The New York Fed's Secret AIG Deal
Taxpayers may have spent $13 billion more than necessary when
government officials, acting in private, struck deals with big
banks on AIG’s credit-default swaps.
By Richard Teitelbaum and Hugh Son
Bloomberg Markets, December 2009
In the months leading up to the September 2008 collapse of
giant insurer American International Group Inc., Elias Habayeb
and his colleagues worked nights and weekends negotiating with
banks that had bought $62 billion of credit-default swaps from
AIG, according to a person who has worked with Habayeb.
Habayeb, 37, was chief financial officer for the AIG
division that oversaw AIG Financial Products, the unit that had
sold the swaps to the banks. One of his goals was to persuade
the banks to accept discounts of as much as 40 cents on the
dollar, according to people familiar with the matter.
Among AIG’s bank counterparties were New York-based Goldman
Sachs Group Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co., Paris-based Societe
Generale SA and Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG.
By Sept. 16, 2008, AIG, once the world’s largest insurer,
was running out of cash, and the U.S. government stepped in with
a rescue plan. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the
regional Fed office with special responsibility for Wall Street,
opened an $85 billion credit line for New York-based AIG. That
bought it 77.9 percent of AIG and effective control of the
insurer.
The government’s commitment to AIG through credit
facilities and investments would eventually add up to $182.3
billion.
Beginning late in the week of Nov. 3, the New York Fed, led
by President Timothy Geithner, took over negotiations with the
banks from AIG, together with the Treasury Department and
Chairman Ben S. Bernanke’s Federal Reserve. Geithner’s team
circulated a draft term sheet outlining how the New York Fed
wanted to deal with the swaps -- insurance-like contracts that
backed soured collateralized-debt obligations.
Subprime Mortgages
CDOs are bundles of debt including subprime mortgages and
corporate loans sold to investors by banks.
Part of a sentence in the document was crossed out. It
contained a blank space that was intended to show the amount of
the haircut the banks would take, according to people who saw
the term sheet. After less than a week of private negotiations
with the banks, the New York Fed instructed AIG to pay them par,
or 100 cents on the dollar. The content of its deliberations has
never been made public.
The New York Fed’s decision to pay the banks in full cost
AIG -- and thus American taxpayers -- at least $13 billion.
That’s 40 percent of the $32.5 billion AIG paid to retire the
swaps. Under the agreement, the government and its taxpayers
became owners of the dubious CDOs, whose face value was $62
billion and for which AIG paid the market price of $29.6
billion. The CDOs were shunted into a Fed-run entity called
Maiden Lane III.
Habayeb, who left AIG in May, did not return phone calls
and an e-mail.
Goldman Sachs
The deal contributed to the more than $14 billion that over
18 months was handed to Goldman Sachs, whose former chairman,
Stephen Friedman, was chairman of the board of directors of the
New York Fed when the decision was made. Friedman, 71, resigned
in May, days after it was disclosed by the Wall Street Journal
that he had bought more than 50,000 shares of Goldman Sachs
stock following the takeover of AIG. He declined to comment for
this article.
In his resignation letter, Friedman said his continued role
as chairman had been mischaracterized as improper. Goldman Sachs
spokesman Michael DuVally declined to comment.
AIG paid Societe General $16.5 billion, Deutsche Bank $8.5
billion and Merrill Lynch $6.2 billion.
New York Fed
The New York Fed, one of the 12 regional Reserve Banks that
are part of the Federal Reserve System, is unique in that it
implements monetary policy through the buying and selling of
Treasury securities in the secondary market. It also supervises
financial institutions in the New York region.
The New York Fed board, which normally consists of nine
directors, in November 2008 included Jamie Dimon, chief
executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co., and Friedman. The
directors have no direct role in bank supervision. They’re
responsible for advising on regional economic conditions and
electing the bank president.
Janet Tavakoli, founder of Chicago-based Tavakoli
Structured Finance Inc., a financial consulting firm, says the
government squandered billions in the AIG deal.
“There’s no way they should have paid at par,” she says.
“AIG was basically bankrupt.”
Citigroup Inc. agreed last year to accept about 60 cents on
the dollar from New York-based bond insurer Ambac Financial
Group Inc. to retire protection on a $1.4 billion CDO.
Unwinding Derivatives
In March 2009, congressional hearings and public
demonstrations targeted AIG after it was disclosed it had paid
$165 million in bonuses that month to the employees of AIGFP,
which is unwinding billions of dollars in derivatives under the
supervision of Gerry Pasciucco, a former Morgan Stanley managing
director who joined AIG after the CDS payments were mandated.
Far more money was wasted in paying the banks for their
swaps, says Donn Vickrey of financial research firm Gradient
Analytics Inc. “In cases like this, the outcome is always along
the lines of 50, 60 or 70 cents on the dollar,” Vickrey says.
A spokeswoman for Geithner, now secretary of the Treasury
Department, declined to comment. Jack Gutt, a spokesman for the
New York Fed, also had no comment.
One reason par was paid was because some counterparties
insisted on being paid in full and the New York Fed did not want
to negotiate separate deals, says a person close to the
transaction. “Some of those banks needed 100 cents on the
dollar or they risked failure,” Vickrey says.
