AIG Bonus Bombshell Raises New Questions About Goldman Sachs

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April 2, 2009 at 07:31 PM

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Decisions made during the final months of the Bush administration created an environment in which the most politically connected investment banks, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, not only flourished, but saw their competitors laid waste, with firms like Lehman in bankruptcy, and others, like Merrill Lynch and Bank of America, forced to merge in desperate hope of surviving.

Two recent news stories raise some interesting questions about Goldman Sachs. In the opaque world of investment banking and federal regulation, these reports shed light on the difficulty of determining where to draw the line between routine complex financial transactions and problematic conflict of interest and favoritism.

The first story ran on the cover of last weekend's Barron's: "Resurrection on Wall Street" (subscription required). It documents in some detail the success of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley as "Wall Street's sole standouts." The highly favorable story, which only peripherally refers to the government support each institution has received, concludes that they are both "making attempts to adapt to the new financial realities. Combined with the decline of their competitors, that makes them good bets for investors now." For a couple of banks trying to boost their stock, what more could you ask for?

The second story, which was covered on March 15 by most news outlets, was based on the disclosure by the American International Group, Inc. (AIG) of massive payments to domestic and foreign financial institutions, and to 20 states, using money provided by U.S. taxpayers through the federal bailout. While most news stories focused on payments made to non-U.S. institutions, fueling populist anger, one of the more interesting aspects of AIG's disclosure statement is the fact that Goldman Sachs, at $12.6 billion, is the single largest beneficiary of AIG largess.

The roots of the linkage between Goldman Sachs and AIG go back to the closing months of the Bush administration, as the financial meltdown reached crisis proportions and key decisions were made that are now reaping the whirlwind. Remember who played a key role in deciding to bail out AIG? Henry Paulson, the Goldman CEO-turned George W. Bush Treasury Secretary. Paulson, according to a September 27, 2008 New York Times piece by Gretchen Morgenson, led a team of regulators and bankers in early September to determine what to do with the most severely wounded financial institutions.
One of the participants in those meetings was Lloyd C. Blankfein, Paulson's successor at Goldman Sachs.

Out of those meetings came the controversial and heavily criticized decision to allow
Lehman Brothers, a Goldman competitor, to go belly up, and to bail out AIG. Starting with $85 billion from the Fed, taxpayers have pumped a total of $170 billion into the giant insurance company. The bailout was crucial to Goldman in that it permitted AIG to pay off its $12.6 billion debt to the firm, $8.1 billion of which was to cover AIG-backed credit derivatives.

At a hearing of the House Financial Services Committee on February 11, 2009, Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein denied that his firm had a major stake in bailing out AIG. Blankfein told the panel that "with respect to our dealings with AIG, we were always fully collateralized and had de minimis or no credit risk at any given moment because we exchanged collateral....We had transactions with them. And if they had gone the wrong way, they would have owed us money. We assumed they'd pay it, but if they defaulted, they wouldn't pay us. We insured against that default. We didn't win money from it. We wouldn't have made money. But it would have protected our down side."

Throughout the past six months of economic crisis, Goldman has taken full advantage of what the government has to offer. On October 28, 2008, Goldman and eight other banks were the first to receive federal bailout money under the Treasury Department's Troubled Assets Relief
Program (TARP). which was initiated by Paulson. On November 25, 2008, Goldman became the first bank in the nation to benefit from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program (TLGP), issuing $5 billion in government-secured debt at 3.367%, substantially less than the market rate facing banks which issued unsecured debt. All told, Goldman has issued a total of $20 billion in government-guaranteed debt under TLGP. In their dealings with banks, both Treasury and the Fed have been subject to relatively minimal disclosure, in order to protect the proprietary interests of financial institutions, especially to prevent rumors of illiquidity or excessive debt from threatening a bank's viability.

*

The banking and insurance industries have traditionally been among the most politically influential sectors. That was especially true during the George W. Bush years, when regulatory policies and tax legislation -- especially cuts in the rates on dividend and capital gains income -- produced a corporate bonanza. In the 2004 election, these financial interests demonstrated their gratitude by contributing hundreds of thousands to the Bush-Cheney '04 campaign. Employees of Morgan Stanley gave Bush more than any other company, $600,480; followed by Merrill Lynch, $580,004; PricewaterhouseCoopers, $513,750; UBS Americas, $472,075; Goldman Sachs, $390,600; MBNA Corp, $356,350; Credit Suisse Group, $331,040; Lehman Brothers, $329,725; Citigroup Inc, $320,620; and Bear Stearns, $309,150.

