Lehman files! BoA buys Lynch! AIG begging Fed!

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Postby vigilant » Tue Sep 16, 2008 6:57 pm

Ya know...this completely slipped my mind lately. I have been watching so many nuances of this event for such a long time, it slipped my mind that in 2005 they changed the bankruptcy laws and made it easier for banks to squeeze blood out of bankrupt folks...amazing coincidental timing huh?

That was the feds safety net for the day they decided to pull the trigger on this deal, let it flip over backwards, acquire the assets, and then step in and save the day....clever...clever...clever...
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Postby kenoma » Tue Sep 16, 2008 7:57 pm


Fed Readies A.I.G. Loan of $85 Billion for an 80% Stake

By MICHAEL J. de la MERCED and ERIC DASH

In an extraordinary turn, the Federal Reserve was close to a deal Tuesday night to take a nearly 80 percent stake in the troubled giant insurance company, the American International Group, in exchange for an $85 billion loan, according to people briefed on the negotiations.

In return, the Fed will receive warrants, which give it an ownership stake. All of A.I.G.’s assets will be pledged to secure the loan, these people said.

The Fed’s action was disclosed after Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson and Ben S. Bernanke, president of the Federal Reserve, went to Capitol Hill on Tuesday evening to meet with House and Senate leaders. Mr. Paulson called the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada, about 5 p.m. and asked for a meeting in the Senate leader’s office, which began about 6:30 p.m.

The Federal Reserve and Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase had been trying to arrange a $75 billion loan for A.I.G. to stave off the financial crisis caused by complex debt securities and credit default swaps. The Federal Reserve stepped in after it became clear Tuesday afternoon that the banking consortium would not be able to complete the deal.

Without the help, A.I.G. was expected to be forced to file for bankruptcy protection.

The need for the loans became necessary after the major credit ratings agencies downgraded A.I.G. late Monday, a move that likely to have forced the company to turn over billions of dollars in collateral to its derivatives trading partners worsening its financial health.

Until this week, it would have been unthinkable for the Federal Reserve to bail out an insurance company, and A.I.G.’s request for help from the Fed of just a few days ago was rebuffed.

But with the prospect of a giant bankruptcy looming — one with unpredictable consequences for the world financial system — the Fed abandoned precedent and agreed to let the money flow.

NYT
:shock:
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Postby slimmouse » Tue Sep 16, 2008 8:05 pm

As I understood it, AIG was an acronym for the CIA anyways.

Consolidation of power indeed.
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Postby smiths » Tue Sep 16, 2008 8:12 pm

You will also notice that two Goldman Sachs alums (John Thain and Thomas Montag) were at the helms of Merrill Lynch as it was guided into the Bank of America

as an interesting and 'unrelated' piece of news

the australian liberal party got a new leader yesterday who may well be the prime minister in three years time who was a 'merchant banker' for ...

goldman sachs,

i wonder where his loyalties will lie in the times ahead?
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Postby anothershamus » Tue Sep 16, 2008 8:32 pm

When bankers ruled the Earth!

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)'(
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Postby vigilant » Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:28 pm

For the first time I am really starting to feel uneasy. Just in the last few days a weird feeling has come over me. I have known what the possibilities are all along, for years.

The laws that have been passed, which in essence are perfectly designed for...mmmm...perhaps financial collapse, bank runs, and basically any situation in which anarchy might be present, or angry people might want to act out.

I have learned that this gang usually doesn't pass laws they don't use. There are examples a plenty to be found. Passed a law one year that said they can inject whatever they want into people by force of law, and the next year they lined up 14 year old girls and threatened to jail their parents if they didn't get them vaccinated for venereal warts....warts...of all damn blasted things....kickback scheme heaven probably...they sell us and tax us on the number one killer in the world which is cigarettes, and want to put mommy in jail if she won't let the pharm companies make triple dollars selling the government wart vaccine...

As I reflect on all that I have learned and seen in the last five years, suddenly for the first time, I sincerely have a chill running up and down my body, and a sick feeling in my gut right now...its bad too.

I sincerely hope my radar is just jammed, but I have a real bad feeling about the coming days and months.......for the first time....

