Fortune | FORTUNE 10月28日 03:56
AIG收购Everest保险业务,战略转型加速
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

保险巨头AIG正计划收购Everest集团全球零售保险组合的续保权,交易价值高达20亿美元保费。此举是AIG CEO Peter Zaffino推动公司百年转型战略的关键一步,同时也助于Everest缓解其在美国意外责任保险业务中低估索赔成本所带来的准备金管理问题。AIG预计在2026年初开始承保Everest在北美的现有客户,并在获得监管批准后于2026年第一季度着手处理欧盟客户组合。此次收购不涉及AIG寻求外部资本或承担债务,且Everest将承担所有现有负债和过往风险敞口,AIG则借此机会拓展客户和未来业务,同时避免了历史遗留的索赔与债务责任。该交易将有力推动AIG在一般保险领域的投资组合增长,该领域在其领导下已实现稳健增长。AIG近年来的财务表现显著改善,分析师认为其已成为一家“不同于以往”的公司,盈利能力和运营效率均有提升。

🏢 AIG拟以20亿美元保费收购Everest集团全球零售保险组合的续保权,这是AIG CEO Peter Zaffino推动公司转型战略的重要举措。此举旨在扩大AIG在一般保险领域的业务,该领域在Zaffino的领导下已展现出持续增长的态势。

🤝 该交易不仅能促进AIG的业务增长,还能帮助Everest解决其在美国意外责任保险业务中低估索赔成本所带来的准备金管理问题。Everest将继续承担所有现有负债和过往风险敞口,而AIG则获得客户和未来业务,避免了历史遗留的索赔责任。

🗓️ AIG计划于2026年初开始承保Everest在北美的现有客户,并有望在2026年第一季度处理欧盟客户组合,具体取决于监管批准。此交易不涉及AIG寻求外部资本或承担债务,为AIG的战略扩张提供了稳健的财务基础。

📈 AIG近年来的财务表现显著改善,盈利能力和运营效率均有提升。公司在2024年保费收入增长,新业务量增加,并在2025年第二季度报告了可观的利润,显示出其转型战略的成效显著,已从过去的亏损局面中走出,成为一家更具竞争力的保险公司。

Insurance giant AIG is set to acquire the renewal rights for the majority of Everest Group’s global retail insurance portfolio worth $2 billion in premiums, sources with intimate knowledge of the deal told Fortune.

The agreement with Everest, one of the world’s largest reinsurance and insurance solutions firms, is part of AIG CEO Peter Zaffino’s transformation effort at the century-old insurance company. It will also ease Everest’s loss reserve management issues after it underestimated claim costs in its U.S. casualty insurance business, leaving the firm in need of capital.

Insiders say that AIG expects to begin writing policies for existing North America Everest clients by the start of 2026. As for clients in the European Union, AIG is positioned to begin working on that portfolio during Q1 of 2026, depending on regulatory approvals. 

AIG, a $44 billion insurance company, already serves more than 88 million commercial and personal customers worldwide​, operating in more than 200 countries and jurisdictions​. Everest also serves millions of policy holders, but is substantially smaller, valued at approximately $14.5 billion.

Meanwhile, Everest has hired multiple senior executives from AIG in recent years including the company’s former legal chief Anthony Vidovich, who was named executive vice president and general counsel of Everest on Oct. 16. 

The Everest deal, insiders say, did not require AIG to seek out external capital or take on debt. And while AIG will obtain the portfolio and client relationships within the deal, all existing liabilities and prior exposures will remain with Everest. This specification will allow AIG to gain access to customers and future business without inheriting responsibility for claims and obligations from policies written before the transaction closed. 

The move will significantly advance AIG’s portfolio growth in general insurance, a facet which, under Zaffino’s leadership, has demonstrated consistent growth. In 2024, the company wrote $23.9 billion in insurance premiums, up 6% year over year on a comparable basis. New business in 2024 reached $4.5 billion, a 9% increase. The company’s Q1 and Q2 earnings show potential further promise. New premiums written in Q1 were up 8% on a comparable basis, bringing in $4.5 billion, with Q2 premiums generating $6.9 billion. 

Growth potential and avoidance of additional financial risk are particularly important to Zaffino’s vision and turnaround of AIG. The company has faced an uphill battle following its involvement in the 2008 global financial crisis. Leading up to 2008, AIG entered into enormous volumes of largely unhedged credit default swaps, insuring more than $440 billion in assets, including $57.8 billion backed by risky subprime mortgages. 

When the subprime mortgage market collapsed, AIG faced huge losses and had to pay out on the credit default contracts. As investors and counterparties demanded collateral, the company’s liquidity evaporated, requiring a $182 billion government bailout, in exchange for an equity stake. 

In the decade that followed, the insurer lost more than $30 billion in underwriting—a sign of excess capital, poor risk controls, and a lack of accountability for underwriting outcomes—and endured several CEO changes.

When Zaffino became CEO in 2021, AIG had undergone massive downsizing, asset sales, and management churn, but lingering operational inefficiencies and poor profitability, especially in underwriting, remained.

Since taking over, Zaffino has led an aggressive transformation strategy focused on disciplined underwriting, operational streamlining, and technological modernization. AIG has divested non-core units, reduced its risk exposure by over $1 trillion, and invested in AI capabilities. Those include partnerships with Anthropic and Palantir to build AI-driven risk assessment and operational tools aimed at improving underwriting precision and claims efficiency. 

AIG’s financial performance has markedly improved, with analysts describing it as a “different company” compared to past years. In Q2 2025, the firm reported a $1.1 billion profit, reversing a $4 billion loss a year earlier which mainly reflected the deconsolidation of Corebridge Financial, a life insurance and retirement solutions provider, and other portfolio changes. Adjusted after-tax income rose 56% year over year, and AIG’s earnings per share of $1.81 beat the forecast of $1.60, while revenue of $6.88 billion surpassed the expected $6.78 billion.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

AIG Everest Group 保险收购 战略转型 金融服务 AIG Everest Group Insurance Acquisition Strategic Transformation Financial Services
相关文章