'AIG'에 해당되는 글 12건

  1. 2009.03.22 Conn. AG says AIG paid $218M in bonuses by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.12.28 The Biggest CEO Firings of 2008 by CEOinIRVINE
  3. 2008.12.02 AIG Sheds A Private Bank by CEOinIRVINE
  4. 2008.11.22 Street's Rally Can't Lift Citigroup by CEOinIRVINE
  5. 2008.11.12 Fannie, AIG Struggle After Federal Takeover by CEOinIRVINE
  6. 2008.11.11 Feds Give AIG Another Lifeline by CEOinIRVINE
  7. 2008.11.11 Government to Grant AIG New, Larger Bailout by CEOinIRVINE
  8. 2008.11.10 AIG reportedly near deal on new government bailout by CEOinIRVINE
  9. 2008.10.05 Collapse of AIG: The Inside Story by CEOinIRVINE
  10. 2008.09.17 Fed -> AIG BIG HELP by CEOinIRVINE

Connecticut's attorney general says documents turned over to his office by American International Group Inc. shows the company paid out $218 million in bonuses, higher than the $165 million previously disclosed.

Attorney General Richard Blumenthal's office received the documents late Friday after issuing a subpoena.

Blumenthal says the documents show that 73 people received at least $1 million apiece, and five of those got bonuses of more than $4 million. The financially ailing insurance giant has been under fire for giving bonuses after receiving more than $182.5 billion in federal bailout money.

AIG (nyse: AIG - news - people ) spokesman Mark Herr declined to comment Saturday.

Blumenthal said the newly revealed number will "further fuel the justified anger and revulsion that people feel."




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They fell from some of the most powerful positions on earth.

The bloodletting in the c-suite started in 2007. It still hasn't stopped.

Another year goes by and more chief executives get the ax--probably more than in any previous year. People shook their heads when Charles Prince III at Citigroup (nyse: C - news - people ) and Stanley O'Neal at Merrill Lynch (nyse: MER - news - people ) got the boot in 2007. Now it look like they were lucky. They got out just in time.

Martin Sullivan of American International Group (nyse: AIG - news - people ) (let go in June), Kerry Killinger at Washington Mutual (nyse: WM - news - people ) (September) and Richard Fuld of Lehman Brothers (nyse: LEHMQ - news - people ) (leaving next month) are among the biggest names to be shown the door as a result of the economic crisis.

Their distinguished company includes James Cayne of the now-deceased Bear Stearns and Richard Syron and Daniel Mudd, the former CEOs of the mortgage buyers Freddie Mac (nyse: FRE - news - people ) and Fannie Mae (nyse: FNM - news - people ).

"There are two kinds of CEO firings," says Noel Tichy, a professor at the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. "There are the crooks and there are the incompetents." This year the biggest departing names all fell into a gray area in between.

None was as corrupt as the executives embroiled in the infamous Enron and Tyco scandals of a decade ago, but you couldn't just say they were simply stupid either. CEOs in the financial services industry discovered that they had allowed their companies to take suicidal risks with other people's money based on bad or staggeringly incomplete information. Many of them have paid with their jobs.

In Pictures: 11 Top Bosses Who Got The Boot in 2008

Despite their prominence, these headline names compose just a small fraction of the 1,361 U.S. CEOs who left their jobs this year through November. That's up from 1,356 in all 12 months of last year. The final 2008 number may prove to be a record, beating the previous one of 1,478 set in 2006, according to data collected by the management consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.


Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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AIG Sheds A Private Bank

Business 2008. 12. 2. 03:41
AIG is shedding assets to help it ride through a bailout from Uncle Sam.

American International Group (nyse: AIG - news - people ) announced Monday that it had sold its wealth management subsidiary to Aabar Investments, a global investment company based in Abu Dhabi. A spokesman for AIG did not wish to reveal the value of the transaction, however Aabar said in a press release on its Web site that it had paid $254.0 million for AIG Private Bank, “subject to a post closing price adjustment based on the net asset value and assets under management of the bank at closing.”

Aabar said it would also assume $83.0 million in debt outstanding as a part of the transaction. AIG did not return phone calls to confirm the sale amount in time for publication.