* *

The consequences of the decisions made in the private meetings chaired by Republican Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson back in September 2008, are just now coming to light, even if transparency is modest at best. Clearly, when regulators and the regulated are trusted to reach decisions behind closed doors -- decisions involving the financial viability of major
banks -- those who are regulated, operating out of public view, will do all they can to insure that their interests are protected.

Decisions made during the final months of the Bush administration created an environment in which the most politically connected investment banks, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, not only flourished...
Decisions made during the final months of the Bush administration created an environment in which the most politically connected investment banks, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, not only flourished...
 
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- Hank10303 I'm a Fan of Hank10303 46 fans permalink

So now what has been done in darkness is coming to light. Now we see that the Bush administration intentionally and wifully involved the federal government in a competitive war between Goldman Sachs, Morgan and their competitors. Now we know why Lehman was allowed to fail. The Bush administration has much to answer for.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 03/17/2009

"The Bush administration has much to answer for.".

Good luck with that...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 03/17/2009

Thats for sure, Obama has decided it's his main mission in life to protect BushCo from any and all legal resposibilities, from Iraq to torture to trillion dollar Wall St rip offs. Obama hearts BushCo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 PM on 03/17/2009
- voltage356 I'm a Fan of voltage356 17 fans permalink
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I cannot believe that people just fell for Paulson claim about not wanting any oversight whatsoever. So please tell me the purpose of congress rewriting the package with Paulson calling for the oversights of where the money was going. Sorry to say that this has been one scam from the get go. Instead of walking out the back door with the money; they walked right out the front door with American public watching in awe. This was one of the best robbery i've seen in my life time. I don't think anything can ever top this one. The beauty of this robbery was just the use of intimidation and fear. They really deserve a hand for pulling this off. I 'm quite inpress indeed. Bravo! Boy, you cannot tell me when they brought in the last character Neil kashkari to seal the deal. You were like WTF because i know Paulson got me on that one. They don't make movies like this anymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 03/17/2009

It is great to read one person who has it right. Again, you need to add the made of the movie like "The Thomas Crown Affair with Steve McQueenand Faye Dunnaway" the original move shows a perfect crime committed twice. not the Broson remake.

By the way, I know you know by now Paulson has been one of the main characters with two face. The Federal reserve have not named the people in those rating companies who sold fraudulent bond securities on the global market and we must paid the countries back for the crime.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 03/17/2009

Paulson designed this 'Ponzi' scheme (TARP). We understand everyone wanting us to buy more stock in order to keep the market up...fix the system...then we'll have 'confidence' to invest.

And that FIX is simple and oblivious, but everyone seems not to be addressing it directly...
- it's 'Corruptio­n-Corrupti­on-Corrupt­ion'.
ie. special interest groups, earmarks, lobbyist, elimination of rules and regulations, the financial sector having contributed over $5.2B to political campaigns, same people who got us in this mess are now tying to get us out (humanly impossible...they will, and have instead spent most of the time & money trying to cover-up the industry's underlining behavior).

Corruption is the 'root' problem here...as it is everywhere. Until that gets fixed first...everything else is redundant...we're just pouring $$$ into the abyss! Wall Street has always been Ponzi Street, and the Golden Rule always applies; 'never invest $$$ you can't afford to lose'.

Fix the 'corruption' - then we'll have 'confidence'.
The solution – 'Transpare­ncy-Transp­arency-Tra­nsparency'­.
How? Start now Restructuring (nationalize, fix, resell) all the zombie bank

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 PM on 03/17/2009

You are 100% correct.

The politican made wall street ponzi scam look legit because they allowed us to have our salary tax deferred in 401K so call retirement plans. so the FREE MARKETS could rip us off" and the politicians would receive our money from the companies as a political donation.

