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    How the Credit Rating Agencies Engineered the Goldman Sachs Bailout

    AIG Only Wanted to Give Goldman Sachs 40 60 Cents on the Dollar, Then Geithner Stepped In

    AIG Doesn't Know How Many Millions of Dollars It's Paying Its Execs to Fail

    read more: #bailouts, #aig, #nourielroubini, #doom, #politics

    AIG's $173 Billion Bailout Went in Part to Foreign Banks

    Where are insurance giant AIG's bailout billions really going? The White House doesn't want to tell us. But the Wall Street Journal, bless its Rupert Murdoch-owned heart, found out anyway: Foreign banks, lots of them!

    The Federal Reserve began propping up AIG last September; a recent $30 billion infusion has brought the total bill to $173 billion. The government now owns 80 percent of the many-tentacled insurer, meaning that taxpayers are essentially on the hook for its liabilities. And AIG has spent roughly $50 billion fulfilling contracts it issued to banks to guarantee the value of various derivatives. Those complex financial bets went disastrously wrong as first the mortgage business and then the entire stock market imploded. U.S. legislators have been asking administration officials for names all week after the Treasury . They refused. But the WSJ got them:

    Goldman Sachs
    Deutsche Bank
    Merrill Lynch
    Société Générale
    Calyon
    Barclays
    Rabobank
    Danske
    HSBC
    Royal Bank of Scotland
    Banco Santander
    Morgan Stanley
    Wachovia
    Bank of America
    Lloyds Banking Group

    Ah yes, Rabobank, that pillar of the American economy.

    Doomsaying economists like Nouriel Roubini have been saying that the global banking system is essentially insolvent. AIG's guarantees have allowed banks to avoid losses on otherwise worthless securities. To what extent is the protection issued through the government-backed AIG been masking their insolvency? Government officials have been saying since September that we must support AIG, lest its failure ripple through the banking system. But could we be just prolonging the inevitable?


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