Commentary on the economy, the markets, and business

Why the AIG bailout just keeps getting bigger

Proponents of the nationalization of troubled big banking companies like Citigroup generally make the case that the work should be done with dispatch and the banks returned promptly to private hands. But the test case for nationalization, AIG, is demonstrating that it may not be that easy.

When the Federal Reserve effectively took over AIG in mid-September, fearful after the fall of Lehman Brothers of letting a firm even more central to global financial markets go belly up, the plan was for a quick turnaround: The government loaned AIG $85 billion on pretty tough terms, installed new management, and ordered the firm to start selling off its still-profitable insurance subsidiaries pronto to pay off the debt. But in the middle of a global financial crisis there aren't a lot of people who can afford to (or want) buy insurance companies. So in November the terms were relaxed and the bailout grew to $150 billion, and now they're easing yet again and the government is pumping in another $30 billion. As Carol Loomis put it in an illuminating explanation of AIG's predicament that ran in Fortune in December:

The ties that bind these two parties ... bring to mind the 1942 movie classic "The Man Who Came to Dinner," in which Monty Woolley, playing the insufferable Sheridan Whiteside, arrives to dine, injures his hip on the front steps, and stays on for the duration, driving his hosts batty. In today's reality show, AIG is The Company That Came to Dinner, and the trapped, restless host is the government. Don't ask when these two will be parting ways, because there's no date set.

Why are we doing this for AIG? There is perhaps no financial company less deserving, in moral terms, of taxpayer aid. This is from Joe Nocera's column in Saturday's New York Times:

When you start asking around about how A.I.G. made money during the housing bubble, you hear the same two phrases again and again: “regulatory arbitrage” and “ratings arbitrage.” The word “arbitrage” usually means taking advantage of a price differential between two securities — a bond and stock of the same company, for instance — that are related in some way. When the word is used to describe A.I.G.'s actions, however, it means something entirely different. It means taking advantage of a loophole in the rules. A less polite but perhaps more accurate term would be “scam.”

Essentially, AIG got into the business of insuring much of the world's financial system against the consequences of a global financial meltdown. It turned out to be incapable of delivering on that insurance—no private company could deliver on it, which is one reason why AIG's business of selling credit default swaps was a scam. And so government has stepped in as the ultimate insurer.

Providing insurance where private institutions can't is one of the most important and essential roles of government. Washington's failure to understand its role as insurer that was one of the key things that made the Great Depression great. But there's insurance that follows proper underwriting standards and insurance that does not. Our government's current experiment in insurance provision most certainly does not.

The fault there lies mostly in the past: Regulators had procedures in place to wind down banks in an orderly fashion and partially protect their depositors, plus a mechanism to collect insurance premiums to pay for all this. But they allowed a few non-bank institutions, and non-bank parts of banking companies, to grow so large and entwined that they couldn't fail without threatening a broader financial meltdown. And so now we're getting this muddled, hugely expensive bailout/takeover.

Costs keep going up on the AIG bailout not because CEO Ed Liddy is doing stupid stuff. All appearances are that he's trying to wind down the bad parts of the company as quickly and responsibly as possible and keep the rest alive. It's just that the losses are bigger than the government and the company anticipated, plus they keep growing as the global economy worsens. It may be that it would make more sense in terms of management focus and incentives to split AIG into a good insurance company ("new AIG," to follow the model for banks laid out the other day by Willem Buiter) and a bad one. But the basic problem still remains—somebody would still have to shoulder the losses of the bad company.

AIG's shareholders are already virtually wiped out, so while there's something to be said for completely wiping them out (the government currently owns 79.9% of the company), that won't pay for anything. Which leaves AIG's creditors and derivatives counterparties (that is, the people it owes money to) and taxpayers. The fear in hitting the former is that if creditors were forced to take another big blow all lending to financial institutions around the world would stop and, as a consequence, financial intermediation would more or less end and we'd be reduced to bartering and digging for grubs. That fear is exaggerated, but there's at least a germ of truth to it—and even if creditors shouldered some of the burden the losses are so huge that taxpayers would still be stuck paying for a lot.