AIG has kept taxpayers and shareholders, who own 80.0% and 20.0% of the firm, respectively, largely in the dark ever since the insurer received its first $85.0 billion lifeline back in September from the U.S. government. Details about the firm’s troubles and the government’s ad hoc bailout strategy have remained hazy even as taxpayer borrowings ballooned to $152.0 billion in early November.

AIG Private Bank, which currently has $8.3 billion in assets under management, will assume a new name, become an independent financial institution and will be headquartered in Switzerland along with offices in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Singapore and Dubai. It will continue to focus on providing wealth management services to high-net worth individuals in Switzerland, Western and Eastern Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

News of the sale might have boosted investor morale but not this time. New York-based AIG fell 7.5%, or 15 cents, to $1.86. The plan for the insurer to sell off its parts and pay back the the U.S. government and emerge as a profitable enterprise may be losing its credibility. (See "Ackman: Yes, we Have No AIG")



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Street's Rally Can't Lift Citigroup

This is a transcript of the Market Update: Close video report.

Barack Obama has reportedly tapped New York Fed Bank President Timothy Geithner to be his Treasury secretary. NBC News reported the appointment late Friday afternoon, followed by a surge in the markets. The Dow gained 494 points, the Nasdaq advanced 68 points and the S&P 500 added 48 points.

Geithner was a central figure in the bailout of Bear Stearns and AIG (nyse: AIG - news - people ).

The broadbased rally brought no relief for Citigroup (nyse: C - news - people ). The stock fell roughly 20% Friday, after Thursday's 26% fall. Citi's board is considering strategic options for the bank. But many financials traded to the upside. Bank of America (nyse: BAC - news - people ), American Express (nyse: AXP - news - people ), and Deutsche Bank (nyse: DB - news - people ) closed in the black. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (nyse: BRK - news - people ) added 16%.

Microsoft (nasdaq: MSFT - news - people ) swung up 12%. A senior executive said the company will not be cutting back on research and will be adding employees in 2009.

Gold held onto a robust rally on Friday, gaining $43 to $792 an ounce. Barrick Gold (nyse: ABX - news - people ) jumped 31%, and AngloGold (nyse: AU - news - people ) added 43%.

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Fannie Mae, a federally chartered company based in the District, reported a $29 billion loss for the quarter. The firm said yesterday that the government's assistance "may prove insufficient."
Fannie Mae, a federally chartered company based in the District, reported a $29 billion loss for the quarter. The firm said yesterday that the government's assistance "may prove insufficient." (By Bill O'leary -- The Washington Post)


Two months after the government began taking over ailing financial companies, the two largest efforts have failed to go as planned, with the firms complaining that federal officials set overly strict terms and took other unhelpful rescue measures.

Fannie Mae yesterday reported a $29 billion loss for the three months ended Sept. 30 and warned that the mission it was given by the government, to help revive the mortgage market, could be compromised unless the Treasury Department takes new steps to support the company. Fannie Mae chief executive Herbert M. Allison has approached the Treasury about providing more help, but Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. has demurred, according to three sources familiar with the discussions.

The insurance giant American International Group, meanwhile, reported a $24.5 billion quarterly loss yesterday as the government agreed to offer it a more generous lifeline in the form of a new, $152 billion loan on easier terms. The government extended an $85 billion loan to AIG in September followed by $38 billion more in October, but the company has been eating away at it at an accelerating pace.

The struggles of these two largely nationalized companies underscore the government's difficulty in intervening in private markets in a way that both protects taxpayers and ensures that the rescue efforts succeed. The government's experience in addressing the financial troubles at Fannie Mae and AIG offers a cautionary tale at a time when Washington is debating whether to extend the federal umbrella to Detroit automakers and other beleaguered firms. Before September, it had been a generation since the government took over a private company out of concern that its failure could endanger the U.S. economy.

At both Fannie Mae and AIG, the reported losses largely reflected poor decisions by the companies before the government intervened.



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Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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The U.S. government is reworking the terms of its aid to troubled insurance company American International Group.

The Treasury Department and Federal Reserve jointly announced Monday that the Treasury will use $40 billion to buy new preferred shares in AIG (nyse: AIG - news - people ). The money will come from the $700 billion in funds the government has authorized to bail out beleaguered banking and insurance firms.

The Fed is also opening up two new lending facilities to help the company. The moves essentially replace the terms of recent government loans to the company, which totaled $123 billion.

