Financial Winners & Losers

Discover: Financial Winners & Losers

Stock quotes in this article:DFS 

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Discover Financial (DFS) was among the losers of the financial sector after posting a first-quarter loss and announcing approval to repay borrowed funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

Discover said late Tuesday it has received approval to redeem the government's $1.2 billion preferred stock investment related to the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

Discover

The Treasury's investment was made in January 2009 as part of TARP's Capital Purchase Program. Discover said it would issue $350 million worth of subordinated debt in a second quarter offering.

The announcement came as Discover posted a loss of $104 million, or 22 cents a share. Revenue net of interest expense slipped to $1.69 billion for the latest quarter from $1.72 billion last year.

Discover shares were lately down 0.1% to $15.29, having traded as high as $15.78 earlier in the session.

Among other credit-card issuers, Capital One Financial (COF) slipped 0.2% to $40.33, while American Express (AXP) rose 0.7% to $41.22.

Hartford Financial (HIG), on the other hand, traded higher after the insurer said it will sell $3.05 billion in securities as part of its plan to repay the $3.4 billion in TARP funds.

Hartford said it will offer $1.45 billion in common stock, $500 million in convertible preferred stock, and $1.1 billion in bonds.

Shares of Hartford were lately up 4.9% to $28.60. Among other insurer stocks, American International Group (AIG) was up 2.1% to $34.32, and MetLife (MET) gained 1.9% to $43.51.

In other insurer news, Bank of America/Merrill Lynch analysts upgraded Lincoln National (LNC) to buy from neutral, sending shares 6.6% higher to $30.35.

Meanwhile, Citigroup (C) traded higher following news the bank's proceeds from the IPO of its Primerica insurance and financial services unit could come in at nearly triple its original estimate.

According to an updated Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Citigroup plans to issue as many as 20.7 million Primerica shares (including the over-allotment option) in an offering that could raise up to $289.8 million

In November, when Primerica first registered for the initial public offering, Citigroup was looking to pull in $100 million from the sale.

TheStreet Premium Services

Jim Cramer
Jim Cramer's Action Alerts PLUS:
Trade right alongside a Wall Street pro — enjoy access to his Charitable Trust portfolio and be sent trade alerts BEFORE he makes a move. Learn More
OptionsProfits
OptionsProfits:
Get 50+ trade ideas a week from the industry's top options experts. Plus — exclusive commentary on market trends and essential trading tools. Learn More
Real Money
Real Money:
Our team of professional Wall Street Pros — including Jim Cramer, Doug Kass, and Nicholas Vardy — delivers intelligent analysis, timely trade ideas, and colorful commentary. Learn More
Stocks Under $10
Stocks Under $10:
Break into the market with small- and mid-cap stocks... all $10 or less! David Peltier tells you exactly which low-priced stocks he's buying and selling. Learn More
To begin commenting right away, you can log in below using your Disqus, Facebook, Twitter, OpenID or Yahoo login credentials. Alternatively, you can post a comment as a "guest" just by entering an email address. Your use of the commenting tool is subject to multiple terms of service/use and privacy policies - see here for more details.
blog comments powered by Disqus
Dow Jones S&P 500 NASDAQ 10-Year Note
12,393.45 1,310.33 2,827.34 15.81
Oil *
101.78
DOWN
26.41
DOWN
2.99
DOWN
10.02
DOWN
0.44
10 Yr
1.58%
SPDR Gold
151.62
-0.21%
-0.23%
-0.35%
-2.71%
Data delayed 20 minutes

Top Stories and Tools

Articles From

After the Bell

Before the Bell

Booyah! Newsletter

Midday Bell

TheStreet Top 10 Stories

Winners & Losers

We respect your privacy.
Podcasts

Connect with TheStreet