That leaves the final question: Which taxpayers? I'm a big fan of the concept of clawing back ill-gotten gains, and in a just world Hank Greenberg and Martin Sullivan, the former CEOs who got AIG into this mess, would currently be working as greeters at a Wal-Mart to make ends meet (rather than, in Greenberg's case, going on CNBC all the time). But the legal logistics of this are daunting. A blunter but more realistic instrument is the tax rate we charge on those with very high incomes: Bankers and other financial types have been overrepresented at the top of the income distribution, so why not just tax them more? Of course, not all bankers made messes, and bankers aren't the only high earners.

The best approach is probably to charge financial system participants appropriate premiums for the insurance that government is providing them. That has to be a major part of any new financial regulatory structure. But it won't pay for anything now.

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  • 1

    Holy cow, Justin. I guess that pretty much sums things up. At what point can we hold the board and officers criminally liable for running a scam? (if you sell something you can't deliver, you either have to return the money or go to jail. It's that simple, right?)
    -
    Let's leave out the question of civil liability, since it seems that the government will also have to bail out the provider of officers and directors insurance on a case this big.

  • 2

    BANZAI7 WORLDWIDE NEWS WATCH

    March 2, 2009

    WASHINGTON - The following is a joint statement was issued on Monday the Treasury and the Federal Reserve on American liquidation Group:

    The U.S. Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve Board today announced yet another restructuring of the government's assistance to AIG in order to cover this intergalactic financial blackhole in a manner that yet again extorts the helpless US taxpayer. Specifically, the government's restructuring is designed to prop up this failed sorry excuse of a company while facilitating the orderly completion of the AIG global garage sale.

    The company continues to face significant challenges, primarily driven by the rapid deterioration in the financial markets largely caused by its own reckless stupidity and the continued turbulence in the markets also caused by its own reckless stupidity. The additional resources will help stabilize the company until its next quarterly TARP fix, and in doing so further destabilizing the already destabilized financial system.

    As significantly, the restructuring components of the government's assistance begin to separate the dogfood lines of AIG, as well as unravel the twisted opaque intestinal blockage constituting the company's finances. The long long long long-term solution for the company, its fleeing customers, the fleeced U.S. taxpayer, and the discombobulated global financial system is the rapid recombobulation and capitalist re-education of the firm. This will take a long long long long time and quite probably more and more and more government support, since markets are not going to stabilize or improve in the near near near term.

    Given the doomsday risk AIG continues to pose and the fragility of markets today, the potential cost to the economy and the taxpayer of government action will be extremely higher than government inaction. AIG provides insurance protection to more than 100,000 entities (god save their souls), including fledgling small businesses, insolvent municipalities, 401(cents) plans, and Fortune 50 cent companies who together employ over 100 million furious Americans. AIG has over 30 million policyholders in the U.S. and is a major source of layoff insurance for, among others, underpaid teachers and Madoff fleeced non-profit organizations (god save all of them). Most importantly the company also is a significant counterparty to Goldman Sachs, Goldman Sachs, a number of major European financial institutions as well as Goldman Sachs.

    AIG operates in over 130 countries with over 400 dimwitted regulators and the company and its juggernaut of regulated and unregulated subsidiaries are subject to a plethora of impotent resolution frameworks across their broad and diverse operations without a single viable resolution mechanism. Within the few options available, the restructuring plan offers a multi-part approach which we hope and pray every night brings forward the ultimate resolution of the company, has received feeble acquiesence from key stakeholders and the seal of approval of the useless rating agencies that helped create this fiasco, and hopefully provides the possible protection for taxpayers in connection with this commitment of resources at this moment in time.

    The steps announced today provide tangible evidence of the U.S. government's commitment to the baiout of AIG time and time again in the face of the certainty of further market dislocations and economic deterioration. Orderly restructuring is essential to AIG's repayment of the ransom it has received from U.S. taxpayers and to hopefully preserving financial stability. The U.S. government is committed to continuing to bail AIG to maintain its ability to generate more and more obligations as they come due.

    Treasury has stated that public ownership of financial institutions is not a policy goal but a reality and, to the extent public ownership is an outcome of Treasury actions, as it has been with AIG, it will work to privatise government owned enterprises with those from the private sector to create a more business for unemployed bankers as soon as possible.

