("MBIA Swings To 1Q Profit On Derivatives Gains," at 4:30 p.m.
EDT, misstated the number of banks still suing MBIA in the fifth
paragraph. The correct version follows.)
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
MBIA Inc. (MBI) swung to a first-quarter profit as losses on
derivatives continued to ease, though the insurer's core results
worsened as earned premiums stagnated.
"Our first quarter 2012 operating results were a disappointment
due to the significant actions we took to reduce future volatility
in our insured portfolio and lower liquidity risk at the holding
company," President and Chief Financial Officer Chuck Chaplin
said.
MBIA has reported a string of choppy results in recent years,
hinging on the varying performance of its insured derivatives. The
company, one of the largest bond insurers in the world, suffered
wide losses after the housing-market crash caused insurance on
mortgage-related securities to backfire.
In 2009, MBIA split off its public-finance business, calling it
the National Public Finance Guarantee Corp., while the
structured-finance guarantees--with all their obligations--remained
with MBIA Insurance Corp. That move prompted many banks to sue
MBIA, though the insurer reached settlements with most of them.
The two banks still pursuing litigation argue that MBIA's
restructuring was improper and will take the insurer to trial this
month in New York State Supreme Court. Bank of America Corp. (BAC)
and Societe Generale (GLE.FR, SCGLY) are alleging an MBIA unit they
expected to pay them is effectively insolvent and unable to pay
claims.
Overall, MBIA posted a profit of $10 million, or 5 cents a
share, compared with a year-earlier loss of $1.27 billion, or $6.37
a share.
MBIA's adjusted pre-tax loss reached $548 million in the
quarter, compared with a $25 million profit a year earlier.
The insurer reported $383 million of revenue, compared with a
negative $1.61 billion top line a year ago caused by $1.42 billion
in losses on insured derivatives. Total premiums earned were flat
at $137 million.
MBIA's insured derivatives gained $299 million in value overall,
compared with a $1.78 billion loss a year earlier.
Investment income dropped 46%.
Shares were off 1.2% at $9.70 after hours. The stock had fallen
15% so far this year through Thursday's close.
-By Drew FitzGerald, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2909;
andrew.fitzgerald@dowjones.com