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The Bailout

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American International Group, Inc is an American insurance corporation that was founded in 1919 (Sjostrom, 2009). The company operates in over 130 countries. Founder, Cornelius Vander Starr, ran the company until 1968 when he turned AIG over to Hank Greenberg. At that time, AIG was a privately held corporation (How Hank Did It). Greenberg had been running AIG for 37 years, longer than any other U.S. major corporation CEO. HeGreenberg transformed the company into the largest insurer in the world, made AIG the number 9 company on the Fortune 500 list, and at the end of 2005 the company’s $850 billion of assets made it the fourth largest company in the U.S. (How Hank Did It). The company consists of general insurance, life insurance & retirement services, and financial services and asset management. The general insurance unit engages in commercial property, casualty, workers’ compensation, and mortgage guarantee insurance. The financial services unit leases capital for equipment and aircraft, capital market transactions, consumer finance, and insurance premium finance. The asset management division engages in several investment related services and investment products to individuals, institutions, and pension funds (Sjostrom, 2009).
In February 2005, American International Group, Inc. was subpoenaed by Eliot Spitzer, New York state’s attorney general, for documents relating to accounting fraud having to do with transactions known as finite insurance (How Hank Did It). AIG booked $500 million as income for the loss portfolio transfer and then added $500 million in reserves for the year 2000. The parties also at fault were the executives from General Re, a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway. This involved a loss portfolio transfer from General Re (the primary insurer) to AIG (the reinsurer). The transaction should not have been counted as an insurance deal. The $500 million should have been accounted for as deposits on...

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