Real-Estate Redux AIG Is Planning a Return to U.S. Property Investing   By Craig Karmin and Serena Ng | The Wall Street Journal – 3 hours ago
 
 
           American International Group Inc. ( AIG)  is planning to jump back into U.S. property investing, reversing  yearslong efforts to downsize its real-estate business in the wake of  its near-collapse and government bailout in 2008.
  AIG until  recently had been dismantling what was once a $24 billion real-estate  portfolio packed with trophy properties around the world to help pay  back U.S. government loans and keep the company afloat. Its investing  has been limited primarily to a few European deals with a single  partner. 
  But now AIG is beginning to make plans for fresh investments across the U.S. that will begin later this year.
  A  real-estate division of the New York-based company has reached out to  developers of new apartment buildings in major metropolitan areas, said  people familiar with the matter.
  "We've done multifamily deals  with them before, and we're interested in working with them again," said  Hal Fetner, president and chief executive of New York developer Durst  Fetner Residential LLC who has been contacted by AIG about new  developments.
  AIG hasn't set specific targets on the size of its  future investments in real estate, but people familiar with the insurer  say that eventually it will amount to hundreds of millions of dollars  annually.
  The company once acquired flashy properties like a  Vermont ski village, Shanghai office towers and a Tokyo shopping mall.  This time, a humbled AIG has set its sights lower: The U.S. apartment  market is where it is focusing now, said people familiar with the  matter.
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  AIG  was one of the financial groups that expressed interest in a $100  million development project in Montclair, N.J., a one-time Jaguar  dealership that developer Pinnacle Cos. plans to convert into an  apartment complex with retail, commercial and office space, said people  familiar with the matter. It also has held discussions with brokers or  developers in California and the Southeast U.S., the people said.
  Some  brokers said they first realized that AIG was paving the way to resume  property investing when they found members of the real-estate team  actively looking to partner with developers at a January multifamily  housing conference in Boca Raton, Fla.
  AIG's return to  real-estate investing is another sign that the insurer is regaining its  footing after paying back most of its $182.3 billion federal bailout.  The company is still 70%-owned by the U.S. government, which is now  largely a passive shareholder and is expected to sell its holdings over  time.
  Over the past year, AIG has crept back into a few  businesses that it abandoned because of the financial crisis, such as  securities lending, as it becomes more comfortable taking risks again.  Its insurance businesses also have remained active investors in  commercial and residential mortgage debt.
  It also is part of a  growing movement by insurance companies to raise their stakes in real  estate as the market rebounds from a sharp correction. A number of big  companies are moving into a vacuum caused by the departure of some  investment-banking firms from real estate and by the struggle of many  funds to raise money.
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  New  York Life Insurance Co., for instance, said it made a new allocation to  commercial mortgage loans and real-estate equity. That commitment could  be as much as $1 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.  Northwestern Mutual, meanwhile, made $1.57 billion in real-estate  equity investments last year, the insurer said. That is up from $1.1  billion in 2010 and more than four times the amount made in 2009.
  AXA  Real Estate, a unit of French insurer AXA SA and one of Europe's  largest real-estate managers with $55 billion under management, is  raising money for its first two U.S. funds and expects to be investing  it soon. Olivier Thoral, AXA Real Estate's head of North America, said  U.S. property should account for 10% of its local real-estate portfolio  within five years.
  Even with industry peers turning more active  as real-estate investors, AIG's return would be more of a milestone. The  insurer's near demise in 2008 was a result of outsize bets on the U.S.  housing and real-estate market through a derivatives unit that insured  complex debt pools backed by residential and commercial mortgage-backed  securities. That unit has been wound down.
  AIG started its  real-estate investing business in 1987 and built it into one of the  world's largest property-investment platforms with $25 billion in assets  at its peak a few years ago. Its real-estate team is led by Robert  Gifford, a 55-year-old industry veteran who was hired in 2009, shortly  before Robert Benmosche was appointed chief executive.
  The global  real-estate business, like many of AIG's units, was originally slated  for sale after the bailout. A year ago, after the company fully repaid a  large loan by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, it turned its focus  from winding down its real-estate portfolio to taking steps toward  getting back into the market.
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  AIG's  real-estate assets are currently around $9.5 billion, or a little more  than a third of its peak, and it maintains a staff of 150 people.
  As  part of its recent sale, AIG has unloaded its limestone-clad former  headquarters in lower Manhattan, a Marriott Hotel in San Juan, Puerto  Rico, and about $300 million of apartment buildings, mostly in New  Jersey, that it acquired near the top of the market in 2007 from Kushner  Cos.
  While the insurer sold its Asia real-estate funds, with $5.4 billion in assets, to Invesco Ltd. ( IVZ)  for an undisclosed sum at the end of 2010, it held on to the IFC Seoul  tower and a Shanghai mixed-use project with a Ritz Carlton hotel. It  continues to invest in European real estate through a venture with  Lincoln Property Co.
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