I have been able to put together equations from my own observations in the last few years, and then watched them come true over and over much to my own surprise.

The equation my mind has formulated in the last few days is enough to cause me nausea. I'm no longer surprised when they come true.

My ability to convince myself, that this equation will not come true, due to my past success, just isn't here....

I have an eerie feeling........Jeff is eerily quiet these days too...i noticed.
Last edited by vigilant on Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby anothershamus » Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:29 pm

looks like the begging worked. News says that AIG will get bailed out by the fed, oh I mean, the taxpayers.
)'(
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Postby bks » Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:37 pm

For the bargain price of an $85 billion loan, US taxpayers now hold a 79.9% share of AIG.

Is this happening??? The government now owns AIG??? Who says socialism sucks if you're a Republican?
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Postby justdrew » Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:44 pm

bks wrote:For the bargain price of an $85 billion loan, US taxpayers now hold a 79.9% share of AIG.

Is this happening??? The government now owns AIG??? Who says socialism sucks if you're a Republican?


I want my shares delivered ASAP. Now it really is an "ownership society"
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Postby vigilant » Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:52 pm

For the bargain price of an $85 billion loan, US taxpayers now hold a 79.9% share of AIG.


Not exactly...its worse than that the way I see it. 12 or 13 private families, that own the Fed have an 85 billion dollar stake in AIG, and they plan to use our money to buy it for themselves. They already bought every major investment bank in the country almost, and signed our name to the check, through our treasury.

It seems that the fed is making the loan, and waving the treasury secretary around like a flag to make it appear as if this is a government bailout.

Our government is broke as hell. They don't have any money. They are in debt up to their eyeballs to the fed, which means the fed owns them and us. The fed instigated all these damn wars and used our money for it, then they had to lend the country more to continue them.

These assets belong the private families that own the fed, not us...but we'll pay their bill, just like we always have, every since they inked the deal on Jekyl Island back in the twenties.

That is "exactly" what this is all about...a transfer of wealth from us, to them, for the next few hundred years at least, or until they "reset" the debt tables again, and put us in debt for another hundred.

They just milked the golden goose again...

Fe Fi Fo Fum I smell the blood of an englishman.......
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Postby JackRiddler » Tue Sep 16, 2008 9:59 pm

.

12 or 13 private families, that own the Fed


Who are they?

The Federal Reserve shareholders are the member banks in the FR system, who are required by law to participate.

Are you saying 12 or 13 (that's pretty precise) families own the member banks (or a sufficient bulk thereof for effective ownership), or are you saying something else?
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Postby bks » Tue Sep 16, 2008 10:06 pm

Fed press release:

Release Date: September 16, 2008

For release at 9:00 p.m. EDT
The Federal Reserve Board on Tuesday, with the full support of the Treasury Department, authorized the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to lend up to $85 billion to the American International Group (AIG) under section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act. The secured loan has terms and conditions designed to protect the interests of the U.S. government and taxpayers.

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 purpose of this liquidity facility is to assist AIG in meeting its obligations as they come due. This loan will facilitate a process under which AIG will sell certain of its businesses in an orderly manner, with the least possible disruption to the overall economy.

The AIG facility has a 24-month term. Interest will accrue on the outstanding balance at a rate of three-month Libor plus 850 basis points. AIG will be permitted to draw up to $85 billion under the facility.

The interests of taxpayers are protected by key terms of the loan. The loan is collateralized by all the assets of AIG, and of its primary non-regulated subsidiaries. These assets include the stock of substantially all of the regulated subsidiaries. The loan is expected to be repaid from the proceeds of the sale of the firm’s assets. The U.S. government will receive a 79.9 percent equity interest in AIG and has the right to veto the payment of dividends to common and preferred shareholders.
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Postby vigilant » Tue Sep 16, 2008 10:15 pm

JackRiddler wrote:.

12 or 13 private families, that own the Fed


Who are they?
The Federal Reserve shareholders are the member banks in the FR system, who are required by law to participate.

Are you saying 12 or 13 (that's pretty precise) families own the member banks (or a sufficient bulk thereof for effective ownership), or are you saying something else?




The Federal Reserve shareholders are the member banks in the FR system, who are required by law to participate.