Once we handed over our money to them we were never going to see it again. It is stated on every page in those booklets they send out to 401K plan investors. It was time to rip off the baby boomers.
they were telling us about Soc Security going broke but that so we could pour more money into these plans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 PM on 03/17/2009
- voltage356 I'm a Fan of voltage356 17 fans permalink
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I cannot believe that people just fell for Paulson claim about not wanting any oversight whatsoever. So please tell me the purpose of congress rewriting the package with Paulson calling for the oversights of where the money was going. Sorry to say that this has been one scam from the get go. Instead of walking out the back door with the money; they walked right out the front door with American public watching in awe. This was one of the best robbery i've seen in my life time. I don't think anything can ever top this one. The beauty of this robbery was just the use of intimidation and fear. They really deserve a hand for pulling this off. I 'm quite inpress indeed. Bravo! Boy, you cannot tell me when they brought in the last character Neil kashkari to seal the deal. You would like WTF. They don't make movies like this anyone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:11 PM on 03/17/2009

From seeking alpha;
On why AIG couldnt be allowed to fail.
What's more, bailing out AIG had the pleasant side-effect of putting the entire global CDS market on a much stronger footing.

Remember that CDS, like all derivatives, are a zero-sum game: for every loser, there's an equal and opposite winner. Very few institutions were net sellers of protection; AIG was by far the largest. So what that means is that the rest of the CDS market, ex AIG, is now a net winner to the exact extent that AIG is a loser: a hundred billion dollars or more.

Given worries about the fragility of the CDS market and the systemic risks that it posed, bailing out the single largest net seller of protection essentially meant injecting a large amount of government cash into the part of the market that regulators were most worried about. It was quite an elegant solution, in its way: rather than trying to unpick the CDS knot institution by institution, you could just bail them all out at once by backstopping AIG

Why are these markets still legal??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 03/17/2009

James Lieber's piece in the Village Voice is the best article I've read yet in terms of explaining what derivatives are and how they work (or don't...). Kinda long, but very well-written.

http://www.villagevoice.com/content/printVersion/850296

(ps - kudos to 1ladybug for posting the link this morning!)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:12 PM on 03/17/2009
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 145 fans permalink

Great article--thanks Ernestine.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:40 PM on 03/17/2009

Please, how can this surprise anyone. Corporations run our gov, and our gov is run by corporations.

Paulson was put in his position by Goldman Sachs so that he could rob the US Treasury and US taxpayers blind so that banks (Goldman Sachs) could profit

Cheney was put in his position by Halliburton so that he could invade Iraq and Afganistan and rob the US taxpayers blind so that Halliburton (and KBR) could profit

Bush was put in his position by Big Oil so that he could invade Iraq and rob US taxpayers blind paying for and paving the way for Big Oil to rob the Iraqis of their natural resource, oil.

I could go on but you get the point, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 03/17/2009
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Frightenly so............

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 03/17/2009
- Opus007 I'm a Fan of Opus007 17 fans permalink

You are right funandgames- it's called fascism!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 PM on 03/18/2009

This goes a long way in explaining why Paulson wanted the money with no strings and no oversight.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:01 PM on 03/17/2009
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WAKE UP! Middle Class Democrats are Mad as HECK!

No Direct Line of CREDIT from Government (LIKE that to WALL STREET) is available to MAIN STREET business and consumers! NO FLOW that goes around this corrupt BANKSTER System.

We all KNOW Shelby is a Foreign Car Republican and part of the PARTY of "NO", but the steps shown by Geithner and Bernanke call into question their Loyalty to Middle Class AMERICANS!

If Geithner and Bernake were not so SUPPORTIVE of HELPING the Corrupt Banksters on Wall Street and were INSTEAD HELPING & PROTECTING MAIN STREET & the Taxpayer, Democrats would be much more supportive.

So Far Banksters' WELFARE and preserving the FED is Geithner/Bernanke's Primary GOAL!

It appears to us "OUTSIDERS" that the "INSIDERS" are still running the Economy for Themselves doing their periodic long term and short term "Harvests of the Middle Class."

NO CREDIT is FLOWING to MAIN STREET except the "TRICKLE DOWN" that flows through the untrustworthy Big WS Banking System that we KNOW is run by the "FLUNKY FED" OWNED and OPERATED for the Benefit of the Elite Banks.

No Direct Line of CREDIT from Government (LIKE WALL STREET HAS) is available to Main Street business and consumers that goes around this corrupt BANKSTER system.

