MetLife: Financial Winners & Losers

MetLife traded higher after the insurer announced a plan to buy AIG's Alico unit for $15.5 billion.
By Robert Holmes ,

(

Updated with stock price moves

.)

NEW YORK (

TheStreet

) --

MetLife

(MET) - Get Report

was among the top performers of the financial sector Monday after the insurer reached a $15.5 billion deal to buy

American International Group's

(AIG) - Get Report

foreign life insurance unit.

AIG

said it will sell its American Life Insurance unit to MetLife for about $15.5 billion, including $6.8 billion in cash and $8.7 billion in equity securities of MetLife. AIG said the cash portion of the proceeds from this sale will be used to reduce the preferred shares in Alico held by the

Federal Reserve

Bank of New York.

MetLife said it expects the transaction to boost its 2011 operating earnings by 45 cents to 55 cents a share, and enable it to increase its estimated 2011 year-end operating return on equity by 140 to 160 basis points.

MetLife was climbing 4.3% to $40.58.

AIG

shares were lately up 3.6% to $29.08.

Among other insurer stocks,

Lincoln National

(LNC) - Get Report

dipped 0.2% to $26.93 and

Prudential PLC

(PUK) - Get Report

fell 1.2% to $15.70, while

Hartford Financial

(HIG) - Get Report

was flat at $26.86.

Morgan Stanley

(MS) - Get Report

also traded higher after a report in

The New York Post

said the firm has hired investment banking veteran

Gary Shedlin

from

Citigroup

(C) - Get Report

. Shedlin, the chairman of Citigroup's global Financial Institutions Group, plans to join Morgan Stanley as a vice chairman, the report said, citing people familiar with the matter.

Morgan Stanley was lately up 0.4% to $29.52, and Citigroup climbed 2% to $3.57.

Most U.S. bank stocks were also trading higher.

Goldman Sachs

(GS) - Get Report

rose 1.6% to $169.87, and

Bank of America

(BAC) - Get Report

gained 0.4% to $16.76. Meanwhile,

JPMorgan Chase

(JPM) - Get Report

slipped 0.1% to $42.75, and

Wells Fargo

(WFC) - Get Report

declined 0.6% to $28.97.

On the other hand,

Bank of New York Mellon

(BK) - Get Report

slipped in early trading Monday after the bank said it will acquire

BHF Asset Servicing

of Germany for about $343 million. The purchase will be funded internally and the transaction is expected to be immediately accretive to earnings,

Bank of New York

said in a statement. Still, Bank of New York shares were down 1.2% to $29.35.

Fifth Third Bancorp

(FITB) - Get Report

also lost ground after FBR Capital Markets analyst Paul Miller cut his rating on the stock to market perform from outperform, citing valuation. Miller maintained his stock price target of $14. Fifth Third shares were down 1.5% to $12.55.

In a separate research note, FBR's Miller upgraded

PNC Financial

(PNC) - Get Report

to outperform from market perform on valuation following the company's common equity raise announcement and the planned sale of its investment servicing business as part of a capital plan to repay $7.6 billion in bailout funds. Miller increased his stock price target to $65 from $55.

PNC Financial shares were advancing 0.9% to $56.06.

-- Written by Robert Holmes in Boston

.

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