Econwatch
July 8, 2009 12:07 PM

Lifting the Veil On AIG

(CBS)
Months after the fury surrounding AIG's more than $180 billion government bailout reached fever pitch, there are still a lot of unanswered questions surrounding the insurance giant's messy deals that threatened to bring down the entire global financial system.

Back in March, CEO Edward Liddy faced congressional outrage over the payment of bonuses worth hundreds of millions to the same people widely seen as responsible for the company's ruination – the infamous financial products division whose risky credit default swap transactions threatened to swallow up its parent company when they went sour.

Liddy termed those payments "distasteful" back then, though he insisted he was contractually obligated to pay them.

About a week later, Jake DeSantis, who worked for AIG Financial Products (AIGFP), sent his letter of resignation to the company and the world through its publishing in The New York Times. In it, DeSantis wrote of being unfairly vilified by Congress and the media and of feeling betrayed by a company he had invested most of his time and efforts trying to restore.

He and his co-workers weren't the greedy, short-sighted snake oil salesmen everyone assumed them to be, he insisted.

But if DeSantis and all those like him in the company weren't to blame for AIG's collapse, who was?

As CBS News reported on in March (and followed up on in April), Joe Cassano, the former head of AIGFP, is being eyed as a key culprit who oversaw the company's risky and ultimately damaging transactions.

In the August edition of Vanity Fair, Michael Lewis delves deeper into Cassano's role and offers a compelling glimpse behind the scenes of a division that for years generated seemingly endless profits based on sound risk analysis.

In 2001, Cassano took the reins of AIGFP – a branch of the company that essentially insured Wall Street firms against the risk they assumed in loans. Unlike his predecessors, Cassano didn't have as sound a grasp on the technical, mathematical aspects of the business and didn't want to spend time debating them.

As Lewis writes:

Across AIGFP the view of the boss was remarkably consistent: a guy with a crude feel for financial risk but a real talent for bullying people who doubted him.


According to Lewis, sources within the company paint Cassano as a dictator who demanded subservience from his workers and an executive who couldn't fathom the business he ran ever losing its remarkable success.

But soon enough, AIGFP's business began to change as they started to insure more and more consumer loans like credit cards, student loans and mortgages. There were no problems initially and most people involved thought AIG's risk was low – all the loans couldn't possibly go into default at the same time, the logic went.

That changed when subprime mortgages increasingly began creeping into AIG's credit default swap portfolio, the equation changed. But, according to Lewis, Cassano was either unable to recognize that or unwilling to listen to the growing number of cautionary voices warning him of their now-unsustainable risk.

Subprime mortages grew around 90 percent of the division's credit default swaps – a figure apparently no one was aware of, even the people who worked on the transactions.

According to Lewis, Cassano had also changed the terms of AIG's relationship with Wall Street. It would begin offering collateral if certain triggers were set off, like AIG's bond rating dropping from AAA to AA, which it did. They would also offer cash to banks if the credit default swaps they sold them decreased in value.

That happened in a major way when the subprime crisis exploded – sending banks rushing to A.I.G. for cash they wouldn't have had without the $182.5 billion from taxpayers.

As many opportunities as there were to avoid catastrophe – on the part of executives and lawmakers alike – Lewis concludes that "Joe Cassano was the perfect man for these times — as responsible for a series of disastrous trades as a person in a big company can be."
Tags:
aig ,
vanity fair ,
joe cassano ,
michael lewis ,
credit default swaps ,
cbsaig
Topics:
AIG
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by tmittelstaed July 8, 2009 5:33 PM EDT
Don't be a moron. Joe Cassano was acting exactly as a greedy CEO of one of these companies is expected to act. It's the job of the government to regulate banks and when banks use insurance companies like AIG then AIG is essentially part of the bank - and must submit to regulation also. The Republicans, stewards of SMALL government, blocked the extension of regulation to insurance companies at every turn - and prevented states from regulating them. So, the CEO's were allowed to do what they are expected to do and why is anyone surprised that they robbed the public purse.

The real problem was Bush bailing out AIG, that shouldn't have happened, AIG should have been allowed to collapse.
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by hennighg July 8, 2009 5:28 PM EDT
And AIG and all the other insurance companies, richer than the banks, resist national health care because it would cost too much. For whom, I wonder. Next time, let the protection sellers crumble. AIG wouldn't be in the way of health care for the unwashed, dirty tax-payers who bailed them out.
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by whitemale08 July 8, 2009 5:01 PM EDT
First of all Goldman Sucks, JP Morgan and Anglo-Dutch banks Barclay's Capital and UBS were all in on this as counter-parties.

