AIG's headquarter offices in Manhattan. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

(Bloomberg) — American International Group Inc. and Prudential Financial Inc. told regulators they could divest units and halt policy sales to avoid taking a bailout in a future crisis.

AIG, the insurer that repaid a U.S. rescue in 2012, and Prudential, which didn’t take Treasury Department funds, submitted the wind-down plans for the first time, after being designated systemically risky by federal regulators last year. The public portions of the plans, released yesterday, are similar to those submitted by banks in their reliance on unit sales.

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