Can a 'numbers guy' with insurance DNA finally fix AIG?
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[February 12, 2020] By
Suzanne Barlyn
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Peter Zaffino sat at 2
World Trade Center poring over financial reports on the morning of Sept.
11, 2001, when the first plane struck a neighboring building. Zaffino,
known by colleagues for his laser-like focus, remained at his desk as
staff began fleeing.
It was not until a fire warden pleaded with Zaffino – who was then an
executive at reinsurance brokerage Guy Carpenter – that he finally left,
a person familiar with the situation said.
Zaffino, 53, is now poised to become the next chief executive of
American International Group Inc <AIG.N>, one of the largest U.S.
insurers, after being named president in December.
Current CEO Brian Duperreault, 72, who has not said that he is leaving,
hired Zaffino as AIG’s chief operating officer in 2017 and soon after
also named him head of AIG's general insurance business.
AIG declined to comment on succession planning. Zaffino did not respond
to a request for comment.
Reuters spoke to 11 associates who offered a portrait of what Zaffino
may be like as AIG’s next CEO, as is widely expected.
They said Zaffino is as rigorous about underwriting as he is
enthusiastic about revenue growth. He expects his team to rattle off
performance statistics on demand while knowing how they align with the
company's goals.
AIG’s next CEO will be the seventh since 2005. The company is in the
midst of a turnaround launched by Duperreault nearly three years ago.
Zaffino is described as a hard-driving “numbers guy” who digs deep into
raw data to evaluate business lines instead of relying on managers’
reports.
“He appears demanding and task-oriented," said Credit Suisse analyst
Andrew Kligerman. "The good part is that he will likely work extremely
hard and press his team to work extremely hard to achieve the
objectives."
Added another person who knows Zaffino and who spoke on condition of
anonymity: “You can’t outwork him. He’s on the job 24-7.”
The person described Zaffino as always "on," coaching his deputies
during short car trips between events at off-site management meetings.
SOCCER GOALIE
Zaffino is fiercely competitive and disciplined, characteristics that
date back to when he played as a Boston College soccer goalie and
trained with the U.S. Men’s national team, they said.
Zaffino grew up as his father, longtime insurance executive Salvatore
Zaffino, rose through the ranks of the industry, exposing him to
industry leaders.
An operating chief is generally next in line for the CEO job, executive
consultants said. That does not always happen, but naming that person
president typically signals an imminent transition, perhaps within a
year.
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American International Group Inc. (AIG) headquarters seen on the day
of the companyŐs 2017 annual shareholder meeting at 175 Water
Street, New York, U.S., June 28, 2017. REUTERS/Suzanne Barlyn
AIG has struggled to right itself after accepting a $182 billion U.S. taxpayer
bailout in 2008 to save it from collapse. Since then, the company has sold off
big chunks to pay back the debt plus a $22.7 billion return. It also had to work
through hefty losses from claims occurring in prior years that led to more than
$11.2 billion in unexpected reserve increases since 2015, most of which occurred
under prior leadership.
LOOKING BEYOND DAMAGE REPAIR
Analysts and investors want Duperreault to be the last CEO whose chief
responsibility is fixing old problems instead of finding ways to increase
revenue. When AIG reports 2019 earnings on Thursday, Wall Street is hoping it
will have significantly improved commercial underwriting profit, and is on track
to meet a double-digit return-on-equity goal by 2021.
In May, AIG reported its first underwriting profit in general insurance since
the financial crisis, a key goal.
Before joining AIG, Zaffino accumulated a wealth of experience as CEO of Marsh &
McLennan Companies Inc’s <MMC.N> reinsurance arm and its retail insurance
brokerage. He was also an executive for a former General Electric Co <GE.N>
subsidiary that focused on alternative risk insurance and reinsurance, after
launching his career at Hartford Financial Services Group Inc <HIG.N>.
Duperreault has focused on sharpening underwriting, doing more with worthwhile
customers, investing in technology, restoring talent and cutting costs.
Zaffino has been the point man to execute those goals, partly by mitigating
losses in commercial property and casualty businesses and relying more on
reinsurance while also modernizing technology and processes. He also helped to
recruit a number of executives.
Nonetheless, AIG’s stock has dropped more than 11% since the current management
team arrived. Analysts say whoever runs AIG next will have to fix that, too.
“They want things to happen right now,” said Piper Sandler analyst Paul Newsome,
of AIG’s executives. “If you are working in that group, you are under pressure
to do it right, do it now, and do it big.”
(Reporting by Suzanne Barlyn in New York; Editing by Lauren LaCapra and Matthew
Lewis)
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