(required by law, very convenient timing on when the law was passed too)
Think about the information in the above statement. It indicates that "somebodys" own the fed. The government doesn't own the fed, and its a matter of public record that they don't.



Who are they?

That subject is taboo. Nobody in their right mind that wants to live a decent life, or live at all for that matter, dares talk about it in the media. But if you do some serious googling, and use some other search engines that have not omitted certain references, you can get yourself a really good idea of who the shareholders are. You have to dig past the bank and business names to try to figure out who actually owns what though. You will see familiar names in the pile. What you will also find is a bunch of unbelieveably complicated rhetorical explanations as to how the share ownership works that have been laid down as a layer of confusion and obsfucation. If you can wade through the crap and rip the bare guts out of it, it becomes apparent that its simply owned by "people" called shareholders with bank names in front of their real names.


Are you saying 12 or 13 (that's pretty precise) families own the member banks (or a sufficient bulk thereof for effective ownership), or are you saying something else?

Yes that is what I mean. The number I hear touted most is 12 or 13. I used to have a list but I think it went to the dump on an old hard drive.

Antiaristo may have one....who knows. I haven't concerned myself with it in the last few years. I dug it out of the mist a long time ago, convinced myself I had a pretty good idea, and then let it go.......

Also take note of the fact that these investment banks that are supposedly "flat broke" have a lot of freedom to record certain transactions and money as "off books balance sheet" entries. They can number in the hundreds of billions of dollars easily. What we see as broken companies being handed to the fed, in reality, have a lot going on that nobody sees....

These people have been using the stock market, insurance companies, among other things as their own private piggy bank for years. The money would stagger the imagination.

They ride oil long, while they ride gold long, the dollar short, grain long, etc....Then they flip everything and do it exactly backwards when they make a move like this that reverses the markets. No matter what happens, they have an ongoing infusion of cash all day long everyday that would stupify the brain if it could count it.

Trillions...and trillions...
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Postby chlamor » Tue Sep 16, 2008 10:15 pm

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Cooking the Insurance Books
A Decade of Lax Regulation Lays Groundwork for Scandal

by Lucy Komisar, Special to CorpWatch
November 17th, 2004


In October, New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer filed suit against the world’s largest insurance broker, Marsh, accusing it of rigging bids and receiving kickbacks in order to defraud clients such as other corporations, city governments, school districts and individuals of billions of dollars through inflated premiums.

“Greedy trial lawyers were the usual excuse for premium increases. Now we know that greedy corporations also have a starring role," Spitzer said, accusing several insurance companies as co-conspirators in making phony or inflated bids and paying kickbacks to the brokerage to get business.

Spitzer also announced that two executives from the insurance conglomerate American International Group (AIG) had already confessed to related criminal charges. But his investigations into AIG may have only scratched the surface. A paper trail stretching back a decade reveals that AIG used offshore shell companies to skirt the law.

The current scam which Spitzer has uncovered works like this: Marsh, an insurance broker, is supposed to find the best insurance policies for its clients from a wide range of companies. Instead it steered the policies to companies such as AIG that agreed to pay kickbacks. It solicited phony competitive bids for insurance contracts to deceive customers into thinking there was real competition for their business. Marsh made $800 million on kickbacks in 2003 alone – over half its $1.5 billion profit. With a 40-percent share of the global insurance brokerage market, its fraud drove up prices for everyone.

AIG announced that its senior managers were not aware of the bid-rigging. But the family ties of three of the alleged co-conspirators make the claim hard to believe. The head of the Marsh brokerage was Jeffrey Greenberg, 53, the head of AIG is his father Maurice (Hank) Greenberg. A former AIG staffer told CorpWatch, "Greenberg is legendary as a hands-on person. Nothing happens in the company without him dealing with it. He knows the names of the elevator operators.”

Another accused collaborator is Hank's other son, Evan, 49 who just happens to run ACE Ltd., another of the companies allegedly involved in the complex scam.

