AIG unit raises $2 billion in aircraft sale to Macquarie

(Reuters) – The aircraft leasing unit of bailed-out insurer American International Group (AIG.N) has agreed to sell 53 passenger jets to Australia’s Macquarie Group (MQG.AX) to raise a much-needed $2 billion in cash.

Deals

International Lease Finance Corp (ILFC), a top customer of Boeing (BA.N) and Airbus (EAD.PA), said on Wednesday it was selling the aircraft, mostly 737s and A320s, for below their book value of $2.3 billion.

The deal follows AIG’s failed efforts to offload the entire ILFC business as part of a global asset sale program to pay back the U.S. taxpayer after a $182.3 billion bailout during the height of the financial crisis.

For Macquarie Group, the deal hoists it to the top of the second tier of aircraft leasing with a total fleet of 186, prompting investors to suggest it will look to expand further and capitalize on the recovering Asia Pacific air travel market.

“We see this as a good acquisition given the price, above average credit quality as called out by the company and the scalable nature of the business,” Citigroup analyst Wes Nason said.

“For them it makes sense to have self-sufficient, large divisions. The deal could mean they are open for expansion,” said Angus Gluskie, a portfolio manager at White Funds Management.

SWITCH TO SALES

AIG tried selling the ILFC business but a mountain of debt at the unit and the challenge to meet its ongoing funding requirements amid tough capital markets meant a deal was not reached.

Instead it switched to aircraft sales to fund the unit and had said last month it was looking to sell planes for up to $3.5 billion.

ILFC founder Steven Udvar-Hazy, who effectively invented the business of aircraft leasing, left the firm in February after failing to buy a portfolio of planes for about $4 billion.

Formed in 1973, ILFC was bought by AIG for $1.3 billion in 1990. As part of AIG, ILFC for many years enjoyed easy funding, but its access dried up as its parent was brought to its knees by the financial crisis in September 2008.

“ILFC’s ability to accomplish significant aircraft sales, together with recent successes in the financial markets, strongly demonstrates ILFC’s ability to generate liquidity and de-lever its balance sheet,” Chief Executive Alan Lund said in a statement.

SURPLUS MACQUARIE

By contrast, investment bank Macquarie is using the global downturn to pick up assets on the cheap.

It said the deal would not make a major dent in its capital surplus, sparking talk of further aircraft purchases.

A Macquarie spokeswoman declined to say anything beyond the statement, citing a blackout period ahead of its earnings announcement.

The deal expands Macquarie’s aircraft portfolio by 40 percent, but it remains far from the big league dominated by ILFC and General Electric’s (GE.N) GE Commercial Aviation.

Macquarie said the planes acquired from ILFC comprised young aircraft on lease to 35 airlines in 27 countries. The weighted average age of the fleet was less than four years and the average remaining lease term was more than five years.

Boeing 737 Next Generation and Airbus A320 family aircraft make up more than 70 percent of the portfolio. The remainder are in-production widebody planes.

Of the 53 planes acquired, Macquarie would buy 47 aircraft outright for $1.67 billion in cash and transfer the rights to buy the remaining six to sister company Macquarie AirFinance Ltd, which is 37.5 percent owned by Macquarie.

Macquarie’s corporate and asset finance division already has loans and leases under management of A$13.8 billion, it said.

Macquarie shares gained 0.8 percent to A$50.40.

($1=1.076 Australian Dollar)

(Additional reporting by Paritosh Bansal in NEW YORK; Editing by Mark Bendeich, Jean Yoon and Lincoln Feast)

UPDATE 4-AIG unit raises $2 bln in aircraft sale to Macquarie

SYDNEY, April 14 (Reuters) – The aircraft leasing unit of bailed-out insurer American International Group (AIG.N) has agreed to sell 53 passenger jets to Australia’s Macquarie Group (MQG.AX) to raise a much-needed $2 billion in cash.

International Lease Finance Corp (ILFC), a top customer of Boeing (BA.N) and Airbus (EAD.PA), said on Wednesday it was selling the aircraft, mostly 737s and A320s, for below their book value of $2.3 billion.

The deal follows AIG’s failed efforts to offload the entire ILFC business as part of a global asset sale programme to pay back the U.S. taxpayer after a $182.3 billion bailout during the height of the financial crisis.

For Macquarie Group, the deal hoists it to the top of the second tier of aircraft leasing with a total fleet of 186, prompting investors to suggest it will look to expand further and capitalise on the recovering Asia Pacific air travel market.

“We see this as a good acquisition given the price, above average credit quality as called out by the company and the scalable nature of the business,” Citigroup analyst Wes Nason said.

“For them it makes sense to have self-sufficient, large divisions. The deal could mean they are open for expansion,” said Angus Gluskie, a portfolio manager at White Funds Management. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For a FACTBOX on AIG asset sale progress: [ID:nN08132517] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

SWITCH TO SALES

AIG tried selling the ILFC business but a mountain of debt at the unit and the challenge to meet its ongoing funding requirements amid tough capital markets meant a deal was not reached.