  • 3

    I would sound like a "conservative" or a "republican" if I brought Obama into this, yet folk were pretty quick to bash Bush & Paulson over the original bailouts (I'm neither republican nor democrat). The fact is that Obama is our president, and if he has nothing to do with the AIG bailout today, then what exactly does the man have say in? We're already being prepped for another war (Iran) by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, so why are we surprised that the great Obama is going to continue bailing out the banker thieves along with his minion Timothy Geithner? Didn't he (Geithner) work for New World Order maestro Henry Kissinger? He (Geithner) arranged the original bailout for AIG, the "rescue" of Bear Stearns, and he was behind the decision to let Lehman Bros fail. More of the same, folks - No "Change" here. Those of you who backed Obama so fervently, you may never see your misstep, nor will you ever want to admit that your man is indeed a fraud after all. Most of you (Obama kool-aid drinkers) only see that W. is no longer in office, and nothing else really matters to you. We may have to invade Iran? No problem. We continue to bail out banks and AIG? No worries. Obama is a smart, eloquent man, and if he says it's kosher, than we trust him. After all, folks - the man's a "democrat." You know - the "good guys." The party for the "working man." That's why the working man will pay for the 30 billion bailout. But like I said - Obama has NOTHING to do with this. He didn't choose Geithner. This was a Federal Reserve decision, and Obama's hands were tied. W's weren't - he was totally complicit in the bailouts, along with Hank Paulson - but Obama is a different story: He hates this just as much as you do. "CHANGE" indeed. POCKET CHANGE for YOU, Billions for the bankers. God Bless America.

  • 4

    LET IT SNOW AS THE DOW GOES UP IN SMOKE
    WilliamBanzai7

    Oh the weather outside is delightful
    But the markets just so frightful
    And since it has no place to go but low
    Let It Snow! As the Dow goes up in smoke!

    The Bailout madness shows no signs of stopping
    And AIG's billion dollar losses just keep on popping
    So turn the thermostat way down low
    Let It Snow! As the Dow goes up in smoke!

    Warren says we can kiss our asses goodbye
    But how I'd hate going down on the fly!
    So if we put up a real good fight
    All through this storm we'll be warm tonight!

    The markets are slowly diving
    And, your ears can hear all the Bulls crying
    And as your 401(k) goes up in smoke
    Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!

  • 5

    Thinking of the future and how we avoid this again: Why do we allow financial products to exist which have no real purpose other than to benefit scam artists who can deceive the public with derivatives, hedge funds and credit default swaps that nobody really understands? This is stealing money from one investor to benefit another. And, eventually, stealing money from all of us in the form of higher taxes when the scam artists go broke.

    I read Felix Salmon's article "The Formula That Killed Wall Street" quite thoroughly and all I can conclude is that the Gaussian copula formula was a sham and those who exploited it were scam artists. David X. Li, and others who understood the mathematics, should have been much more explicit about its limitations.

    To blame Paulson, Geithner and Obama for this is folly. The real culprits were the regulators who thought these financial products were the "cat's whiskers" and the government officials and congress who failed to regulate the regulators.

  • 6

    Let's start working together as communities. We are all so segregated and keep to ourselves these days. I say hi to people while I am out in public and I get looks like I am crazy for being friendly. What the hell happened to America? We have people on the internet cussing at each other and name calling. There is no sense of community and everyone in this country thinks they have some sort of entitlement. You can't even take a trip a mile from your house these days and not get cut off or flipped off. Is this really the America we want our kids growing up in? An America that rewards Banks and Corporations Billions of dollars for failing and making bad decisions and in some cases out right criminal decisions? By the time we finish blaming each other or the next minority group (which worked well for Hitler ) all of our money and futures will have been plundered by the elites of this world whose sole focus is to control and own everything. Wake up America!Bailout News

  • 7

    Isn't the real question here "why didn't we just let AIG go bankrupt? It could have sold its "consumer" insurance business at a minimal loss, and told all their partners in the CDS scam that they were out of luck.

  • 8

    Wow.

