July 10, 2009

AIG Seeks Clearance For More Bonuses

Washington Post: $2.4 Million in Executive Payments Due Next Week

  •  (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi)

  • Timeline Bailing Out AIG

    Events pertaining to the insurance giant since it began receiving massive amounts of cash from the U.S. government.

  • In-Depth Q&A: AIG

    Answers to some key questions about the insurance giant's latest bailout boost.

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(Washington Post)  This story was written by Brady Dennis and David Cho.

American International Group is preparing to pay millions of dollars more in bonuses to several dozen top corporate executives after an earlier round of payments four months ago set off a national furor.

The troubled insurance giant has been pressing the federal government to bless the payments in hopes of shielding itself from renewed public outrage.

The request puts the administration's new compensation czar on the spot by seeking his opinion about bonuses that were promised long before he took his post.

AIG doesn't actually need the permission of Kenneth R. Feinberg, who President Obama appointed last month to oversee the compensation of top executives at seven firms that have received large federal bailouts. But officials at AIG, whose federal rescue package stands at $180 billion, have been reluctant to move forward without political cover from the government.

"Anytime we write a check to anybody" it is highly scrutinized, said an AIG official, who declined to speak on the record because the negotiations with Feinberg are ongoing. "We would want to feel comfortable that the government is comfortable with what we are doing."

The payments coming due next week include $2.4 million in bonuses for about 40 high-ranking executives at AIG, according to administration documents from earlier this year. Though the actual sum may have changed since then, the payments are much smaller than those that caused the upheaval in March.

Still, officials at AIG and within the government see them as a land mine.

Feinberg, who previously managed the government's efforts to compensate the families of those killed in the Sept. 11 attacks, has the power to determine salaries, bonuses and retirement packages for all executive officers and the 100 most highly paid employees at firms such as Citigroup, Bank of America, General Motors and AIG.

AIG's upcoming payments do not fall under Feinberg's official purview, as they involve bonuses delayed from 2008. Feinberg is charged with shaping only current and future compensation. As a result, some Treasury officials believe they are under no obligation to offer an advisory opinion in this case, which could leave AIG officials to decide the matter on their own, according to a person familiar with the talks.

In November, AIG's top seven executives, including Chairman Edward M. Liddy, agreed to forgo their bonuses through 2009. Then, in March, facing pressure from Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and other government officials, the company restructured its corporate bonus plans for the remaining top 50 executives. As part of this agreement, the senior executives were to receive half their 2008 bonuses -- which totaled $9.6 million -- in the spring, with another quarter disbursed on July 15 and the rest on Sept. 15. The last two payments would depend on whether the company made progress in revamping its business and paying back bailout money to taxpayers.

The exact range of the payments due this month to AIG executives was unclear in company disclosure filings.

AIG's proxy statement filed last month explains why AIG initially instituted the retention payments. The company stated that after the federal bailout began in September, "we needed to confront the fact that many of our employees, perhaps the majority, knew that their long-term future with us was limited, and our competitors knew that our key producers could perhaps be lured away. . . . Allowing departures to erode the strength of our businesses would have damaged our ability to repay taxpayers for their assistance."

The Treasury declined to comment specifically on the bonuses due this month. In a statement, a department spokesman said, "Companies will need to convince Mr. Feinberg that they have struck the right balance to discourage excessive risk taking and reward performance for their top executives. . . . We are not going to provide a running commentary on that process, but it's clear that Mr. Feinberg has broad authority to make sure that compensation at those firms strikes an appropriate balance."

Feinberg did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment.

The recent discussions between the company and Feinberg illustrate how politically sensitive the bonuses have become, both for AIG and for the Obama administration. No development in the government's bailout of financial firms has angered lawmakers and ordinary Americans more than the disclosure in mid-March that the global insurer was paying more than $165 million in retention bonuses. They were aimed at retaining 400 employees at AIG Financial Products, the troubled unit whose complex derivative contracts nearly wrecked the global insurance giant.

Ultimately, some of these employees vowed to return more than $50 million -- but not before the resulting firestorm threatened to undermine the government's effort to rescue the financial system. Lawmakers, including key allies of the administration, sponsored bills that would have levied harsh taxes on AIG and other bailout recipients offering bonuses to their executives.

Afraid of such Congressional action, firms rushed to pay back federal aid, while others shied away from cooperating with the government in some of its bailout programs. Some initiatives had to be scaled down as a result.
The issue of bonuses, which had earlier been viewed by officials as minor relative to the larger problems in the financial system, began to consume the attention of top officials within the Treasury and Federal Reserve. Geithner attended long meetings to review payments, even those for low-ranking AIG executives.

