Showing posts with label aig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aig. Show all posts

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Fed, Bernanke Cover Up Wall Street Welfare Moms' Receipts

A friend who teaches finance at a college near New York City (he doesn't want me to divulge his name because his college has threatened to fire any professor who reads my blog) has forwarded a telling Bloomberg report in response to my blog supporting the reappointment of Ben Bernanke.

Bloomberg reports that the Federal Reserve Bank required AIG to file a report four times, insisting that AIG delete more than 1,000 pieces of information concerning the bank bailouts. According to Bloomberg:

"AIG was asked to limit what the public knew about the Maiden Lane transactions. The payments have been called a “backdoor bailout” by lawmakers because banks, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Societe Generale SA, were reimbursed at 100 cents on the dollar for mortgage-linked securities that had declined in value."

The Fed, for instance, redacted the information that the price AIG paid for default swaps was nearly 100 percent of market value. The aggregate cost of the transaction, according to the article, was over $15 billion. That's alot of poor people's tax money going down the tube of Wall Street's incompetence.

Moreover, a schedule A that included sensitive information was omitted from AIG's filing with the SEC. The article states:

"the SEC said in a Dec. 30, 2008, letter that AIG was 'required to file the entire agreement, including all exhibits, schedules, appendices.' After consultation with the New York Fed, AIG requested confidential treatment for the Schedule A, and on Jan. 14, 2009, AIG amended a filing saying that the 'confidential portion of this Schedule A has been omitted' and provided to the SEC."

AIG says that they were not the ones who wanted the confidentiality. The schedule would have showed the large subsidies being paid to Wall Street. The Fed, acting on behalf of Wall Street, encouraged the SEC to cover up the identities of the bankers.

It is not news that the Fed acts on behalf of Wall Street and the money center banks. It is been providing these welfare moms on Wall and Broad with welfare slips for more than 75 years.

The question to be asked now is whether an appointee of the Democratic Party-dominated Senate would be an improvement over Chairman Bernanke. It is tempting to say that if Harry Reid and his fellow extremists appointed an even more aggressive Fed chairman, with a policy even more expansive than Bernanke's, all hell might break loose, and this could be the death knell of the Fed. But I cannot hope for ill to come to this nation. As bad as Bernanke is, the Democrats seem likely to appoint someone worse unless the group that opposes Bernanke makes their aim clear.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Barack Obama on AIG's Payroll

H/t Larwyn. This appeared on Dan Spencer's Examiner blog:

Senator Barack Obama received a $101,332 bonus from American International Group in the form of political contributions according to Opensecrets.org. The two biggest Congressional recipients of bonuses from the A.I.G. are - Senators Chris Dodd and Senator Barack Obama.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

AIG Investors Not Allowed To Lose

It's nice to be a bank. You can lend people money you don't have, and make reckless investments at that. Then, when the reckless investments bail, er, I mean fail, economists are eager to justify subsidizing you through public funds in the interest of the "public good". I wonder how hard these guys are laughing when they're on the way to the bank.

According to the Wall Street Journal:

>"Banks in the U.S. and abroad are among the biggest winners in the federal government's revamped $150 billion bailout of American International Group Inc...Banks in the U.S., Europe and Canada bought credit-default swaps on these securities from AIG, which in turn promised to compensate them if the securities defaulted. Defaults haven't been a major problem, but the market values of these CDOs fell sharply over the past year or so...Throughout its AIG rescue efforts during the past two months, the government has had the banks in its sights; it made its initial bailout of AIG in part to avoid potential bank losses that might have threatened the broader financial system...The banks that participate will be compensated for the securities' full, or par, value in exchange for allowing AIG to unwind the credit-default swaps it wrote..."It's like a home run for some of the banks," says Carlos Mendez, a senior managing director at ICP Capital, a fixed-income investment firm in New York. "They bought insurance from a company that ran into trouble and still managed to get all, or most, of their money back."

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Schnorrers' Day on Wall Street

I blogged this back in March, but it is even more relevant today:

"Hooray for Chair Bernanke
The economic explorer
'Did someone call him 'schnorrer'"?

---Groucho Marx (Ben Bernanke), Animal Crackers

Groucho Marx was, of course singing about himself, Captain Spaulding, in Animal Crackers, but with a small modification or two the lines sing of Ben Bernanke. In case your Yiddish is rusty, "schnorrer" means beggar or sponger, according to Wikipedia. Is it fair that John Q. Public is subsidizing multi-million dollar Wall Street salaries for guys who can't figure out how to run a business?

Please review the entire song:

(All on Wall Street)
At last we are to meet him,
The famous Ben Bernanke.
From climates hot and cranky,
The Chairman has arrived.

Most heartily we'll greet him,
With plain and fancy cheering.
Until he's hard of hearing.
The Chairman has arrived.
At last - The Chairman has arrived.