The news comes as AIG announced a third-quarter loss of $24.5 billion.

"These new measures establish a more durable capital structure, resolve liquidity issues, facilitate AIG's execution of its plan to sell certain of its businesses in an orderly manner, promote market stability and protect the interests of the U.S. government and taxpayers," the Fed said in its statement.

In September the government loaned AIG $85 billion, part of a chain of events that led to the government's bailout. Last month, the feds granted AIG another $38 billion.

But markets are still in a tailspin, and AIG--which has been deemed too big to fail--is still on the ropes. The equity stake announced by the Treasury Monday allows the Fed more wiggle room in extending funds to AIG, as it cuts the original amount of funds loaned to the company from $85 billion to $60 billion.

At the same time, the terms of that loan are being modified to help stabilize the company. The loan is being extended from two to five years, and the interest rate is being significantly reduced. The old rate was the three-month London interbank offered rate plus 850 basis points. The new rate will be the three-month Libor rate plus 300 basis points. In addition, the government is slashing the rate on undrawn funds from 850 basis points to just 75 basis points.

Of the two new lending facilities the Fed is granting AIG, the first allows the New York Fed to lend up to $22.5 billion to a newly limited liability company that is being established to buy mortgage-backed securities from AIG. The second allows the New York Fed to lend up to $30 billion to another LLC that will be used to buy collateralized debt obligations insured by AIG.

Both new lending facilities require the insurance company to put up cash and bear risk for the new lending facilities. In the first case, AIG has to make a $1 billion subordinated loan to the LLC; in the second case, the loan amount from the company is $5 billion.

"The U.S. government intends to exit its support of AIG over time in a disciplined manner consistent with maximizing the value of its investments and promoting financial stability," the Fed said in its statement.

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The federal government today announced an expanded effort to bail out American International Group, including a partial government takeover of the company, as the troubled insurance giant disclosed massive losses over the past three months.

The new plan expands an existing government bailout program from $123 billion to $150 billion. But more significantly, it restructures the plan to include much less debt and instead provides direct government investment in the company.

Under the new plan, the government will buy $40 billion of AIG preferred stock, a step that puts AIG on par with major U.S. banks, which the government partially nationalized last month. Another $52.5 billion will be used to take troubled assets off of the company's books.

The new plan is an acknowledgement that an original bid to help the company was in fact weighing it down by requiring quick repayment and a high interest rate on government loans.

Federal officials announced the new AIG bailout at 6 a.m. -- shortly before the company reported that it had lost $24.5 billion from July through October. AIG has now posted losses of $37.6 billion for the first nine months of the year.

The federal government today announced an expanded effort to bail out American International Group, including a partial government takeover of the company, as the troubled insurance giant disclosed massive losses over the past three months.

The new plan expands an existing government bailout program from $123 billion to $150 billion. But more significantly, it restructures the plan to include much less debt and instead provides direct government investment in the company.

Under the new plan, the government will buy $40 billion of AIG preferred stock, a step that puts AIG on par with major U.S. banks, which the government partially nationalized last month. Another $52.5 billion will be used to take troubled assets off of the company's books.

The new plan is an acknowledgement that an original bid to help the company was in fact weighing it down by requiring quick repayment and a high interest rate on government loans.

Federal officials announced the new AIG bailout at 6 a.m. -- shortly before the company reported that it had lost $24.5 billion from July through October. AIG has now posted losses of $37.6 billion for the first nine months of the year.


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American International Group Inc. late Sunday was reportedly near a deal for a revised bailout package from the U.S. government that would make borrowing terms easier for the troubled insurer.

A proposed $123 billion bailout package would be replaced with a new $150 billion package, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Details of the arrangement could be announced as early as Monday, when AIG is scheduled to report its third-quarter results, the Journal said. The plan reportedly would replace an $85 billion two-year loan with a $60 billion five-year loan at a lower interest rate.

The government also reportedly would inject $40 billion into AIG in exchange for preferred stock.

AIG representatives were not immediately available for comment.

The government had earmarked $85 billion in September for AIG's rescue. Another $37.8 billion was made available in October.