Separately this week, a Citigroup analyst warned that AIG might be worthless to shareholders if or when it ever pays back the billions it owes the U.S. government.

"Our valuation includes a 70 percent chance that the equity at AIG is zero," Joshua Shanker of Citigroup wrote in a note to investors. He cites the continuing risks posed by the company's exotic derivative contracts, called credit-default swaps, and its sale of assets at low prices. AIG's stock plummeted by more than 25 percent yesterday.



By Brady Dennis and David Cho
© 2009 The Washington Post. All rights reserved.

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Add a Comment See all 25 Comments
by GiveMeFreedom July 11, 2009 8:55 PM EDT
I need to hire 3 people at my company. How about I treat the new hires like liberals on this site want AIG people treated. Let's see I will pay #1 per month and then give you a big bonus at the year end. Only problem is at year end I will say that the company is BK and all well too bad what the contract says or how hard you worked, too bad, no bonus. Any liberals want the job?
Reply to this comment
by whitemale08 July 11, 2009 12:38 AM EDT
Obama promised in his campaign to 'protect' the 'middle-class' instead he's let them down and betrayed them by bailing out Goldman Sucks and JP Morgan with their trillions in absolutely worthless derivatives and credit-default swaps.

Obama is a LOSER!!!

LOSER LOSER LOSER!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by nursetweetypie July 10, 2009 12:22 PM EDT
OH BOY, MORE MONEY TO THE RICH AND GREEDY. ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS SHOW UP FOR THE CHECK. FORGET DOING THE JOB RIGHT. THE AMERICAN PUBLIC ARE SUFFERING AND LOSING EVERYTHING THEY KNOW AND THE RICH CREEPS CONTINUE LIFE AS USUAL. WHATS WRONG WITH THIS? LETS START GIVING BONUSES TO THE PEOPLE THAT NEED THEM. YOU KNOW THE REAL PEOPLE THAT WORK, PAY TAXES AND MAKE THIS NATION RUN.
Reply to this comment
by skeetchamp July 10, 2009 10:54 AM EDT
since AIG doesn't want government micromanaging, they should make their own decision on this and not pass the buck to the administration.
Reply to this comment
by ktgilb1 July 10, 2009 10:42 AM EDT
I sorry, maybe because i don't understand high finance, but i thought a bonuse was somthing you get when you do a good job. If AIG messed up so bad the Gov had to step in to save them, how do they deserve a bonuse????
Reply to this comment
by payasyougo July 10, 2009 8:32 AM EDT
"AIG Seeks Clearance For More Bonuses"
----
Lets see....

Employees drawing a salary regardless of their performance.
Employees not being held accountable for bad decision making.
Employees putting other people's money at risk with no accountability.
An entity that defines their own salary and benefits.

Why would this government consider any of the above an issue.

Hint: it's called a mirror.
Reply to this comment
by liberalme July 10, 2009 3:24 PM EDT
I doubt the pion employees are getting any of the bonus--it's the big "thinkers" at the top--who do nothing more than sit on their duffs figuring out how to get paid for doing nothing!
by ramos1129 July 10, 2009 7:21 AM EDT
No...NO.....NADA....NYET....We own 80% of AIG. AIG spends millions on conferences, seminars, get aways to expensive resorts. AIG takes billions from us which we need elsewhere...Court martial any corporate office and government official that signs off on these bonuses.
Reply to this comment
by GiveMeFreedom July 11, 2009 8:52 PM EDT
And the social security administration just held a conference in Phoenix at the Biltmore too. And the UAW partied in Miami earlier this year. I guess since these are liberal leaning institutions it is OK right?
by consciousnes July 10, 2009 5:42 AM EDT
When will it all end? People are loosing their homes and Insurance companies that are ripping them off conntinue to give big bonuses to their inept execs.
Reply to this comment
by beaumuff July 10, 2009 5:19 AM EDT
Oh no,Obama and Geithner are going to be "furious" AGAIN.
Reply to this comment
by nextgenman09 July 10, 2009 4:45 AM EDT
Only in America do people who fail get bonuses. The American Business Model.
Reply to this comment
by GiveMeFreedom July 11, 2009 8:51 PM EDT
Yes. Congress is the best example of abject failure while great pay, health, pension and travel too.
by r9119111 July 10, 2009 4:05 AM EDT
by Phxfire July 9, 2009 11:40 PM PDT
wow, there you go again, ithoughtitwasfunny, opening your mouth and spewing junk. ACORN had absolutely no agreement with ACORN, even your messiah, Limbaugh, has had to swallow hard and drop that line. ACORN also hasn't been convicted of any wrongdoing. I'm not defending any wongs, just sick to death of parrots repeating lies and misleading innuendo.

