Why the Bailout of AIG Necesary Susan Matthews Mark Contreras Sean Foglia Rick Ramirez
AIG Bailout economic reasons The AIG Bailout may not sit well with taxpayers but the benefits out way the costs
AIG will be able to pay off the extended loans to tax payers AIG reduced loan amount from 68 to 51 billion by selling assets Nan Shan Life Insurance Co. in Taiwan = 2.15 billion (yesterday)
AIG and other companies that are Nationalized will be forced to restructure. Restructuring will reduce systemic risk Taxpayers will not sell off company shares in crisis Taxpayers are starting to sell off more shares in the company Restructuring forces AIG to scale down
The Potential risks that surround the insolvency of one of the largest insurance companies in the world are numerous. Insurance policy holders around the world would be at risk. Because of the credit default swaps failure bondholders and other entities could loose up to 400 billion Overnight disappearance of wealth leads to tightened credit markets and deeper recessions Bank failure can lead to losses in uninsured deposits FDIC is dependent on taxpayer funds in crisis. Fed will have to loan more money to insolvent banks and may never recover the loans.
Moral hazard is a small price to pay to prevent a second great depression Fed in first depression did very little 10% unemployment vs. 25% economy saw very little growth vs. negative growth Great example to test economic theory.
Derivative/Credit Default Swap reduction Market Derivatives=$144 B o $23 B. of CDO Swaps o $14 B. intermediations Summary of AIG's derivative positions as of Sept. 30, 2011
AIG's Relationship with the U.S. Government AIG o Sold 100 Million shares of common stock Treasury Department o Sold 200 Million shares of common stock
Reducing Toxic Risk Assets Progress made in reducing portfolio size risk 86% of non-credit derivatives terminated or reduced
Why Was the AIG Bailout Important Henry Paulson did not wanted to save Lehman Brothers and used “Moral Hazard” Bush did not believe in a bailout Obama Administration with Timothy Geithner felt bailout was necessary
Why Was the AIG Bailout Important The housing market failure The repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act Lack of government intervention during the Great Depression
The Players Before the Bailout
The Players After the Bailout