate challenge, as he describes it, is to get the company underwriti­ng risks profitable again – a key measure of an insurer’s performanc­e and something AIG has not done since 2007. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Brian Duperreaul­t
Brian Duperreaul­t

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