Where Did the Money Go?
by
Richard Cummings
by Richard Cummings
Fed Chairman
Ben Bernanke has resisted calls from Congress that he release the
names of the banks that were recipients of the bailout money the
Fed gave to AIG to prevent it from collapsing. AIG insured its counterparties
against losses from mortgage-backed derivatives. The Fed poured
$85 billion into AIG, which paid out $37.3 billion of that money
to counterparties that had purchased a certain type of derivative-based
protection from AIG, called multi-sector credit default swaps.
The counterparties
have never been disclosed but the Wall Street Journal reported
that they included Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, UBS and Deutsche
Bank.
AIG and the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York have unwound many of these contracts.
To do this, they offered to buy the CDOs (collateralized debt obligations)
that were originally insured by those agreements. The counterparties
sold these assets at a discount, but were compensated in full in
return for allowing AIG to extricate itself from the obligations.
The counterparties also got to keep the $37.3 billion in collateral,
according to the Wall Street Journal.
While Bear
Stearns was collapsing, Goldman Sachs boasted that it had insulated
itself by buying insurance against the mortgage-backed derivatives.
As it turns out, it was, in fact, rescued by the Fed when it bailed
out AIG. In 2007, Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman Sachs CEO, received
$70 million in compensation, including bonuses, $27 million in cash.
A Democrat, he contributed $7,000 to Hillary Clintons presidential
campaign. At the time the New York Fed came to AIG's assistance,
Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner was its head. Blankfein
is still drawing down millions in compensation. The rationale for
his compensation is the alleged profitability of Goldman Sachs,
which raked in over $9 billion in 2006. It should also be noted
that the bailout stopped Goldman stock from plummeting, thereby
protecting not only Blankfeins fortune, but that of Hank Paulson,
the former chairman of Goldman Sachs, who was Secretary of the Treasury
under George W. Bush. This is perhaps the greatest financial scandal
in American history but most Americans are totally ignorant of it.
On
top of this, the AIG bailout enabled John Thain to pay out billions
in bonuses while he headed Merrill Lynch, just prior to its sale
to Bank of America, a recipient of billions of bailout money, this
while the unemployment rate is headed towards ten percent and the
market collapse has caused losses in the trillions. Were the names
of the banks made officially public, there would be cries of outrage
so loud as to be deafening, making any further bailouts dubious
for political reasons. And while Bernanke has said that he would
not permit the big banks to fail, the looting of America by some
of the richest and most powerful people, such as Blankfein and Thain,
goes on, with no end in sight. Pandit the bandit now says Citigroup
is profitable, enabling its stock to rise above a dollar, generating
a temporary euphoria in the market. The cheers going up on CNBC
can be heard all the way to Warren Buffetts coffers. And American
tax payers are not only bailing out the American banks, they are
also bailing out Europe. What suckers!
March
12, 2009
Richard
Cummings [send
him mail] taught international law at the Haile Selassie
I University and before that, was Attorney-Advisor with the Office
of General Counsel of the Near East South Asia region of U.S.A.I.D,
where he was responsible for the legal work pertaining to the aid
program in Israel, Jordan, Pakistan and Afghanistan. He is the author
of a new novel, The
Immortalists, as well as
The Pied Piper Allard K. Lowenstein and the Liberal Dream,
and the comedy, Soccer Moms From Hell. He
holds a Ph.D. in Social and Political Sciences from Cambridge University
and is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers.
He is writing a new book, The
Road To Baghdad The Money Trail Behind The War In Iraq.
He is a contributing editor for The
American Conservative.
Copyright
© 2009 Richard Cummings
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