Government bails out AIG with $85 billion loan

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JEANNINE AVERSA, IEVA M. AUGSTUMS and STEPHEN BERNARD | September 16, 2008 11:29 PM EST | AP

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Businessmen leave an American International Group office building, Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008 in New York. Worries about AIG's well-being intensified Monday and early Tuesday after several ratings agencies downgraded the company. Lower ratings can add to the amount of money the already cash-strapped company has to set aside. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

WASHINGTON — For the second time this month, the U.S. government put taxpayer money on the hook to rescue a private financial company, saying the failure of the huge insurer American International Group Inc. would further disrupt markets and threaten the already fragile economy.

The Federal Reserve said Tuesday it would provide up to $85 billion in an emergency, two-year loan to rescue AIG, which teetered on the edge of failure because of stresses caused by the collapse of the subprime mortgage market and the credit crunch that ensued. In return, the government will get a 79.9 percent stake in AIG and the right to remove senior management.

The move was similar to government's seizure on Sept. 7 of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, where the Treasury Department said it was prepared to put up as much as $100 billion over time in each of the companies if needed to keep them from going broke.

Both moves were bound to raise questions about the use of taxpayer money to bail out private firms.

The Fed said it determined that a disorderly failure of AIG could hurt the already delicate financial markets and the economy. Although little known off Wall Street, AIG does business with almost every financial institution in the world and insures $88 billion worth of assets including mortgages and corporate loans.

Its failure could also "lead to substantially higher borrowing costs, reduced household wealth and materially weaker economic performance," the Fed said in a statement.

The decision to help AIG reversed the government's stance over the weekend, when it refused to use taxpayer money to bail out Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Lehman, which filed for bankruptcy protection Monday, collapsed under the weight of mounting losses related to its real estate holdings.

The White House said it backed the Fed's decision Tuesday.

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"These steps are taken in the interest of promoting stability in financial markets and limiting damage to the broader economy," White House spokesman Tony Fratto said.

After meeting with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke in a late-night briefing on Capitol Hill, Congressional leaders said they understood the need for the bailout.

"The administration is approaching an unprecedented step, but unfortunately we are living in unprecedented times." said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. "Hearing of these plans, you have to stop to catch your breath. But upon reflection, the alternatives are much worse."

New York officials said the deal helps stave off a fiscal crisis for the state.

"Policy holders will be protected, jobs will be saved," New York Gov. David Paterson said Tuesday night.

The Fed's move was part of a concerted push to help calm jittery markets and investors around the world.

On Tuesday, the Fed decided to keep its key interest rate steady at 2 percent, but acknowledged stresses in financial markets have grown and hinted it stood ready to lower rates if needed.

The central bank also pumped $70 billion into the nation's financial system to help ease credit stresses. In emergency sessions over the weekend, the Fed expanded its loan programs to Wall Street firms, part of an ongoing effort to get credit flowing more freely.

The stock market, which Monday had its worst session since the Sept. 11 attacks, recovered Tuesday after the Fed's decision on interest rates. The Dow Jones industrials rose 141 points after losing 500 points on Monday.

AIG's shares swung violently, though, as rumors of potential deals involving the government or private parties emerged and were dashed. By late Tuesday, its shares had closed down 20 percent _ and another 45 percent after hours.

The problems at AIG stemmed from its insurance of mortgage-backed securities and other risky debt against default. If AIG couldn't make good on its promise to pay back soured debt, investors feared the consequences would pose a greater threat to the U.S. financial system than this week's collapse of the investment bank Lehman Brothers.

The worries were heightened Monday after Moody's Investor Service and Standard and Poor's lowered AIG's credit ratings, forcing AIG to seek more money for collateral against its insurance contracts. Without that money, AIG would have defaulted on its obligations and the buyers of its insurance _ such as banks and other financial companies _ would have found themselves without protection against losses on the debt they hold.

"It might not just bring down other financial institutions in the U.S. It could bring down overseas financial institutions," said Timothy Canova, a professor of international economic law at Chapman University School of Law. "If Lehman Brother's failure could help trigger AIG's going down, who knows who AIG's failure could trigger next."

