Evan McKenzie on the rise of private urban governance and the law of homeowner and condominium associations. Contact me at ecmlaw@gmail.com
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
AIG: Too big to fail: "Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- American International Group Inc., the biggest U.S. insurer by assets, has been offered an $85 billion U.S. loan in return for an 80 percent stake in the company, according to a person familiar with the situation.
The Federal Reserve was persuaded to offer the loan because of the risk that an AIG failure would threaten the stability of world financial markets, according to the person, who declined to be identified because negotiations were confidential. Efforts to find a private-sector solution failed because the company is too big and a long-term fix was needed, the person said.
The agreement keeps New York-based AIG in business, averting a collapse that could have threatened more financial companies and cost them $180 billion in losses, according to RBC Capital Markets. AIG needed the rescue to stave off a collapse after its credit ratings were cut and shares plunged 79 percent since Sept. 11.
``There's a systemic risk if AIG isn't saved,'' Benoit de Broissia, an equity analyst at Richelieu Finance in Paris, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. Richelieu has about $6.2 billion under management."
-----------------
AIG is enormous, and I understand with $180 billion at stake "the stability of world financial markets" can be on the table if it fails. But how do you top this? Is the sun going to go out? Will the galactic core collapse on itself?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment