Preview from Europe: The Bears Are Back [View article]
Read the actual bill it is available on the House's website. Despite how it has been reported it: taxes any individual whose salary and bonus combined is more than 125k. Households combined whose salary and bonus amount to more than 250K are also subject to the taking. So if you work at one of these banks, earn 100K a year and got a 26 K bonus and are the sole breadwinner of your house, the gov't will take your entire bonus. Does that seem fair to the over 116K employs of AIG who had nothing to do with the London based FP unit who work hard to provide for the familes and were counting on the bonus to pay loans and mortgages? Who are working hard to ensure that the company remains profitable to pay back the taxpayer! Wasn't that the whole point of the bailout? Or was it to pay the counterparties? Hmmmm... Oh, by the way, this tax doesn't actually tax the London based employees that everyone wants to flog. And it doesn't tax Merril Lynch because unlike AIG they are still allowed to lobby Congress. Can't wait for our best and brightest to go to Zurich, Banco Sociale and other foreign entities and the US Economy collapes. Way to go!
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Mac.barron- Good point obviously everyone who works for AIG is to blame even though some of the units are making billions in profit. So when Kevin Kelly, a legend in insurance who has never lost money for the company left that was a good thing for the company, that will really help out the country. This was a small unit that took down the parent. AIG is humongous. It is like blaming NBC for what GE Financial Unit does. You really have no clue, just let anger fuel your thinking, that is productive!
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Read the actual bill it is available on the House's website. Despite how it has been reported it: taxes any individual whose salary and bonus combined is more than 125k. Households combined whose salary and bonus amount to more than 250K are also subject to the taking. So if you work at one of these banks, earn 100K a year and got a 26 K bonus and are the sole breadwinner of your house, the gov't will take your entire bonus. Does that seem fair to the over 116K employs of AIG who had nothing to do with the London based FP unit who work hard to provide for the familes and were counting on the bonus to pay loans and mortgages? Who are working hard to ensure that the company remains profitable to pay back the taxpayer! Wasn't that the whole point of the bailout? Or was it to pay the counterparties? Hmmmm... Oh, by the way, this tax doesn't actually tax the London based employees that everyone wants to flog. And it doesn't tax Merril Lynch because unlike AIG they are still allowed to lobby Congress. Can't wait for our best and brightest to go to Zurich, Banco Sociale and other foreign entities and the US Economy collapes. Way to go Congress!
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
The real genius here is the architect of this outrage residing in the current adminstration. They were able to turn the country's attention to these bonuses (which they knew about for months and endorsed since AIG's Board is unable to take any action without running it by the Fed) and away from the billions that went to the counterparties, i.e., Goldmen, etc... They were the ones bailed out, not AIG. They were the ones who created the mortages not AIG. The day the identity of the counterparties were released the outrage from Washington was created. It is obvious, but still the sheep all waive their pick signs and our upset that these folks got bonuses because they are trying to unwind accounts that could cost the taxpayers way more than they have paid so far! _ The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was getting the world to believe he didn't exist!
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
AIG RESPONDS TO WALL STREET JOURNAL STORY NEW YORK, December 10, 2008 – American International Group, Inc. (AIG) has issued the following statement regarding an article that appeared today in The Wall Street Journal: “A story in today’s Wall Street Journal incorrectly reports that AIG has a previously undisclosed obligation to counterparties of about $10 billion. The Journal’s story relates to AIG Financial Products’ multi-sector credit default swap portfolio. Included within that $71.6 billion portfolio (notional amount as of September 30) is approximately $9.8 billion of swaps that were sold as credit protection on “synthetic” securities. The swaps on these synthetic securities are also referred to as “cash settlement” or “Pay As You Go” (PAUG) swaps because they are settled in cash as and when losses are taken. The majority of the multi-sector CDS swaps were written as “physical settlement” swaps, where AIG is required to physically buy the underlying collateralized debt obligation (CDO) bond in the event of a CDO credit event. The $9.8 billion notional amount does not represent a loss to AIG or a debt it owes to counterparties. It represents the notional value of the maximum potential cash settlement portion of the multi-sector portfolio. Cash settlement swaps have lower liquidity risk because they are PAUG. A credit event on a physical settlement swap requires AIG to buy the total underlying CDO tranche in an amount equal to AIG’s full notional exposure whereas a PAUG contract only obliges AIG to pay losses on that tranche as and when they occur therefore reducing the cash impact. AIG is addressing its exposure to its entire multi-sector CDS portfolio through its existing credit agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. As previously announced, AIG and the Federal Reserve have funded the Maiden Lane III facility, which has negotiated agreements to settle $53.5 billion of AIG’s $71.6 billion CDS portfolio. The notional amount attributable to the cash settlement portion of the AIG Financial Products multi-sector credit default swap portfolio has been consistently included in the total AIG Financial Products multi-sector credit default swap exposure in AIG’s SEC filings and is explained on page 117 of AIG’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ending September 30, 2008.” # # # American International Group, Inc. (AIG), a world leader in insurance and financial services, is the leading international insurance organization with operations in more than 130 countries and jurisdictions. AIG companies serve commercial, institutional and individual customers through the most extensive worldwide property-casualty and life insurance networks of any insurer. In addition, AIG companies are leading providers of retirement services, financial services and asset management around the world. AIG's common stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange, as well as the stock exchanges in Ireland and Tokyo.
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Oct 09 07:11 AM I can't believe all of this nonsense over AIG. IS EVERYONE STUPID! Obama made damaging reckless comments and didn't even look into the issue. The conference was set a year in advance and paid for by the marketing budget of the insurance companies which can not be tapped to pay back the loan from the FED and the FED loan money is not going into the insurance companies budget at all! Plus, the FED now owns AIG, even after AIG pays back the 100 plus billion dollar loan, the FED owns them. Why are we mad about a conference where 100 of their biggest clients were wined and dined by a 10 AIG employees that was paid for by the insurance companies? That is standard practice. The insurance company has a billion dollar marketing budget and needs now more than ever to keep their huge clients. The better AIG does the better tax payers will be when the FED sells the 79 percent interest later. Piling on against AIG is actually against every taxpayers best interest. We want them to thrive not go bankrupt you IDIOTS!
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
I can't believe all of this nonsense over AIG. IS EVERYONE STUPID! The FED now owns AIG, even after AIG pays back the 100 plus billion dollar loan, the FED owns them. Why are we mad about a conference where 100 of their biggest clients were wined and dined by a 10 AIG employees. That is standard practice. The insurance company has a billion dollar marketing budget and needs now more than ever to keep their huge clients. The better AIG does the better tax payers will be when the FED sells the 79 percent interest. Piling on against AIG is actually against every taxpayers best interest. We want them to thrive not go bankrupt you CLONES!
Preview from Europe: The Bears Are Back [View article]
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Good point obviously everyone who works for AIG is to blame even though some of the units are making billions in profit. So when Kevin Kelly, a legend in insurance who has never lost money for the company left that was a good thing for the company, that will really help out the country. This was a small unit that took down the parent. AIG is humongous. It is like blaming NBC for what GE Financial Unit does. You really have no clue, just let anger fuel your thinking, that is productive!
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
It is obvious, but still the sheep all waive their pick signs and our upset that these folks got bonuses because they are trying to unwind accounts that could cost the taxpayers way more than they have paid so far!
_
The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was getting the world to believe he didn't exist!
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
NEW YORK, December 10, 2008 – American International Group, Inc. (AIG) has issued the following statement regarding an article that appeared today in The Wall Street Journal:
“A story in today’s Wall Street Journal incorrectly reports that AIG has a previously undisclosed obligation to counterparties of about $10 billion. The Journal’s story relates to AIG Financial Products’ multi-sector credit default swap portfolio. Included within that $71.6 billion portfolio (notional amount as of September 30) is approximately $9.8 billion of swaps that were sold as credit protection on “synthetic” securities. The swaps on these synthetic securities are also referred to as “cash settlement” or “Pay As You Go” (PAUG) swaps because they are settled in cash as and when losses are taken.
The majority of the multi-sector CDS swaps were written as “physical settlement” swaps, where AIG is required to physically buy the underlying collateralized debt obligation (CDO) bond in the event of a CDO credit event.
The $9.8 billion notional amount does not represent a loss to AIG or a debt it owes to counterparties. It represents the notional value of the maximum potential cash settlement portion of the multi-sector portfolio. Cash settlement swaps have lower liquidity risk because they are PAUG. A credit event on a physical settlement swap requires AIG to buy the total underlying CDO tranche in an amount equal to AIG’s full notional exposure whereas a PAUG contract only obliges AIG to pay losses on that tranche as and when they occur therefore reducing the cash impact.
AIG is addressing its exposure to its entire multi-sector CDS portfolio through its existing credit agreement with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. As previously announced, AIG and the Federal Reserve have funded the Maiden Lane III facility, which has negotiated agreements to settle $53.5 billion of AIG’s $71.6 billion CDS portfolio.
The notional amount attributable to the cash settlement portion of the AIG Financial Products multi-sector credit default swap portfolio has been consistently included in the total AIG Financial Products multi-sector credit default swap exposure in AIG’s SEC filings and is explained on page 117 of AIG’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ending September 30, 2008.”
# # #
American International Group, Inc. (AIG), a world leader in insurance and financial services, is the leading international insurance organization with operations in more than 130 countries and jurisdictions. AIG companies serve commercial, institutional and individual customers through the most extensive worldwide property-casualty and life insurance networks of any insurer. In addition, AIG companies are leading providers of retirement services, financial services and asset management around the world. AIG's common stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange, as well as the stock exchanges in Ireland and Tokyo.
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
I can't believe all of this nonsense over AIG. IS EVERYONE STUPID! Obama made damaging reckless comments and didn't even look into the issue. The conference was set a year in advance and paid for by the marketing budget of the insurance companies which can not be tapped to pay back the loan from the FED and the FED loan money is not going into the insurance companies budget at all! Plus, the FED now owns AIG, even after AIG pays back the 100 plus billion dollar loan, the FED owns them. Why are we mad about a conference where 100 of their biggest clients were wined and dined by a 10 AIG employees that was paid for by the insurance companies? That is standard practice. The insurance company has a billion dollar marketing budget and needs now more than ever to keep their huge clients. The better AIG does the better tax payers will be when the FED sells the 79 percent interest later. Piling on against AIG is actually against every taxpayers best interest. We want them to thrive not go bankrupt you IDIOTS!
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]