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AIG Blames "Perfect Financial Storm" For Its Woes, Cites "Run On the Bank" In A New Twist On Cause Of Collapse.


Summary: American International Group
"AIG" redirects here. For other uses, see AIG (disambiguation).


American International Group, Inc. (AIG) (NYSE: AIG; TYO: 8685 ) is a major American insurance corporation based in New York City.
 Inc. (AIG AIG addressee indicator group (US DoD)
AIG American International Group, Inc
AiG Answers in Genesis (religious group in defense of Scripture)
AIG Artificial Intelligence Group
AIG Australian Industry Group
), the U.S.-based insurance giant, has launched a defence against allegations by its shareholders that the beleaguered be·lea·guer  
tr.v. be·lea·guered, be·lea·guer·ing, be·lea·guers
1. To harass; beset: We are beleaguered by problems.

2. To surround with troops; besiege.
 company engaged in fraud and wrongdoing wrong·do·er  
n.
One who does wrong, especially morally or ethically.



wrongdo
 that led to its spectacular collapse in September 2008.

According to the London-based www.emeconomy website, quoting reliable sources,, American International Group Inc. (AIG), the U.S.-based insurance giant, has launched a defence against allegations by its shareholders that the beleaguered company engaged in fraud and wrongdoing that led to its spectacular collapse in September 2008. It was saved through a U.S. taxpayer-funded bailout of over $180 billion (USD USD

In currencies, this is the abbreviation for the U.S. Dollar.

Notes:
The currency market, also known as the Foreign Exchange market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average volume of over US $1 trillion.
), only to pay billions of that money to other troubled Wall Street firms and millions in retention bonuses to its executives.

In civil lawsuits filed in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, AIG's shareholders are trying to recover damages for the money lost when AIG's stock price crashed. Citing risky securities lending practices in one unit and a failure to disclose massive paper losses in another unit that wrote billions in exotic derivatives contracts, the shareholders are trying to cleave cleat, cleave

claw of any cloven-footed animal.
 back billions of dollars. Similar lawsuits in the U.S. have reaped handsome settlements and verdicts for groups of individuals, who can sue under so-called "class action" laws, allowing many people to bring a single lawsuit if they suffer from the same harmful act.

In a court filing this week, AIG denied allegations of wrongdoing, blaming its collapse on "the perfect financial storm." Claiming that the market panic and the need for cash caused an unexpected "run on the bank," the company defended itself -- as well as its auditors, underwriters and several former executives -- all accused of fraud in civil class action cases brought in the United States.

Gradually, questions about systemic weakness in several AIG businesses have emerged. Last week, media in the United States, including The New York Times, began raising questions about the weaknesses even in AIG's core insurance businesses. AIG's court papers make little mention of the insurance business, but, for the first time since its implosion implosion /im·plo·sion/ (im-plo´zhun) see flooding.

im·plo·sion
n.
1.
, AIG confessed to being underfunded un·der·fund  
tr.v. un·der·fund·ed, un·der·fund·ing, un·der·funds
To provide insufficient funding for.

underfunded adjinfradotado (económicamente) 
 and unprepared when its was called upon to pay out billions of dollars to institutions who were returning borrowed securities in droves. Those firms, hungry for cash, had a right to reclaim money they posted for the stock borrowings, but AIG did not have cash to give back because it placed the money in other risky investments. At this same moment, large investment firms like SociE[umlaut]tE[umlaut] GE[umlaut]nE[umlaut]rale rale (rahl) crackle; a discontinuous sound consisting of a series of short sounds, heard during inhalation.

amphoric rale
, Goldman Sachs, and Merrill Lynch were demanding that AIG post billions in collateral on credit default swaps, which were insurance-like contracts that AIG wrote to payout if the firms suffered losses on near-risk-free bonds.

In the search for greater clarity on the causes of the collapse, AIG's courtroom defence may raise more questions than it answers.. AIG has not explained why it had insufficient cash on hand to cover securities redemptions, nor its decision to post the last of its cash with SocGen and other firms for unrealised losses on bonds that, even now, have suffered no dollar losses. Earlier filings and statements by AIG show that the company had contested the need to post the cash under these insurance-style contracts. At an investor conference in late 2007, Joseph Cassano, the former head of the unit that wrote the derivative contracts, who is also being sued by shareholders, vowed to fight calls for collateral by some of Wall Street's most powerful firms, saying "[i]t's not a service to the shareholder or to the company for me to agree terms on these collateral calls unless I can make sure that I believe that they're bona fide. And that's what we do." Sources close to AIG's London office say that Cassano was at loggerheads log·ger·head  
n.
1. A loggerhead turtle.

2. An iron tool consisting of a long handle with a bulbous end, used when heated to melt tar or warm liquids.

3.
 with its external auditors, who also served as Goldman Sachs' auditors, over Goldman's demand for cash. Shortly thereafter, Cassano was sacked, and AIG went on to pay billions in collateral for unrealized losses to SocGen, Goldman Sachs, and other firms.

2009 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

2009 Al Bawaba (Albawaba.com)

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Publication:Albawaba.com
Date:Aug 6, 2009
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