Jeffery has resigned in disgrace, but so far the family patriarch is holding onto his executive seat. During a conference call with investors, he said, "I have never discussed business with Jeff or with Evan. . . . We get together on a very rare occasion. But we never discuss business. We play tennis occasionally." Still, fallout from the scandal has already cut $24 billion from AIG's $150 billion market capitalization and knocked 12 percent off its stock price.

American International Group

Hank Greenberg runs the world's second largest financial conglomerate and the largest underwriter of commercial and industrial insurance. Last year, AIG reported net income of $10 billion. It has $648 billion in assets, a market value of $195 billion, $77 billion in sales and $6.5 billion in annual profits. It has operations in 130 countries and nearly 77,000 employees. It ranks third on Forbes' list of the world’s biggest companies, after Citigroup, and General Electric.

AIG is a public company. Its largest single shareholder with 13.62 percent of AIG stock is Starr International Company (SICO), a private company headquartered in the tax haven of Bermuda. Greenberg owns 21.86 percent of SICO. Forbes says Greenberg has a net-worth of $3.6 billion, making him the world’s 132nd richest man. Greenberg was elected AIG president in 1962, CEO in 1967 and chairman in 1989.

Though it is an American company listed on the New York Stock Exchange, AIG makes extensive use of offshore jurisdictions such as Barbados, Bermuda and Luxembourg that are immune from U.S. regulatory and tax scrutiny. They help the company launder profits to evade U.S. taxes and hide insider connections in supposedly "arms-length" deals. This is especially important as the company has moved into financial services and asset management, handling the wealth of “high net-worth” clients -- the mega-rich.

Greenberg has enviable political clout, never so much in evidence as when, with the help of Henry Kissinger -- chair of AIG's international advisory committee and a paid consultant via Kissinger Associates – AIG became in 1995, the first company licensed to sell insurance in China. AIG was the only foreign firm that owned 100 percent of its license there.

The American International Group at its origins was linked to the OSS (Office of Strategic Services) the forerunner of the CIA. It grew from the Asia Life/C. V. Starr companies founded by Cornelius Starr who started his insurance empire in Shanghai in 1919, the first westerner to market insurance in China.

Starr served with the OSS during World War II, and the Starr Corporation, located in the same building as the OSS in New York, provided intelligence on shipping, manufacturing and industrial bombing targets in Asia and Germany. The companies' biggest shareholder was Starr International Company (SICO), a private holding company incorporated in offshore Panama and with principal executive offices in offshore Bermuda, to avoid U.S. regulation and taxes. Starr left Greenberg a large block of Starr International stock.
Lax Regulators Give AIG a Free Pass
At Spitzer’s press conference, New York State Insurance Superintendent Gregory V. Serio said: "This has gone from an inquiry into failure to disclose compensation to an active investigation of bid rigging and improper steering. This certainly proves the adage that where there is smoke, there is fire." But AIG’s comportment could not have been much of a surprise to Serio, who was New York’s deputy insurance superintendent in the late 90s. That’s when New York and three other states gave the powerful company a pass on some very questionable practices. If they had paid attention to the smoke then, perhaps this billion-dollar fire wouldn’t have ignited.

In the late 90s, four state insurance departments New York, Delaware, Pennsylvania and California were aware that AIG was moving debt off its books via the use of an offshore shell company it secretly set up and controlled. But despite clear evidence of wrongdoing, no sanctions were ordered.

Insurance companies normally insure themselves by laying off part of their risk to reinsurance companies, so if a claim comes in above a certain amount, the reinsurance company will pay it. Insurance companies use re-insurers to reduce some of their risk and because state laws require them to keep a certain amount of capital available to pay out claims. If they have reinsurance, that amount can drop. If they have enough good reinsurance, they get a credit for that against their losses. The reinsurer, of course, has to be an independent company; the risk isn't reduced if it's just moved to another division of the same company.

In the mid-80s, two of AIG's reinsurers failed. The bankruptcy liquidators paid creditors, including AIG, over several years but meanwhile the amount owed was liable to show up as unacceptably high levels of debt on the AIG books.

Trevor Jones, an insurance investigator who for 20 years has run Insurance Security Services in London, explained, "Hank [Greenberg] decided to set up Coral Re [a reinsurance company] to move the debts he couldn’t claim as assets into this other company… No other real company would play ball, because you are fiddling the accounts, moving your bad debts off your books."

