By Echo Wang
NEW YORK (Reuters) -AIG Inc’s life insurance and retirement division Corebridge Financial Inc raised $1.68 billion on Wednesday in the biggest initial public offering (IPO) so far this year, braving market volatility and ending a seven-month lull in major listings.
AIG said it sold 80 million Corebridge shares at $21 per share, which was at the lower end of their indicated target range of $21 to $24 per share.
The IPO values Corebridge at $13.6 billion.
All proceeds of the IPO will go to AIG and the new company is not raising new capital, according to an earlier filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Corebridge’s share sale could help shake the IPO market out of its hibernation. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and rampant inflation triggering rises in interest rates have been driving stock market volatility since February, making it hard for companies to press ahead with listings.
IPOs in the United States are on track for their worst year in over two decades, according to Dealogic, which tracks listing data going back to 1995. So far, companies have raised about $18 billion this year, compared to over $231 billion during the same period last year, according to the data provider.
Other companies, including social media platform Reddit and software firm ServiceTitan, have been forced to delay their IPO plans this year in light of the volatility.
With a raise of $1.7 billion, the Corebridge offering also marks the biggest U.S. IPO this year, topping private equity firm TPG Inc.’s $1.1 billion listing in January.
BIGGEST IPO OF 2022
AIG first announced it would separate its life and retirement unit and list it as a new public company in 2020, thereby allowing the insurance giant to focus on its property and casualty business.
Such a move reflects a wider trend among insurers to focus on a single product offering, given their different return profiles to shareholders; a trend which AIG had successfully fought off for years, including a campaign by activist investors in the mid-2010s advocating such a separation.
After divesting a 10% stake to private equity firm Blackstone Inc for $2.2 billion last year, AIG filed for the Corebridge offering in March. It had initially planned to complete the listing by the end of June, before postponing it due to market turbulence.
The Houston-based AIG subsidiary provides retirement solutions and insurance products in the U.S.
AIG will control almost 78% of the company’s shares after the listing, with Corebridge trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “CRBG”.
JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley and Piper Sandler Co. are the lead underwriters for the IPO. Bank of America, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs are also among the lead underwriters on the IPO.
(Reporting by Echo Wang in New York; Additional reporting by David French; Editing by Anirban Sen and David Gregorio)