-----Original Message-----
From: Sid Shniad [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 4:48 PM
Subject: Geithner Singled Out In TARP Watchdog Neil Barofsky's Scathing
Report On AIG Bailout


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/11/16/aig-bailout-government-ov_n_359919.
html

11-16-09

Geithner Singled Out In TARP Watchdog Neil Barofsky's Scathing Report On AIG
Bailout

A brutal report issued Monday by a government watchdog holds Timothy
Geithner -- then the head of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and now
the nation's Treasury Secretary -- responsible for overpayments that put
billions of extra tax dollars in the coffers of major Wall Street firms,
most notably Goldman Sachs.

The authoritative new narrative describes how, while bailing out insurance
giant AIG last fall, a team led by Geithner failed nearly every step of the
way.

Instead of bargaining with AIG's numerous counterparties to resolve its
billions of dollars in souring derivatives contracts, Geithner's team ended
up paying top dollar for toxic assets -- "an amount far above their market
value at the time," the report notes.

"There is no question that the effect of FRBNY's decisions -- indeed, the
very design of the federal assistance to AIG -- was that tens of billions of
dollars of Government money was funneled inexorably and directly to AIG's
counterparties," the Office of the Special Inspector General for the
Troubled Asset Relief Program said.

Wall Street firms like Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch and Wachovia got full
value for their derivatives contracts with AIG, and taxpayers got the bill.
In total, $27.1 billion of public money was transferred to companies that
did business with AIG.

Throughout the bailout of AIG, the report says, the New York Fed failed to
develop appropriate contingency plans; failed to properly assess the impact
of its decisions; and generally engaged in negotiation strategies that were
doomed to fail.

Then, after Geithner's team paid off AIG's counterparties on Wall Street, it
imposed "onerous" terms on the troubled insurer, the report says.

"[T]he decision to acquire a controlling interest in one of the world's most
complex and most troubled corporations was done with almost no independent
consideration of the terms of the transaction or the impact that those terms
might have on the future of AIG," the report finds.

Geithner, now the nation's chief financial officer, just didn't bargain hard
enough with Wall Street's biggest companies, the report concludes:

    [T]he refusal of FRBNY and the Federal Reserve to use their considerable
leverage as the primary regulators for several of the counterparties,
including the emphasis that their participation in the negotiations was
purely "voluntary," made the possibility of obtaining concessions from those
counterparties extremely remote. While there can be no doubt that a
regulators' inherent leverage over a regulated entity must be used
appropriately, and could in certain circumstances be abused, in other
instances in this financial crisis regulators (including the Federal
Reserve) have used overtly coercive language to convince financial
institutions to take or forego certain actions. As SIGTARP reported in its
audit of the initial Capital Purchase Program investments, for example,
Treasury and the Federal Reserve were fully prepared to use their leverage
as regulators to compel the nine largest financial institutions (including
some of AIG's counterparties) to accept $125 billion of TARP funding and to
pressure Bank of America to conclude its merger with Merrill Lynch.
Similarly, it has been widely reported that the Government, while arguably
acting on behalf of General Motors and Chrysler, took an active role in
negotiating substantial concessions from the creditors of those companies.

Meanwhile, the Fed was attempting to keep the details of AIG's
counterparties hidden from public view -- another big mistake, according to
the report:

    The now familiar argument from Government officials about the dire
consequences of basic transparency, as advocated by the Federal
Reserve...once again simply does not withstand scrutiny. Federal Reserve
officials initially refused to disclose the identities of the counterparties
or the details of the payments, warning that disclosure of the names would
undermine AIG's stability, the privacy and business interests of the
counterparties, and the stability of the markets.


    After public and Congressional pressure, AIG disclosed the identities.
Notwithstanding the Federal Reserve's warnings, the sky did not fall; there
is no indication that AIG's disclosure undermined the stability of AIG or
the market or damaged legitimate interests of the counterparties. The lesson
that should be learned -- one that has been made apparent time after time in
the Government's response to the financial crisis -- is that the default
position, whenever Government funds are deployed in a crisis to support
markets or institutions, should be that the public is entitled to know what
is being done with Government funds.

    While SIGTARP acknowledges that there might be circumstances in which
the public's right to know what its Government is doing should be
circumscribed, those instances should be very few and very far between.

!DSPAM:2676,4b03444b25626480212619! 
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