New York-based AIG operates an insurance and financial services businesses ranging from property, casualty, auto and life insurance to annuity and investment services. Those traditional insurance operations are considered healthy and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners said "they are solvent and have the capability to pay claims."

WASHINGTON — For the second time this month, the U.S. government put taxpayer money on the hook to rescue a private financial company, saying the failure of the huge insurer American Internation...
WASHINGTON — For the second time this month, the U.S. government put taxpayer money on the hook to rescue a private financial company, saying the failure of the huge insurer American Internation...
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As Alice said in Alice in Wonderland, it's getting curiouser and curiouser.
I practically choked on my coffee this morning while watching MSNBC. After getting $85 Billion of hard-earned taxpayer dollars to help them get out of hot water, not only is AIG not apologetic about spending $400,000 on what was billed as a retreat, but they're planning another one. Maybe the hot water they're getting out of is the jacuzzi at a luxury resort.
I don't get their lame justifications and I simply don't get what what the hell is going on. I worked for a company that held company retreats, but guess what. When the going got rough, they teleconferenced instead.
AIG's explanation was that they didn't use the bailout money for this. Bull!
Excuse me. I don't give a damn if they wrote the check from another checkbook, they spent plus or minus $400,000 while they were supposedly trying to keep their heads above water.
Space is limited here, and there's more, so if you want to read the this whole rant, visit http://myspace.com/sallystraight
---MyComments2

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 10/09/2008
- berrycooda I'm a Fan of berrycooda 23 fans permalink

Wow....Government bailing people out of debt ???

Who do I contact to get me out of debt.....If I quit paying my bills, maybe my lender would have to get
bailed out too.

Help....I need to get a new $40,000.00 electric car. Then I won't need to spend any money on gas.
(just on electric bills)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 AM on 09/19/2008

McCain was right we should stop bailing out these people and let them sell off some of their property .

McCain the next day understood why the Feds bailed them out but I am sure if he was president they would not have received one dime of Taxpayer money

Of course Obama has no position he would rather wait and see what happens then take the position based on if it worked or not so he can be right

Maybe Obama should ask his 2 economic advisers the ex CEO's of Fannie mae and Lehman

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 AM on 09/18/2008

McCain sold to the highest lobbyist bidder.
McCain has more lobbyist ties then U.S. has dollars.
McCain champion of lies and deception.
McCain the man that just keep given .... your jobs to oversea countries , more money to coporations and oil companies.
McCain what he doesn't not know now , he will forget in an hour.
Republicans are full of BS , Lies and propaganda , take that away and they are silenced.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 09/18/2008

What McCain right before he was wrong ..... Or was he wrong before he was right....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 09/18/2008

GM is also to big to fail. Since AIG has been nationalized, when GM comes begging the FED should place them under the control of a new Department of Civilian Transportation in the Pentagon. They can mandate production of100 mpg ultralight vehicles for civilian use, and federalize the employee's pensions and health care. This will drastically reduce demand and price of oil., during the transition to electric vehicles. Ford will soon follow. This will end squabbles over CAFE standards. which is a waste of federal time and money, and reduce pentagon expenditures in the Mid-east.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 PM on 09/17/2008
- iambusto I'm a Fan of iambusto 5 fans permalink

nah !! GM is not big enough to fail. its hardly big enough. Let it go straight into bankruptacy and then to liquidation.

The auto market doesnt need 5-8 big players. 2-3 is plenty. Hopefully Ford follows next.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 AM on 09/18/2008
- macohmz I'm a Fan of macohmz 17 fans permalink
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" We gotta reform America." Said Sarah in her interview with Charlie. Don't mistake fat-cat bureaucrats and CEOs and the rest of these demons with America. Go where the reforms are needed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 09/17/2008
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I don't get it....