    *

    The bigger issue in my mind is the fact that Sec. Geithner is not supported in Treasury right now. The staffing issues seem to simply exasperated already dire problems. I can't help but fell that the only thing left is to suspend the stock markets internationally and have government wade in; declare winners and losers and reform the institutions that have fallen apart.

  • 9

    plk,
    -
    Quick question? Or probably better addressed to Barbara since she knows so many research gurus.
    -
    What amount (in range form or percentage form since exact numbers don't exist) is AIG involved as a counter-insurer to the once high and mighty $62 Trillion CDS market?
    -
    Seriously, it is time for the American public and the world to find out just how deep does this rabbit hole go?

  • 10

    "And so now we're getting this muddled, hugely expensive bailout/takeover."

    I agree with you, but I don't think that's how this is being perceived. I think that many people view this bailout as corrupt governance, and that when Bair and Geithner come out saying that there's nothing that we can do, they're indicting the entire system in many people's eyes. Between leaving failed businesses in place, government cries of feebleness, and the seeming support of the "Too big to fail" system, is it any wonder that there's a loss of confidence?

  • 11

    What amount (in range form or percentage form since exact numbers don't exist) is AIG involved as a counter-insurer to the once high and mighty $62 Trillion CDS market?
    _
    good question. And I've looked, and can't find a definitive answer.
    _
    what you do find is articles like how companies like Goldman-Sachs had $20 billion insured against losses by AIG -- and Goldman-Sachs should have known better -- and they probably did know better. GS knew that if AIG would never be able to cover that $20 billion, because GS knew that it wasn't just GS's losses that AIG wrote insurance on, and knew that AIG would never be able to cover all the losses that were sustained if GS lost $20 billion on those investments.
    _
    AIG was providing a service to scam artists -- by buying insurance from AIG on that $20 billion, it could claim that $20 billion as a "cash equivalent" asset, because AIG was guaranteeing against losses.
    _
    but what is really important is not that GS had $20 billion insured by AIG on its books, but that it probably sold tens of billions of dollars worth of securities based on CDO's with AIG insurance.

  • 12

    Pluk,
    -
    w/r/t - "but what is really important is not that GS had $20 billion insured by AIG on its books, but that it probably sold tens of billions of dollars worth of securities based on CDO's with AIG insurance."
    -
    That is why I think it is extremely important for the country to find out how much of the, at one time, $62 Trillion CDS market was propped up by AIG? In '01, there was $900 billion in the CDS market and in '07 - $62 Trillion!! The bonuses, earnings, wealth distribution etc. were based upon that money being REAL!!
    -
    I just don't think that most people get that we've been living in an Alice in Wonderland economy for a while. There really is no replacement for make believe. The rabbit hole and its depths may never be fully explored in fact.

  • 13

    THE MIGHTY BAILOUT TIM
    (The Mighty Quinn, Bob Dylan)
    WiliamBanzai7

    Ev'rybody's bailing AIG and the big banks run by dopes,
    Some are building lucite monuments,
    Others, jotting down feckless notes,
    Ev'rybody's in despair,
    Ev'ry girl and boy
    But when Tim the Bailout Eskimo gets here,
    Ev'rybody's gonna jump for joy.
    Come all without, come all within,
    You'll not hear nothing like Geithners bailout spin.

    I like to do just like the rest, I like my portfolio nice and neat,
    But guarding financial fumes and chump trade waste,
    It ain't my cup of meat.
    Ev'rybody's 'neath the lemon tree,
    Feeding Ponzi pigeons on a limb
    But when Tim the Bailout Eskimo gets here,
    All the pigeons gonna run to him.
    Come all without, come all within,
    You'll not hear nothing like Geithner's bailout spin.

    Now Livermore trading maxims ain't gonna do, I can't recite 'em all,
    Just tell me where it hurts,
    And I'll tell you who to call.
    Nobody can get no sleep,
    There's financial excrement on ev'ryone's feet
    But when Tim the Eskimo gets here,
    Ev'rybody's gonna wanna another bailout dose.
    Come all without, come all within,
    You'll not hear nothing like the mighty bailout Tim.

  • 14

    I had asked this two weeks ago. The big Washington Post "expose" on AIG quoted the newly installed honcho as saying that AIG's positions were almost perfectly hedged. How can that be and is the new guy the government put in as big of an idiot as the last ones?