I'm with you, Phxfire. We must not get tired of letting these parrots know that we are onto them. They think that if they keep spewing their line of crap, enough people will eventually believe them so they will win the next election. Keep up the good work. The neocons must never ragain the power they have had in recent years. Never.
Reply to this comment
by Phxfire July 10, 2009 2:42 AM EDT
Oh, good, can't blame Obama for the mess, since that was on the criminals bush/cheney's watch, so some of you just resort to inane and absurd name calling. This is a HUGE mess that the current administration is trying to mitigate, at the same time they are fixing all the other messes left behind by the previous administration. But, I guess I should consider the sources, eh?
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by joe1022joe July 10, 2009 1:39 AM EDT
This money is commission earned and owed from sales they made in 2008. Not paying it would be unilaterally violating their contract. That's a no-no. You wanna not pay bonus money in the future - OK. But welching on old debts isn't - unless they did something illegal and as far as I know they haven't been charged with anything by the legal system.
Reply to this comment
by Phxfire July 10, 2009 2:44 AM EDT
What they earned in 2008? For what, running the company into the largest loses in its history and contributing to placing the economy into a recession? What exactly did they do to earn these bonuses???
by whitemale08 July 11, 2009 12:34 AM EDT
What a dumb and idiotic comment.

AIG is paying bonuses from 2008 Bush/Paulson taxpayer bailout money!

THAT'S HOW THEY GOT THE BONUSES IN THE FIRST PLACE!

JUST KEEP MORE MOUTH SHUT, YOU'RE NOT DOING ANYTHING USEFULL TO HELP FIGHT THESE CRIMINALS ON WALL STREET!

YOU BELONG ON THE OTHER SIDE SINCE YOU WISH TO DEFEND THEM SO MUCH!

AIG is a backdoor for the billions payed to Goldman Sucks and JP Morgan as counter-parties to their absolutely worthless derivatives and credit-default swaps.

AIG MUST BE SHUT DOWN IMMEDIATELY!!!!!
by whitemale08 July 10, 2009 12:45 AM EDT
Obama is failure and puppet for BIG FAILED ZOMBIE BANKS.

He works for Wall Street/City of London and junkyard dogs Sean Hannity.
Reply to this comment
by cattiej July 10, 2009 12:34 AM EDT
If AIG gives these CEO's bonuses, I, along with many other's will not vote again for Obama. He probably won't take any REAL action except complain and then when it comes election time, he WILL take their campaign money..for us it will be for naught. We aren't going to vote for Obama again. Any bonus money these jerks from AIG would get would be an outrage and the citizens are sick and tired of being sick and tired. This whole story makes me sick to my stomach. All the people who's lives have been torn apart, forever, by companies like AIG and their rape of the taxpayers is disgusting. Where is GOD when you need him?
Reply to this comment
by debinok1 July 9, 2009 11:58 PM EDT
Disgusting. The only bonus these idiots deserve is jello with dinner, while they sit in a prison cell.
Reply to this comment
by GiveMeFreedom July 11, 2009 8:50 PM EDT
99% of the employee's at AIG were good, hard working people. You hypocrites on the left need to stop the green envy. Most of you want to be professors and pollute our childrens minds in college. The problem is eventually they get smart and stop believing the garbage of the left later in life and get conservative (at least financially).
by despido July 9, 2009 11:37 PM EDT
AIG Seeks Clearance For More Bonuses...
------------------------

Oh Goodie! Another opportunity for Obama to pretend he's outraged.
Reply to this comment
by the74blaster July 9, 2009 11:35 PM EDT
I have a beter idea. Lets just lay them off to reduce the labor costs at AIG and give their bonus back to the taxpayers.
Reply to this comment
by Phxfire July 10, 2009 2:40 AM EDT
wow, there you go again, ithoughtitwasfunny, opening your mouth and spewing junk. ACORN had absolutely no agreement with ACORN, even your messiah, Limbaugh, has had to swallow hard and drop that line. ACORN also hasn't been convicted of any wrongdoing. I'm not defending any wongs, just sick to death of parrots repeating lies and misleading innuendo.
See all 25 Comments
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