A Range of Options
People familiar with the transaction say the New York Fed
considered a range of options, including guaranteeing the banks’
CDOs. They say that by buying the securities, AIG got the best
deal it could.
According to a quarterly New York Fed report on its
holdings, the $29.6 billion in securities held by Maiden Lane
III had declined in value by about $7 billion as of June 30.
Edward Grebeck, CEO of Stamford, Connecticut-based debt
consulting firm Tempus Advisors, says the most serious breach by
the government was to keep the process of approving the bank
payments secret.
“It’s inexcusable,” says Grebeck, who teaches a course on
CDSs at New York University. “Everybody should be privy to the
negotiations that went on. We can’t have bailouts like this
happening behind closed doors.”
Secret Deliberations
The deliberations of the New York Fed are not made public.
In this case, even the identities of the AIG counterparties
weren’t disclosed until March 2009, when U.S. Senator
Christopher Dodd, head of the Senate Finance Committee, demanded
they be made public.
Bloomberg News has filed a Freedom of Information Act
request seeking copies of the term sheets related to AIG’s
counterparty payments, along with e-mails and the logs of phone
calls and meetings among Geithner, Friedman and other New York
Fed and AIG officials. The request is pending.
The Federal Reserve has been reluctant to publish
information on its efforts to stabilize the financial system
since the crisis began. The Fed has loaned more than $2
trillion, yet it refuses to name the recipients of the loans, or
cite the amount they borrowed, saying that doing so may set off
a run by depositors and unsettle shareholders.
Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News, sued in
November 2008 under the Freedom of Information Act for
disclosure of details about 11 Fed lending programs. In August,
Manhattan Chief U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska ruled in
Bloomberg’s favor, saying the central bank had to provide
details of the loans.
The Fed has appealed to the Second Circuit Court of
Appeals, and the data remain secret while the appeal proceeds.
‘Cataclysmic Financial Crisis’
Information on the borrowers is “central to understanding
and assessing the government’s response to the most cataclysmic
financial crisis in America since the Great Depression,”
attorneys for Bloomberg said in the Nov. 7 suit.
Questions about the New York Fed transactions may be
answered by Neil Barofsky, inspector general for the Troubled
Asset Relief Program, or TARP. He is working on a report, which
may be released next month, on whether AIG overpaid the banks.
TARP is the vehicle through which the Treasury invested more
than $200 billion in some 600 U.S. financial institutions.
William Poole, a former president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of St. Louis, defends the New York Fed’s action. The
financial system had suffered through months of crisis at the
time, he says. The investment bank Bear Stearns Cos. had been
swallowed by JPMorgan; mortgage packagers Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac had been taken over by the government; and the day before
AIG was rescued, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. had filed for
bankruptcy.
‘Enough Trouble’
“I think the Federal Reserve was trying to stop the
spread of fear in the market,” Poole says. “The market was
having enough trouble dealing with Lehman. If you add, on top of
that, AIG paying off some fraction of its liabilities, a system
which is already substantially frozen would freeze rock-solid.”
Still, officials at AIG object to the secrecy that
surrounded the transactions. One top AIG executive who asked not
to be identified says he was pressured by New York Fed officials
not to file documents with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission that would divulge details.
“They’d tell us that they don’t think that this or that
should be disclosed,” the executive says. “They’d say, ‘Don’t
you think your counterparties will be concerned?’ It was much
more about protecting the Fed.”
‘An Outrage’
Friedman’s role remains controversial. In December 2008,
weeks after the payments to the banks were authorized in
November, Friedman bought 37,300 shares of Goldman stock at
$80.78 a share, according to SEC filings. On Jan. 22, he bought
15,300 more at $66.61.
Both purchases took place before the payments to Goldman
Sachs were publicly disclosed under pressure from Senator Dodd
in March. On Oct. 26, Goldman Sachs stock closed at $179.37 a
share, meaning Friedman had paper profits of $5.4 million.
Jerry Jordan, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Cleveland, says Friedman should have resigned from the New
York Fed as soon as it became clear that Goldman stood to
benefit from its actions.
“It’s an outrage,” Jordan says. “He needed to either
resign from the Fed board or from Goldman and proceed to sell
his stock.”
98,600 Goldman Shares
Friedman remains a member of Goldman’s board and held a
total of 98,600 shares of the firm’s stock as of Jan. 22.
Vickrey says that one reason the New York Fed should have
insisted on discounted payments for AIG’s CDSs is that the banks
likely had hedges against their insured CDOs or had already
written down their value. On March 20, Goldman Sachs CFO David
Viniar said in a conference call with investors that Goldman was
protected.
“We limited our overall credit exposure to AIG through a
combination of collateral and market hedges,” Viniar said.
“There would have been no credit losses if AIG had failed.”
In any event, former St. Louis Fed President Poole says the
entire process should have been public and transparent. “There
should be a high bar against not disclosing,” Poole says. “The
taxpayer has every right to understand in detail what
happened.”
Richard Teitelbaum is a senior writer in New York, at
rteitelbaum1@bloomberg.net; Hugh Son is a reporter in New York,
hson1@bloomberg.net
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