  • 15

    RRsafety,
    -
    It is important to recall what hedging actually is and does.
    -
    Most hedges are positions established in a market in an attempt to offset exposure to the price risk of an equal but opposite obligation or position in another market.
    -
    But listen to CNN's recent video: Liddy: How to lose $62 billion
    -
    First, Liddy discusses that the first crisis was a crisis of liquidity...to get beyond that they needed in September the first $85 billion. Remember that AIG has a book derivatives that totals $2 trillion, 74 million policies (life insurance, 401ks, annuities, etc.).
    -
    Now asset values in general are in full retreat!
    All of them: CMBSs, RMBSs, Hybrids, Convertibles, and some forms of debt, equities, etc....all of them an impairment on their P&L!
    -
    How do you effectively hedge when everything you put money into is losing money?
    -
    I hope everybody is ready for Dow 4000. That I predict will be the bottom. Then I'm all in for the next 20 years.

  • 16

    BOHEMIAN BAILOUT AIG
    (Bohemian Rhapsody, Queen)
    WilliamBanzai7

    Sing along link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=irp8CNj9qBI

    Is this the real world-
    Is this warped bailout fantasy-
    Caught in a market dive-
    Lets all escape from financial reality-
    Open your eyes
    Look up to the TARP bailout skies and see-
    We're just a poorly managed sham, we need financial sympathy-
    Because its easy come,easy go,
    Trade a little high,little low,
    Anyway the market winds blow, doesnt really matter to AIG,
    To AIG

    Obama, just watched the AIG bailout scam,
    Put a derivative gun against Uncle Sam's head,
    Pulled the trigger, now the deficits red,
    Obama, your Presidential term had just begun,
    But now the TARP money's gone and Geithner's thrown it all away-
    Obama ooo,
    Did'nt mean to make you cry-
    If the DOW is not back this time tomorrow-
    Carry on, carry on, as if moral hazard dosnt really matter-

    Too late, our time may have come,
    Spending taxpayer nickels and dimes-
    Wallets aching all the time,
    Goodbye everybody-this bailout scams got to go-
    Gotta leave this joke behind and face the truth-
    Obama ooo- (any way the market wind blows)
    The economy may have to dive,
    Sometimes its like Adam Smith was never born at all-

    I see a little silhouetto of a bailout man,
    Alan Greenspan, Alan Greenspan come and do the bailout tango-
    Thunderbolt and lightning-very very frightening me-
    Asset Bubble
    Asset Bubble
    Market maestro-magnifico-
    Im just a greedy Wall Street con man and nobody loves me-
    Hes just a Wall Street con man with an Ivy League pedigree-
    Spare him his life from Chapter 11 insolvency-
    Bailout easy come easy go-,will you give me bailout dough-
    Bismillah! no,we will not give him bailout dough-let him go-
    Bismillah! no, we will give him more bailout dough- don't let him go
    Bismillah! we will not give you bailout dough-let you go
    Will not let you go-let him go
    Will let you go won't let him go
    No,no,no,no,no,no,no-
    Oh mama mia, mama mia AIG let them go-
    Beelzebub has a devil put money aside for A, for I, for GGGGGGGGG-

    So you think you can scam us and spit in our taxpayer eyes-
    So you think you can shtup us and leave us to die-
    Oh baby-cant do this to us baby-
    Just gotta get out-just gotta get right outta here-

    In the end
    Nothing really matters,
    Only AIG and rampant greed,
    Nothing really matters-,nothing really matters but greed,

    Thats the way the Wall Street wind blows....

  • 17

    We believe the international giant financial cartel's less-than-transparent and lack-of-accountability model has failed to work.

    This is an economic tragedy of unsurpassed magnitude. It can only add more salt to the already horrible global economic wound.

    One just wonders how such a mind-boggling sum of money (some $62 billion, equitable to a small nation's GDP if not more) can simply go down the drain that easily within a quarter of a year. Does anyone know the truth? Could it be fraudulence, manipulation or embezzlement?
    (Vei-ze & Tan Boon-tee)

  • 18

    AIG will fail anyway. They keep pulling losses out of a hat. Why continue to waste the money?

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