(Bloomberg) -- American International Group Inc. filed for an initial public offering of its life and retirement arm, one of the final steps in a years-long effort to simplify the sprawling insurer.
The business will be renamed Corebridge Financial Inc. once it becomes public, AIG said in a filing Monday. The insurer called the business “one of the largest providers of retirement solutions and insurance products” in the U.S., with $411 billion in client assets under management as of the end of last year.
“Today’s announcement represents continued progress as we prepare our life and retirement business to be a standalone company,” AIG Chief Executive Officer Peter Zaffino said in a statement.
The company also announced new directors on Corebridge’s board, which already included Blackstone Inc. President Jonathan Gray and Zaffino, who serves as chairman of the unit.
Zaffino and his predecessor, Brian Duperreault, have spent several years overhauling AIG. Efforts to execute on part of the insurer’s agenda by splitting off the life and retirement business have ramped up in recent months.
Earlier Monday, AIG announced an agreement with BlackRock Inc. that would see the investment manager handle as much as $150 billion of the insurer’s assets.
BlackRock, Blackstone
Prior to the agreement with BlackRock, AIG sold a 9.9% equity stake in its life and retirement business to private equity firm Blackstone for $2.2 billion in cash. That pact created a “long-term strategic asset management relationship” for an initial $50 billion from the insurer’s life and retirement portfolio, expected to grow to $92.5 billion within six years.
The size and price of the Corebridge share sale are yet to be determined, according to the filing, which indicated the business had total equity of $28.9 billion as of the end of 2021. That represents its book value, or how much it would be worth in a liquidation. AIG will be the selling shareholder in the listing, according to the filing.
The business generated net income of $7.4 billion on revenue of $23 billion in 2021, showing substantial increases from net income of $642 million on revenue of $15 billion on a pro forma basis a year earlier, according to the filing. About half the unit’s revenue came from investments last year, with about $8.7 billion of the total from premiums and policy fees, the company said in its filing.
Corebridge plans to list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol CRBG. JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley and Piper Sandler are leading the share sale.
IPO Slump
Corebridge’s filing could signal a return of IPOs. Activity in that market has been muted since January amid high volatility, inflation concerns and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Following a string of follow-on offerings and block trades, new listings are set to make a comeback in the next few months, dealmakers have said.
For More: U.S. IPO Hopefuls Are Hunting for Signs of Elusive Market Window
After a record-breaking 2021, IPOs on U.S. exchanges are having the worst quarter since 2016. Only 33 companies, not including blank-check firms, have raised a total of $2.75 billion in listings since Jan. 1, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Private Equity firm accounted for $1.1 billion of that total with its January offering.
In the first three months of 2021, by comparison, 150 companies raised more than $56 billion in IPOs in the U.S., the data show.