So AIG went to elaborate lengths to set up a shell company in Barbados, where capital requirements and regulation was minimal compared to the U.S., where American regulators couldn’t readily discover AIG's involvement and where, as an added incentive, it could move money out of reach of U.S. taxes. Some high-level corporate executives were persuaded to front for a company into which AIG could "cede" insurance.

Goldman Sachs and Robert Rubin
Coral Re, a Barbados reinsurance company, was launched with a private sale of shares organized by Goldman Sachs, then headed by Robert Rubin, who would become President Clinton's Treasury Secretary and is now chairman of the executive committee of Citigroup. A confidential memorandum, (which Goldman Sachs ordered investors not to copy and to return on demand) told why the company was formed. "AIG's interest in creating the Company is to create a reinsurance facility which will permit its U.S. companies to write more U.S. premiums. For a U.S.-domiciled company, a high level of surplus is required to support insurance premiums in accordance with U.S. statutory requirements. The statutory requirements in Barbados are less restrictive."

A no-risk deal was offered by Goldman Sachs to selected investors who lent their names and credibility in exchange for guaranteed return of $25,125 in the first year and $45,225 each subsequent year. They were L. Donald Horne, chairman of Mennen Company; Charles Locke, chairman of Morton Thiokol; Kenneth Pontikes, former chairman of Comdisco; David Reynolds, chairman of Reynolds Metals; John Richman, former chairman of Kraft; and Samuel Zell, chairman of Itel Corporation. They didn’t have to put up any money: they got financing from Sanwa Bank of Chicago secured by the Coral Re shares, a guarantee of enough dividends from Coral Re to cover the interest, and agreement they could hand off the shares and debt whenever they chose.

Rubin buddy Bill Clinton, then governor of Arkansas, may also have thrown his weight behind the project. The Arkansas Finance and Development Authority (ADFA), headed by a man who went to work in the Clinton White House, became lead investor, although state law banned it from buying stocks.

The new company was not a legitimately independent business. For investors, there was no money at risk; the board of directors never made a decision; and Coral Re had no office of its own but was managed by American International Management, a subsidiary of none other than AIG.

Eventually, the scheme unraveled. State insurance examiners look at company books every five years. "In 1992, Delaware examiners auditing Lexington [an AIG subsidiary] smelled a rat," a former regulator from one of the four investigating insurance departments told CorpWatch.

AIG initially refused to provide Coral Re documents to the examiners, and it took them a couple of years to nail the connection. When AIG finally supplied Coral Re's financial papers, the regulator was incredulous. He said, "The books were definitely cooked. I remember three years in a row [in the early 90s] their pretax income came out to an even number. It was like somebody said 'show $250,000 pretax income.' I've been looking at financials for 35 years and have never seen pretax numbers come out even." The figures were 1987 $1.1 million; 1988 $1.555 million; 1989 $0.8 million.

The Regulatory Record
The Delaware report on AIG, finally issued in October 1996, suggested that Coral Re "may be an affiliate" of AIG. It described how AIG played an integral role in the creation of Coral Re; that the purpose for creating Coral Re was to reinsure risks for AIG companies; that virtually all of Coral Re's business originated from AIG units; and that Coral Re was managed by AIG subsidiary American International Management Co. Ltd. It concluded that the arrangement with Coral Re did not transfer risk, and it had to come off the books.

AIG insisted, in the face of overwhelming evidence, that Coral was independent. The regulator told CorpWatch, "It's clear AIG formed that company. They denied it, because if they owned it, it would be affiliated and they would not be able to take credit for reinsurance. Delaware should have suspended them, but did nothing."

New York and Pennsylvania also investigated, had similar experiences with AIG stonewalling, and reached similar conclusions.

The New York report on three AIG companies said the deal with Coral Re was "window dressing" and didn't "transfer underwriting risk," so AIG shouldn't take credit for it. New York described an accounting slight-of-hand which mirrors what indicted Enron officials did to change loans into earnings. In 1991, AIG insurance companies borrowed $190 million from an affiliate, AIG Funding Inc., but reported the loan as a sale to AIG Funding of their accounts receivable, ie. the money owed them by Coral Re. Presto, a loan became revenue, and balance sheets showed no loss.