Not only does Bush and Obama bails these crooks out but just today Bloomberg.com announces that Goldman Sucks and JP Morgan are going to re-package the worthless derivatives and credit-default swaps that haven't been bailed out yet. (remember there's over 1.4 quadrillion).

And to pay for it the NSTIFC (National Surface Transportation Infrastructure Commission) announces today a proposal to use a pay-by-the-mile tracker-box system in your vehicle as an MASSIVE AUSTERITY measure to pay for these stupid bailouts to Goldman Sucks and JP Morgan.

I tried to warn you folks that bailouts to Goldman Sucks wouldn't work and yet that's what we are doing to the complete ruination of the United States.

HAIL THE BRITISH EMPIRE OF WORTHLESS DERIVATIVES AND CREDIT-DEFAULT SWAPS YOU STUPID AMERICANS!!!!!!
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by tmittelstaed July 8, 2009 5:36 PM EDT
The federal interstate highway system is not covered by the fuel tax, not by a mile. And every year, the fuel tax brings in less and less and the interstates crumble away and require more and more maintainence. The pay-by-mile system is a good idea that would fairly spread the costs of maintaining the system to everyone using it. It has nothing to do with bailing out banks.
by lovegetpeace July 8, 2009 4:00 PM EDT
I mistakenly thought these Pals with MBAs from Ivy Universities were smarter than your average American begging at the streets of America.
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by lovegetpeace July 8, 2009 3:57 PM EDT
Greed in Capitalism is like Cancer in Humans. You never know you have it until it is too late.
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by ibsteve2u July 8, 2009 3:42 PM EDT
The nation is suffering the consequence of the Republican interpretation of "government should be run like a business"...by which they actually mean government's sole purpose is to further enrich business and, of course, the owners and managers of those businesses.

Now that in and of itself wouldn't have been so bad...but the Republicans have a floor for just which businesses they care about; a floor directly related to how much money those businesses can afford to invest in electing Republicans at the national level.

That requirement to have enough wealth to be significant left America's small and medium businesses out in the cold...witness the absolute failure of the Republicans to factor in the reliance of small and medium-sized businesses upon the spending of the American worker/consumer when the Republicans began creating the policies of free trade that exported our jobs and the tax cuts that financed the building of the offshore factories required to house them.

And witness how the Republicans rushed to rescue the enormous wealth of the enormously wealthy that was at risk on Wall Street and in banking in October of 2008...but, again, left America's workers/consumers out in the cold, thus delivering a death blow to many of America's small and medium businesses.

There is a silver lining, of course: Had the Republicans acted to help Main Street, they might well have perpetuated the myth that they give a damn about America, and won the 2008 Presidential election and/or more Congressional races.

lollll...but their instincts...their core belief system that only the wealthy deserve to have wealth...betrayed them.

Pretty bad, when you are so greedy that you cut your own throat.
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by beaumuff July 8, 2009 4:05 PM EDT
Yes and Obama and Turbo tax crook Timmy helped them make a bunch of new millionaries also for political paybacks. What was funny they acted like they didn't know it and were mad about it until they got caught.
by chonder2 July 8, 2009 2:48 PM EDT
Like I've said before. You would think with the scale and seriousness of that economic crash there would be ONGOING investigations now.Is it me or is the cause, and or the players of the crash not to be found out? There are countless numbers of people that the words "mad as hell" can't even begin to describe.
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by chonder2 July 8, 2009 2:44 PM EDT
Like I've said before. You would think with the scale and seriousness of that economic crash there would be ONGOING investigations now.Is it me or is the cause, and or the players of the crash not to be found out? There are countless numbers of people that the words "mad as hell" can't even begin to describe.
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by 12345-908903 July 8, 2009 1:47 PM EDT
According to this article, this giant Ponzi scheme was not, in fact, the mastermind of financial geniuses, but instead the hapless thrashings of an intellectually challenged, even dimwitted but bullying hardnose sob that let the debacle occur. Well, what would we expect from a bunch of crooks calling themselves insurance salesmen ? Good old AIG. Thanks a billion for putting the rest of us in the poorhouse. Hope you are enjoying your stolen money Cassano.
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