Liam McGee, an Irish-born banker and insurance executive who guided Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. through a taxpayer bailout and shored up the company’s finances, has died. He was 60.

McGee died Feb. 13 after a two-year battle with cancer, Hartford said Monday in a statement. He’d relocated with his family from Connecticut to California after learning he had the disease and stepping down from the insurer.

McGee ran Hartford as chief executive officer from October 2009 through the middle of 2014, turning around an insurer that had been forced into a U.S. government rescue. The CEO sold stock and debt to help the Hartford, Connecticut-based company repay its $3.4 billion bailout, and retreated from life insurance and variable annuities to focus on property-casualty coverage.

“Liam was a man of commitment, integrity and compassion,” Hartford director Thomas Renyi said in the statement. “Liam made the tough decisions necessary to guide the company through this period.”

The retirement products, which guarantee a minimum return to investors, contributed to more than $4 billion in losses that Hartford posted during the 15 months before McGee was hired to replace Ramani Ayer.

Hartford plunged more than 90 percent from its 2007 peak to its low in March 2009 of $3.33 a share amid the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. It received the second- largest bailout package among insurers under the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

“We learned our lessons from the last two years,” McGee told analysts and investors in April 2010. “Never again will we have a concentration in any product, whether it be annuities or anything else, of the size that VA was.”

‘Something Drastic’

Within six months of joining Hartford, McGee had raised $1.65 billion selling stock and another $1.1 billion in debt. A stock-market recovery helped Hartford post its first profit in six quarters in the final three months of 2009, and aided McGee as he raised capital.

McGee narrowed Hartford’s focus to property-casualty insurance in 2012 after the firm’s stock slipped to the lowest valuation relative to book value of any major insurance company. Billionaire hedge-fund manager John Paulson, who at the time controlled the largest stake in the insurer, told McGee to “do something drastic” and urged him to split the company.

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