The Pennsylvania insurance department investigation also concluded, "There was no transfer of insurance risk."

The four states – Delaware, New York, Pennsylvania, and California – met in 1996 to coordinate their reports on AIG.

The Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) also looked into the matter. The regulator said, "The SEC came to me; they wanted to know if we were going to rule they were affiliated. Then there would be penalties, because if AIG was affiliated with Coral and they hadn't disclosed it in 10k filings, that’s a 'no-no' with the SEC."

It also would have been an issue for the Internal Revenue Service. If Coral Re was an AIG affiliate, it would have to pay taxes on its income. If it was "independent," that money came tax-free.

"But nobody had any guts; they wanted Delaware to say Coral Re is affiliated and use that to go after them. None of the agencies had the gumption to do it on their own," said the regulator. And AIG wasn’t shy about its tactics. He said, "In 1996, AIG hired a private investigator to check into the background of the chief examiner in Delaware. The investigator actually told the department he was looking at the chief examiner at the request of AIG. It was intimidation. And Delaware officials allowed it to happen."

A Delaware examiner told the regulator. "When you do something with this company, they make it so difficult for you, so people just let it go."

Delaware reported what it found but didn’t rule the companies were affiliated. “That would have meant hearings, endless hassles,” the regulator concluded. And real punishment for AIG.

The New York Insurance Department said the violations of New York law were not serious enough to warrant a fine. Besides, an official said, it was hard to prove "control" of an offshore company -- which, of course, is the reason for going offshore. The delays and stonewalling allowed AIG to use Coral Re for more than eight years. By the time it had to shut it down, it didn't need it anymore.

Things have gotten tougher for the company since the Enron affair caused the SEC to look more serious about corporate corruption. In the current climate, these regulatory agency findings would probably prompt investigations by State Attorneys General, perhaps they still could. Last year, AIG paid a $10 million fine to the SEC for helping the Indiana wireless telecom company Brightpoint commit accounting fraud. AIG marketed a "non-traditional" insurance product aimed at "income statement smoothing," spreading a loss over future reporting periods. The SEC called such financial products “just vehicles to commit financial fraud” and said the insurance giant refused to give it subpoenaed documents, compounding its misconduct. The U.S. Justice department is currently investigating but has yet to file criminal charges.

Business Insurance, a trade publication, editorialized on the timidity of regulators for giving AIG "little more than a tap on the wrist" in exchange for "a promise not to do it again." "The message delivered here is that a company of AIG's power and complexity can afford to be openly hostile to state oversight and, in the end, have things pretty much its own way. That is a disheartening message, indeed," wrote the magazine's editors.

AIG spokesman Andrew Silver told CorpWatch that “AIG was not involved in the offer and sale of Coral Re’s shares. That was done by Goldman Sachs, which approached potential investors with which it had relationships. AIG did not control or have an equity interest in Coral Re. The issue raised by the regulators was whether these transactions should be booked as a deposit account or an insurance account. The regulators concluded that real risk was transferred and that these transactions should be accounted for as insurance. AIG insurance subsidiaries eventually commuted their Coral Re reinsurance.”

Goldman Sachs failed to respond to inquiries about its role in setting up Coral Re.

Asked how AIG could say the regulators concluded that real risk was transferred when Pennsylvania stated clearly, "There was no transfer of insurance risk,” Silver declined to reply.

http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=11657
Liberal thy name is hypocrisy. What's new?
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BoA & RI

Postby ultramegagenius » Tue Sep 16, 2008 10:24 pm

the Bank of America and Zapata Oil:
http://rigorousintuition.blogspot.com/2005/02/my-god-they-killed-him.html

the Bank of America and its funds to Latin America channeled through the Mid-East!
http://rigorousintuition.blogspot.com/2006/04/money-doesnt-talk.html

non-Jeff private banking analysis:
http://www.networkideas.org/feathm/may2006/Kannan_Srinivasan.pdf

and, apparently i was thinking of the Bank of New York! sorry...
http://www.narconews.com/Issue40/article1644.html
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