No effort to create that HONEST alternative has been put forward!

So Main Street "WILTS" while San Silly RANTS and WALL STREET Elite get their $6.4 Million BONUSES while Goldman "Double-DIPS" through AIG!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 03/17/2009
- Hank10303 I'm a Fan of Hank10303 46 fans permalink

I think you made an error or two.

The picture with the above article - Henry Paulson, the Goldman CEO-turned George W. Bush Treasury Secretary. You know the one in charge of the bailout. The one that went to congress with a 3 page plan for $700 billion dollars. The one that refused to attached restrictions or strings to the first $350 billion. The one that gave AIG its first $30billion. OR DID YOU MISS ALL THAT NEWS BETWEEN SEPTEMBER 2008 AND DECEMBER 2008.

I WANT PROSECUTIONS

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 03/17/2009
- voltage356 I'm a Fan of voltage356 17 fans permalink
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Yeah, because they hedge their bets that the subprime would failed and now they are getting paid on their bet from the credit default swap (CDS) AIG. There a true American company for you and had the nerve to get bail out money they didn't even need.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 03/17/2009
- DocinPA I'm a Fan of DocinPA 2 fans permalink

What about all of the money going to FOREIGN banks?!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 03/17/2009
- Savanna I'm a Fan of Savanna 30 fans permalink

Folks I hate to break the news to you, but in the former administration the global world took over.
Everything became messed together and breaking apart the pieces would probably be close to
impossible. This is the REAL reason why the banking system was deregulated. This is like
Coke is not longer an American company but a global company. Banks are the same way now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 PM on 03/17/2009

It just doesn't End!
1.) Suspicions confirmed. Paulson's special interests today are quite obvious and "damaging to the American taxpayer.. (Goldman Sachs relationship and posturing)
2. Where were the restrictions on bonus programs when AIG got the bailout? The UAW were required to break their contract and accept less, before a dime was even discussed.
3.) How about the Wells Fargo Chairman complaining about the Government requiring a "stress test", after they accepted the TARP Funds.....Now he knows what it is like to accept a Wells Fargo Credit Card......and being subjected to the Universal Policy he promoted so heavily during the 2005 Bankruptcy Laws.
We elected the House, Reps and President to stop this. What's New!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 03/17/2009

Jump on the bandwagon, and blame Obama, Boy, we certainly have short term memory. He's been in office for 50 plus days- and yet, it's his fault. Wow.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:28 PM on 03/17/2009
- sammy cole I'm a Fan of sammy cole 2 fans permalink

It's NOT Obama's fault....but it now IS his responsiblity and MESS to clean up. Something very strange about Paulson at the wheel driving THAT September HURRY UP and PASS the BAILOUT BILL......­....someth­ing about it all smelled fishy then........and IS ROTTEN NOW.....AIG Bonus recipients should RETURN THE MONEY to the American TAXPAYERS IMMEDIATELY....and our Govt should investigate this BIG TIME.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 03/17/2009

Its not Obamas fault.
Hes being blackmailed by the banks.
Tim Giethner , Larry Summers and the FED ARE the problem now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:01 PM on 03/17/2009

Summers and Rubin helped create the problem a decade ago.

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0908/13887.html

Why President Obama would rely on these men for economic advice is beyond me...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 03/17/2009
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 145 fans permalink

Blackmailed? Threatened, more like.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:41 PM on 03/17/2009

Thanks, MSM, for all you DON'T do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 03/17/2009

At least we still have Jon Stewart!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 03/17/2009

Aren't we still waiting to hear what happened to all of the first $350B of TARP funds that the Bush admin distributed?

Public confidence in both our financial and justice systems would rise if we could witness some real justice. Not one person in banking has been held accountable. Instead, they get millions in bonuses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:24 PM on 03/17/2009
- sammy cole I'm a Fan of sammy cole 2 fans permalink

When Madoff went to jail last week..the market CELEBRATED. Imagine what would happen in OUR economy IF OTHERS were prosecuted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 03/17/2009
- DinkSinger I'm a Fan of DinkSinger 10 fans permalink

I often wonder who writes HuffPo headlines. This article, for instance, headlined "AIG Bonus Bombshell Raises New Questions", does not contain a single mention of the bonuses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:58 PM on 03/17/2009
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