Prudential not buying AIA

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14 years 5 months ago #3939 by Dongdaemun
Yeah, better not. In Spore wld be a giant player, almost monopolising the business. Prudential scraps US$35.5b bid for Asian insurer AIA Posted: 02 June 2010 LONDON : British insurance giant Prudential ditched its deal to buy AIG\'s Asian unit AIA on Wednesday, ending a bid to become the world\'s top non-Chinese insurer, after AIG refused to cut the price. The failed takeover, worth US$35.5 billion (29 billion euros), was masterminded by Prudential\'s high-profile Chief Executive Tidjane Thiam, whose glittering career now looks tarnished, according to media. \"Prudential plc announces that it is in negotiations with American International Group, Inc. (AIG) for the termination of the agreement for the combination of Prudential with AIA,\" the London-based firm said in a statement. The deal collapsed one day after AIG rejected a request by Prudential to cut the price to US$30 billion, following a shareholder revolt over the high cost

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14 years 5 months ago #3948 by Joes
Replied by Joes on topic Re:Prudential not buying AIA
Reward for holding on Investors in structured Prudential Yield product likely to make tidy profit by Julie Quek 05:55 AM Jun 04, 2010 SINGAPORE - It was a structured product that was on the brink of collapse last year. But investors who had held on to the Prudential Yield 15 and Yield 20 funds managed by Prudential Asset Management (Pams) look set to walk away with a tidy profit when the fund matures next Thursday. In October last year, United Overseas Bank (UOB) made a buyback offer to about 4,000 customers who purchased the funds through the bank. UOB offered to redeem their units at par value or the initial price they paid for the investment, less all yearly payouts such as the interest coupon to date - or at 88 cents for Yield 15 and 82 US cents ($1.15) for Yield 20. Other distributors of this structured product were HSBC, Maybank, Prudential Assurance Company Singapore and Hong Leong Finance. At its lowest point, the Yield 15 and Yield 20 had dived to 37.5 cents and 39.8 US cents, respectively, at the end of March last year. But improved credit conditions this year have caused the funds to recover and the price of each unit has rebounded to $1.074 for Yield 15 and US$1.104 for Yield 20 as of May 27. Investors who held on to the fund for five years until maturity would also have earned 15-per-cent returns in coupon payments for the Yield 15 notes. This works out to about 3 per cent coupon interest a year. Meanwhile, holders of the Yield 20 fund would have collected 22.5 per cent over the 5-year investment period of the fund. For investors, the potential capital gains coupled with the coupon payments mean that they would walk away from the fund in a better-off position at maturity than if they had redeemed those notes last year. A retired investor who declined to be named told MediaCorp that she regretted her decision to accept UOB\'s buyback offer last year as this meant she lost out on the 15-per-cent returns from the coupon payments. However, former NTUC Income chief executive Tan Kin Lian told MediaCorp that he advised these investors not to regret their earlier decision, because noone would have known whether these funds would do well or fail at maturity this year. The fund was in trouble last year and early this year, when it suffered a total of 17 defaults out of its 100 reference entities in its portfolio. Had the fund been hit by six more defaults, the funds\' capital would be adversely affected. Customers are expected to receive their maturity proceeds by end-June.

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