Obama admin. seeks powers to shut firms like AIG Wed Mar 25, 2009 8:09am IST


   [image: Photo]
By Glenn Somerville and David Alexander

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration on Tuesday mounted a
full-scale push for government authority to shut down troubled institutions
like insurer AIG to avoid the need for future bailouts.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, testifying before lawmakers still
fuming about big bonuses for executives at bailout recipient AIG, called on
Congress for new powers to take over big non-bank financial firms that run
amok.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke strongly backed Geithner in testimony
before the same committee, and President Barack Obama took the case public
during a televised news conference on Tuesday evening.

"Keep in mind that it is precisely because of the lack of this authority
that the AIG situation has gotten worse," Obama said. "We should've obtained
it much earlier so that any institution that poses a systemic risk that
could bring down the financial system, we can handle, and we can do it in an
orderly fashion that quarantines it from other institutions."

When asked which agency should be given the authority to wind down major
non-banks, Obama said the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp has a good model.

"If you look at how the FDIC has handled a situation like IndyBank for
example, it actually does these kinds of resolutions effectively when it's
got the tools to do it. We don't have the tools right now," Obama said.

The FDIC has the power to resolve failed banks like IndyMac Bank, but does
not have the power to wind down other types of financial firms.

AIG ran a global insurance company but also had a division dealing in
derivatives contracts that has been likened to a hedge fund. That unit took
a big hit when the U.S. housing sector imploded, putting the entire firm at
risk of a collapse that could have endangered the whole financial system.

Geithner said the government needed the same types of tools to deal with
failing non-bank institutions that it already has to deal with struggling
banks. Under his proposal, the Treasury chief would determine whether
emergency action was needed in consultation with the Fed and the relevant
regulator.

"As we have seen with AIG, distress at large, interconnected, non-depository
financial institutions can pose systemic risks just as distress at banks
can," he told the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee.

Congress has already begun working on a revamp of financial regulations that
is expected to include authority to wind down non-bank firms. Aides at the
House panel said on Monday the committee would likely vote on a bill as soon
as March 31.

House Republican leader John Boehner told reporters the Treasury's request
for authority to shutter non-banks sounded like "an unprecedented grab of
power."

But other lawmakers were more supportive.

"I welcome it," Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd told
reporters. "We've got to figure out a way to deal with this."

AIG POSTER CHILD FOR WIND DOWN AUTHORITY

AIG, which has been propped up with up to $180 billion from taxpayers, has
become the poster child for U.S. regulatory reform. Geithner, Bernanke and
New York Federal Reserve Bank President William Dudley all painted a dire
picture before lawmakers of what could have happened if AIG had failed.

"Conceivably, its failure could have resulted in a 1930s-style global
financial and economic meltdown, with catastrophic implications for
production, income and jobs," Bernanke said.

Fury at the $165 million in bonuses recently paid by the insurer threatens
to undercut efforts to stabilize the rickety financial sector.

Geithner laid out a plan on Monday to sop up as much as $1 trillion in toxic
assets sitting on bank books, but success hinges on the willingness of
investors to participate.

Last week, the House passed legislation to claw back most of the AIG bonus
money, and investors are wary of partnering with the government out of fear
the rules could later change.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus said on Tuesday the Senate put
the AIG bonus bill "on pause," suggesting lawmakers were having second
thoughts, but Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said action was still
possible.

The proposal sketched by Geithner would let the government step in to act as
a receiver for troubled non-banks. It would be able to deal with non-banks
in the same way the FDIC does with banks.

When the FDIC seizes a bank, it typically holds it until it gets it in shape
to reopen under new ownership or to be taken over by a healthy bank. FDIC
Chairman Sheila Bair has hinted that her agency might be suited to play a
similar role for other financial firms.

Officials say if they had authority to shut non-bank firms, the collapse of
Lehman Brothers, which touched off the most virulent phase of the credit
crisis, could have been avoided.

(Additional reporting by Alister Bull, David Lawder, Corbett B. Daly, Karey
Wutkowski and Susan Cornwell)



-- 
Regards,
Jigar Tanna,
Arihant Capital Markets Ltd.
9821301971

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