Instead it switched to aircraft sales to fund the unit and had said last month it was looking to sell planes for up to $3.5 billion.

ILFC founder Steven Udvar-Hazy, who effectively invented the business of aircraft leasing, left the firm in February after failing to buy a portfolio of planes for about $4 billion. [ID:nN04104420]

Formed in 1973, ILFC was bought by AIG for $1.3 billion in 1990. As part of AIG, ILFC for many years enjoyed easy funding, but its access dried up as its parent was brought to its knees by the financial crisis in September 2008.

“ILFC’s ability to accomplish significant aircraft sales, together with recent successes in the financial markets, strongly demonstrates ILFC’s ability to generate liquidity and de-lever its balance sheet,” Chief Executive Alan Lund said in a statement.

SURPLUS MACQUARIE

By contrast, investment bank Macquarie is using the global downturn to pick up assets on the cheap.

It said the deal would not make a major dent in its capital surplus, sparking talk of further aircraft purchases.

A Macquarie spokeswoman declined to say anything beyond the statement, citing a blackout period ahead of its earnings announcement.

The deal expands Macquarie’s aircraft portfolio by 40 percent, but it remains far from the big league dominated by ILFC and General Electric’s (GE.N) GE Commercial Aviation.

Macquarie said the planes acquired from ILFC comprised young aircraft on lease to 35 airlines in 27 countries. The weighted average age of the fleet was less than four years and the average remaining lease term was more than five years.

Boeing 737 Next Generation and Airbus A320 family aircraft make up more than 70 percent of the portfolio. The remainder are in-production widebody planes.

Of the 53 planes acquired, Macquarie would buy 47 aircraft outright for $1.67 billion in cash and transfer the rights to buy the remaining six to sister company Macquarie AirFinance Ltd, which is 37.5 percent owned by Macquarie.

Macquarie’s corporate and asset finance division already has loans and leases under management of A$13.8 billion, it said.

Macquarie shares gained 0.8 percent to A$50.40. ($1=1.076 Australian Dollar) (Additional reporting by Paritosh Bansal in NEW YORK; Editing by Mark Bendeich, Jean Yoon and Lincoln Feast)

Cousins joins four rookies for Tigers

Four players will play their first games for Richmond in its AFL season opener against Carlton in Melbourne on Thursday night.

Draft picks Dustin Martin, Relton Roberts, Ben Nason and former Port Adelaide player Mitch Farmer will run on for the Tigers at the MCG.

Midfielder Ben Cousins is also set to play despite being in hospital twice in recent weeks with a stomach complaint.

“He’s right to go. He’s had four training sessions since his illness, and he’s looked really good,” Tigers coach Damien Hardwick said.

“We’re very happy with the way he’s headed.”

Hardwick said the debutants will take time to come to grips with the rigours of senior football.

“Ben Nason hasn’t even been to the MCG, so it’s his first time at the MCG, he’s got 80,000 people screaming at him to ‘kick it’,” he said.

“They’ll take a little while to get going but we hopefully see some signs going forward [of] what they can offer our footy club.”

However it is the second, third and fourth-year players Hardwick has earmarked as those who need to improve for the Tigers to ensure no more wasted time at a club which has unsuccessfully frittered away three decades.

The ex-Port Adelaide and Hawthorn assistant believes the improvement of players like Jack Riewoldt and fringe dwellers Tom Hislop and Adam Thomson from their time under Terry Wallace is how he and his new team of assistants should be initially judged.

“Those are the guys we’re expecting to become better players, and that’s the measure of our coaching as well,” Hardwick said.

“If we can do that, we become a better side a hell of a lot quicker.

“We’ve put a lot of work into those guys over the summer.

New Blue injection

Three Carlton recruits are also poised to play their first game for the club.

Brock McLean, Lachie Henderson and Robbie Warnock are all in the Blues’ line-up, while first-round draft pick Kane Lucas has been named as an emergency.

Assistant coach Brett Montgomery said Lucas is a smart flexible player.

“He reads the ball incredibly well, can offer up a lot of flexibility, plays half-back, half-forward, can play inside-mid, outside, so it gives us that flexibility, the confidence that we can throw him anywhere,” he said.

“He’s a good kid, he’s a smart kid, and he knows the game of footy. And every time we’ve put him out against AFL opposition he’s looked up to the class.”

Carlton will also have a new captain in the form of Andrew Carazzo, with Chris Judd suspended for three weeks.

Carrazzo has been handed the honour in his 100th match, with fellow vice-captains Kade Simpson and Michael Jamison to take charge in the following weeks.

Former Melbourne Demon McLean will also add some experience to the midfield in Judd’s absence.

“He’s got all those leadership qualities. Fitting into a new club is sometimes quite difficult, he’s certainly handled it great to date,” Montgomery said.

“Now he needs to go and manage that introduction into the way we want to play and into our game style, on field from round one onwards.

“So we’re hoping he plays, he’s in that four new players, we’d hope he’d get a game.”

-ABC/AAP