(Butler)
Mr. Henry Paulson, Field Secretary to Chair Bernanke.

(Jamison/Zeppo/Henry Paulson)
I represent the Chairman who insists on my informing you of these conditions under which he camps here. In one thing he is very strict, he wants his women young and picked and as for Wall Street bankers, he won't have any tramps here.

(All on Wall Street)
As for bankers he won't have any tramps here,
There must be no tramps.

(Paulson)
The bankers must all be very old,
The women warm, the champagne cold.
It's under these conditions that he camps here.

(Voice off Screen)
I'm announcing Chairman Ben Bernanke

(All on Wall Street)
He's announcing Ben Bernanke

Oh dear, he is coming,
At last he's here.

(Chair Bernanke)
Hello, I must be going,
I cannot stay, I came to say, I must be printing.
I'm glad I came, but just the same I must be going.
La La.

(Mrs. Rittenhouse/Margaret Dumont)
For my sake you must stay.
If you should go away,
You'd spoil this party I am throwing.

(Chair Bernanke)
I'll stay a week or two,
I'll stay the summer through,
But I am telling you,
I must be printing.

(All on Wall Street)
Before you print,
Will you oblige us,
And tell us of your deeds so glowing?

(Bernanke)
I'll print as much as you say,
In fact I'll even stay!
I'll print dollars far and away!

(All on Wall Street)
Good!

(Bernanke)
But I must be going.
I must be printing.

(Paulson)
There's something that I'd like to say,
That he's too modest to relay.
The Chairman is a moral man.
Sometimes he finds it trying
To be printing and printing.

(Bernanke)
This fact I emphasize with stress,
I never print a buck unless - Somebody's buying.
I never print a buck unless - The public's paying.

(All on Wall Street)
The Chairman is a very moral man.

(Paulson)
If he hears of a high interest rate, He'll naturally repel it.

(Bernanke)
I hate a high interest rate I do.

(All on Wall Street)
The Chairman is a very moral man.
Hooray for Chair Bernanke, The economic explorer.

(Chair Bernanke)
Did someone call me Schnorrer?

(All on Wall Street)
Hooray, Hooray, Hooray.

(Paulson)
He went onto Wall Street where all the bankers pocket bucks.

(Chair Bernanke)
If I stay here I'll go nuts.

(All on Wall Street)
Hooray, Hooray, Hooray.
He put all his reliance, In courage and defiance,
And risked his life for economic science.

(Chair Bernanke)
Hey, hey.

(Mrs. Rittenhouse/Margaret Dumont)
You are the only Chairman to print money over every acre.

(Chair Bernanke)
I think I'll try and make her.

(All on Wall Street)
Hooray, Hooray, Hooray.
He put all his reliance, In courage and defiance,
And risked his life for economic science.

(Chair Bernanke)
Hey, hey.

(All on Wall Street)
Hooray for Chair Bernanke, The economic explorer.
He brought his name undying fame
And that is why we say, Hooray, Hooray, Hooray.

(Chair Bernanke attempts to speak)
My friends, I am highly gratified at this magnificent display of effusion and I want
you to know.........

(All on Wall Street)
Hooray for Bernanke, The economic explorer.
He brought his name undying fame
And that is why we say, Hooray, Hooray, Hooray.

(Chair Bernanke)
My friends, I am highly gratified at this magnificent display of effusion and I want
you to know.........

Hooray for Ben Bernanke, Wall Street's hero.....
Well, somebody's got to do it!

Hooray, hooray, hooray

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Letter to Speaker Nancy Pelosi Re Impeachment of President George W. Bush

PO Box 130
West Shokan, New York 12494
September 20, 2008

The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
House of Representatives
450 Golden Gate Ave. 14th Floor
San Francisco, CA 94102

Dear Speaker Pelosi:

I have also written to Senator McCain and Congressman Kucinich, John Conyers and my representative Maurice Hinchey concerning the impeachment of President George Bush. I am a laissez-faire Republican who has contributed to several Republican candidates. The recent bailout of AIG Insurance Company is a significant breach of the Constitution of the United States and so provides grounds for impeachment that you hitherto considered to be unavailable. The ownership of an insurance company is not a power granted to the federal government and has no serious justification either economically or because of the federal government's police powers. Justification of the AIG bailout would require accepting the claim of presidential economic omniscience. But the Constitution grants no such omniscience and no such power to the president.

Because President Bush has violated his oath to uphold the Constitution, President Bush deserves to be impeached.

The presidential oath of office reads as follows:

"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

At this juncture there is sufficient public support for an impeachment of President Bush. You may not agree with my reasons, and I may not agree with yours, but I think that more than half of the public would support a hearing.

Sincerely,


Mitchell Langbert, Ph.D.

Cc: Congressman Ron Paul
2445 Rayburn House Bldg
Washington, DC 20515