AIG is no longer a broad financial conglomerate story; after the Corebridge separation it is mainly a global property-and-casualty insurer whose value depends on underwriting discipline, reserve quality, investment income and parent-level capital conversion. At $76.53 as of the 23 June 2026 close, the stock sits about 3% above the selected fair value of $74.61, with the downside marker at $60.49 and the upside marker at $108.89. The business has improved; the stock is near a defensible value and still needs proof that post-divestiture underwriting ROE is durable without leaning on favorable reserve development or asset-sale-funded capital returns. The key macro issue is not higher rates or insurance volatility in isolation, but whether casualty inflation and catastrophe load are absorbed through pricing, claims discipline and reinsurance so General Insurance underwriting income can become remittable parent cash rather than reserve strengthening, statutory-capital pressure and weaker buyback capacity.
Latest Proof Snapshot
Latest reported quarter: Q1 2026, released on 30 April 2026 and filed on Form 10-Q on 1 May 2026. Reported net income attributable to AIG common shareholders was $763m versus $698m a year earlier, while reported diluted EPS was $1.41, up 22%; adjusted after-tax income was $1.146bn, or $2.11 per diluted share, with adjusted EPS up 80%. General Insurance net premiums written were $5.599bn, underwriting income was $774m and the combined ratio improved to 87.3%.
Latest Proof Snapshot (cont.)
The proof is not just the headline quarter. Reported ROE was 7.5%, below the 8.64% cost-of-equity hurdle used in the selected framework, while company-defined Core Operating ROE was 12.2%. Adjusted EPS is the cleaner operating read; reported EPS and ROE are noisier because the $154m retained-Corebridge loss sits inside broader fair-value and realized-loss adjustments, while underwriting proof is measured through General Insurance underwriting income, AYCR and parent remittances.
Latest Proof Snapshot (cont.) (cont. 1)
Management said AIG remained on track to meet or exceed the March 2025 Investor Day financial objectives; the numerical objectives, sourced to the company Q1 financial-results presentation rather than the earnings-release text itself, are 20%+ operating EPS CAGR for 2025-2027, 10%-13% Core Operating ROE, a General Insurance expense ratio below 30%, and 10%+ dividends-per-share CAGR for 2025-2026. Q1 operating cash flow was $155m against roughly $760m of shareholder returns; Q1 can be seasonally cash-heavy, so the issue is not a full-year failure signal but a proof item for parent-level conversion through the rest of 2026.