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Today Edward Liddy, AIG’s new CEO, announced what the troubled insurance company is putting up for sale, and it’s a lot. Other than the company’s US property and casualty businesses, and its international general insurance business (companies with a combined annual revenue of about $40 billion) most everything is on the block. He is hoping to retain a majority interest in the company’s top notch international life insurance business as well.

He wants to do big deals and do them quickly, in a bid to pay off the expensive bridge loan the company got from the New York Federal Reserve two weeks ago. AIG has already pulled down $61 billion of the $85 billion offered, at an interest rate currently around 12.5%. The company is also paying 8% interest on the balance it has not drawn down.

In his first conference call with investors, Liddy fielded a good numbmer of questions about why the company didn’t put the Fed deal to a vote of shareholders. Many analysts concluded their exchanges with the CEO with a wistful “Good luck.” Clearly it’s a tough market to be selling anything especially with lending so restrained.

But Liddy’s tone was unrelentingly businesslike and matter of fact. He promised in conclusion to be in better touch with them than perhaps the company had been in the past. “A strong viable and nimble AIG will emerge from this crisis,” Liddy promised. He encouraged investors to think of the Fed deal as an essential lifeline and one that would have suffered for waiting days or weeks for a shareholder vote.

One of the thorniest issues for AIG is the one that brought is to its knees in the first place: the rapid rise in collateral it has had to post to cover credit default swaps. Most of the $61 billion drawn down, Liddy said, has done to its securities lending arm, AIG Financial Products, “in round numbers $53 or $54 billion,” he said. “I liken it to filling up a bathtub, you fill up initially and then it starts to slow down.” Though he did clearly say AIG expects to borrow more from the Fed, he didn’t say how much. When asked if he might have to go back for more than $85 billion, Liddy said he never likes to say never, but that they hoped to borrow as little as possible. He noted that an analysis by Blackrock of these deals showed that even under the worst case thought possible, the “intrinsic value is significantly above where we have those market. The question is can we retain some of the upside?” And that’s a question Liddy can’t answer.

For Liddy and his managers the biggest challenge right now is keeping the various companies operating at a high level and that means keeping people. As of today some know they will be leaving the mother ship no matter what. “Certainty is better than uncertainty,” said Liddy. “So by declaring today what businesses are a part of us going forward and which are not, at least it lets people know where they sit.” Just to be sure they stay seated, he’s put in place “a full array of retention agreements and enhanced severance agreements. “For many reasons, for our people and our policy holders, selling the businesses to brand name companies, with strong ratings, strong balance sheets, and well capitalized, that is a key.”

These businesses could be game changing for the buyers who get them he notes, and he says he’s heard from dozens of interested parties already.

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Fed -> AIG BIG HELP

Business 2008. 9. 17. 19:56
U.S. and global stocks fall in the wake of the failure of Lehman Brothers, the disappearance of Merrill Lynch as an independent company, and the shaky state of the American International Group, the U.S.'s largest insurance company.
» LAUNCH PHOTO GALLERY

U.S. Seizes Control of AIG With $85 Billion Emergency Loan
  Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, September 17, 2008; Page A01

Invoking extraordinary powers granted after the 1929 stock market crash, the government seized control of the insurance giant American International Group to preserve a crucial bulwark of the global financial system.

The move to lend the Wall Street giant up to $85 billion in exchange for nearly 80 percent of its stock effectively nationalizes one of the central institutions in the crisis that has swept through markets this month.

The government had sought to avoid federal intervention by lining up private companies to rescue AIG. But the effort failed when companies were unwilling to take on the massive financial risk, forcing the government's hand.

AIG found itself on the verge of bankruptcy because of mounting losses from investments tied to subprime home mortgages and also from the insurance it was providing to others who invested in mortgages.

When credit-rating agencies downgraded the company Monday, AIG suddenly faced a crunch to come up with $14.5 billion to meet its commitments. If the company failed, it could have set off cascading losses across the global financial system.

"The Board determined that, in current circumstances, a disorderly failure of AIG could add to already significant levels of financial market fragility and lead to substantially higher borrowing costs, reduced household wealth and materially weaker economic performance," the Fed said in a statement.

"It's heavy, heavy, heavy. It's much more than has been done except Fannie and Freddie," said Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), who heads the Joint Economic Committee, referring to the mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were taken over by the government earlier this month. "But when you look at the alternatives, none of them are better."


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