I didn't break it so why do I have to fix it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 PM on 09/17/2008

Can someone explain to me why nothing has been done in the last 3 +/- years about AIG since those AIG execs were indicted, etc. I haven't seen one thing mentioned about any of that. Or is it because Spitzer was doing the investigating and eventually was brought down. I kinda thought they were after him for a reason. I guess the Repugs still believe going to a pro is worse than bilking billions out of the taxpayers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 09/17/2008


Spitzer was a mark man when he investigated AIG, fined this Giant over 80 million, and embarrassed Hank Greenberg who had to step down as the CEO. Greenberg held that position over 25 years, and was like Teflon, until Spitzer came along. I suspect, AIG executives and the powers that be, have tentacles all over our political and economic systems. None of them were indicted. But of course, some lowly underwriters were made the scapegoat while powerful politicians, shakers and movers shielded the real culprits.

I suspected that there is a special interest group who will, one way or another bring Spitzer down. For all of Spitzer's savvy, he failed to realized that there will be repercussions for the embarrassing the biggest insurance company in the world. This special interest group used the oldest trick in the book - SEX. Too bad for Spitzer, he fell for the trap. To this day, I believe this was nothing but a trap.

But as the story goes - What comes around, goes around.

Now - AIG and perhaps these interest group are now in serious trouble. Nightmare - none of them can imagine.

Justice comes in many shades. I guess in the end - Spitzer got some kind of justice. .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 PM on 09/17/2008

This is one huge conspiracy. This has been the mastermind of the feds, wall street and the white house.
The only way they can do such enourmous transacations in 48 hours or so, is that this has been in the works for years.

they want to bankrupt America so we'rre all slaves that are in debt. Wake up.

the Fed wants to lend money at high interest so we can work like slaves to pay it off. Bravo!! Take a bow.!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 PM on 09/17/2008

DUDES!!! Check this out. AIG had a buyer just 2 days BEFORE the Feds "bailed out" their sorry asses, but AIG refused the PRIVATE offer. See the attached Bloomberg article. Had they taken the offer then Uncle Sugar wouldn't have had to risk YOUR money. "Liars can figure, but fugures don't lie."

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=azTRq.G2zU7g&refer=home

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 PM on 09/17/2008

Sorry this was a Freudian slip: "Liars can figure, but fugures don't lie."
I meant FIGURES don't lie.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:47 PM on 09/17/2008
- dadw5boys I'm a Fan of dadw5boys 277 fans permalink
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OK THE SHIP IS SINKING!!!!!!

GAMBLERS FIRST !!!!!
THEN THEIR LACKEYS !!!!!!

THEN REPUBLICANS POLITICANS !!!!

THEN WOMEN AND CHILDREN !!!!!

AMERICAN MEN GRAB YOUR ANKLES !!!!!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 09/17/2008
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My 79-year-old mother and stepdaddies' fixed income annuities are with AIG.

****shudder****

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 09/17/2008

I think I j=have AIG's new slogan. "We've No Money"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 09/17/2008
- NicoleAnon I'm a Fan of NicoleAnon 9 fans permalink

I have a question for all the people who are critcizing how the government has responded to this crisis. What exactly would you have done differently?

Also some people are predicting that investment banks will start merging with commercial banks but this isn't going to happen because they want to be regulated the same way. Nobody really knows how they have been making so much money and they want to keep it that way - Goldman Sachs already said they wouldn't merge with a commercial banks because they would have to change the way they do business.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 09/17/2008
- booker52 I'm a Fan of booker52 24 fans permalink
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Hello?? Since when does the US Government bail out private businesses?? I don't care how large they are. When does this stop?? You know more are going under and the US doesn't have the funds to bail everyone out. I say this is BS. Our own government caused this problem to start with by deregulation. Then the pigs on Wall Street fed, got fat now they want us the American public and our tax dollars to bail their butts out. How sad!!!! Thanks for nothing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:34 PM on 09/17/2008
- loki I'm a Fan of loki 128 fans permalink
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Capitalism is the astounding belief that the most wickedest of men will do the most wickedest of things for the greatest good of everyone

John Maynard Keynes (1883 - 1946)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 09/17/2008
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