Washington Post
GAO: AIG May Never Pay Back Taxpayer Billions
Been holding your breath waiting for government-owned insurance giant AIG to pay back the $120.7 billion taxpayer bailout money?
You may want to exhale.
In a report issued Monday from the Government Accountability Office, AIG is making "some progress" to reorganize and get back on the path to paying back the taxpayers, but "the ultimate success of AIG's restructuring and repayment efforts remains uncertain."
Quick recap on AIG: It was a large, respected and sound insurance giant composed of many parts bought up over the years. One of those parts was AIG FP, the financial products division, headquartered in London. FP dealt in exotic financial engineering instruments; chiefly credit default swaps. AIG suffered a liquidity crisis when it was downgraded during the financial crisis last year, as the global markets melted down following the massive losses in housing values.
Basically, AIG sold more insurance on financial products than it could back up. So the U.S. government, fearful that a collapse of AIG could bring down the entire financial system one day after Lehman Brothers collapsed, stepped in with aid. Taxpayers now own 80 percent of AIG.
The GAO report said taxpayers remain so exposed in the wobbly AIG that the end-game "could result in the Federal Reserve and Treasury not being repaid in full."
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