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    Default AIG chief now wants his cash back for bonuses

    AIG chief asks for bonuses back



    AIG Chairman Edward Liddy on the "distasteful" bonuses

    The boss of US insurer AIG has called the bonuses paid to executives "distasteful" and said he asked some recipients to return at least half.
    But Edward Liddy said the Federal Reserve knew in November of the $165m (£119m) bonus payments to executives that have caused a furore in US.
    "Mistakes were made at AIG on a scale that few could have imagined possible," he told a Congressional hearing.
    Lawmakers are also taking steps to recover the bonuses.
    Mr Liddy also admitted that AIG was "too complex, too unwieldy and too opaque".
    He said that he had asked AIG executives receiving a bonus of more than $100,000 to pay at least half of it back and he later reported that some of the firm's executives were following his wishes.
    The insurer has taken about $170bn of aid from the US government, which is why the bonus payments have caused such outrage in the US.


    Americans talk about the AIG bonuses

    In pictures

    US lawmakers are considering several different responses to the controversy.
    The House of Representatives will on Thursday vote on legislation aimed at recovering the AIG bonuses.
    The bill would apply a 90% tax rate on bonus income of $250,000 that was paid to companies that received at least $5bn in bail-out money.
    "When you weigh the harm that AIG and other bad actors have done to the system, our economy, and American families, with the concerns regarding the precedent of using the tax code, there is no question this legislation is the best decision we can make," said Charles Rangel, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
    Anger
    President Barack Obama has also reiterated his anger at the bonus payments.
    He referred to them as an "inappropriate use of taxpayer money".
    "Excess greed and excess compensation have made us all vulnerable," he added.
    The president called for a new model for economic growth that does not rely on the financial sector.
    He also said that he and members of his economic council had begun discussions with lawmakers on legislation to create a new regulatory body to give the government more authority over financial institutions like AIG.
    'Wave of rage'
    Mr Liddy appeared in front of the Congressional committee to answer questions about the bonuses and the plight of AIG.
    Before Mr Liddy appeared before the committee, members of the committee expressed their anger, not just at the bonuses paid to AIG executives, but also at the $170bn bail-out by the US government.
    One referred to a "tidal wave of rage" throughout the US, while another called the US taxpayer "the ultimate sucker" in the whole AIG saga.

    AIG has recently made a set of compensation payments, some of which I find distasteful


    Edward Liddy, AIG chief executive



    AIG: Company profile

    Mr Liddy said the company had "strayed from its core competencies in the insurance business".
    Nowhere was this more evident than in "the creation of what grew to become an internal hedge fund, which then became substantially overexposed to market risk," he added.
    Drastic action is now needed to claw back the massive losses that resulted from these risks, Mr Liddy said.
    Notes accompanying the written testimony said that the insurer would undertake a "massive restructuring that will effectively break up the company and unlock value to repay taxpayers."
    Reports suggest that AIG is considering selling its New York headquarters and a nearby office block.
    Mr Liddy also addressed the contentious issue of excessive bonuses.
    "I am mindful of both the environment in which we are operating and of the president's call for a more restrained compensation system," he said.
    Mr Liddy has said that he would not have approved the $165m bonuses if he had been chief executive at the time the contracts were signed.
    "AIG has recently made a set of compensation payments, some of which I find distasteful," he said.
    Record loss
    Earlier this week, Barack Obama expressed anger at the bonuses, calling the payments "an outrage".
    "It's hard to understand how derivative traders at AIG warranted any bonuses, much less $165m in extra pay," he said.
    US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has since said that the government will deduct the bonuses from government funds due to be paid to the insurer.
    Mr Liddy, former chief executive of the Allstate insurance firm, took over at AIG in September, just days after it was saved from bankruptcy with an $85bn lifeline from the government.
    The government has since pumped billions more into the troubled insurer, which reported a loss of $61.7bn for the last three months of 2008 - the biggest quarterly loss in corporate history.
    I know its only $165m in terms of how much of the total AIG bailout money they received, but anyone else feel miffed how they can pay bonuses out with our money ? I thought bonuses are meant to be earned not given to you on a plate.

    It makes you look at it on the wider scale, what other financial institutions have been giving away huge sums of our, dont forget its our money which we have to pay back, our money so they can have a little bonus ? i thought this money was supposed to help balance out there stocks, stop them from going bankrupt ?

    It comes out the aig chief wants it back, with a nice cheery yeh it was a mistake, im making my employees pay half back, it will be ok...The funny thing is of this ordeal was that tim geithner was the supervisor for aig, through getting all these bonuses, yet he said he didnt know about them since the weekend ? .............

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7950452.stm

    "I may not like what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."

    - Voltaire(1694–1778)

  2. #2

    Default Re: AIG chief now wants his cash back for bonuses

    this sums up my thoughts on the subject.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lBUVN...layer_embedded

  3. #3
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    Default Re: AIG chief now wants his cash back for bonuses

    Quote Originally Posted by Martin N View Post
    I know its only $165m in terms of how much of the total AIG bailout money they received, but anyone else feel miffed how they can pay bonuses out with our money ? I thought bonuses are meant to be earned not given to you on a plate.

    It makes you look at it on the wider scale, what other financial institutions have been giving away huge sums of our, dont forget its our money which we have to pay back, our money so they can have a little bonus ? i thought this money was supposed to help balance out there stocks, stop them from going bankrupt ?

    It comes out the aig chief wants it back, with a nice cheery yeh it was a mistake, im making my employees pay half back, it will be ok...The funny thing is of this ordeal was that tim geithner was the supervisor for aig, through getting all these bonuses, yet he said he didnt know about them since the weekend ? .............

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7950452.stm
    Is it legal to lynch idiots in a civilian kangaroo court?
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