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Reply #5: Thanks for the additional link, need to spend more time reading through this again... [View All]

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slipslidingaway Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Nov-21-09 06:15 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. Thanks for the additional link, need to spend more time reading through this again...
Edited on Sat Nov-21-09 06:16 PM by slipslidingaway
and also the link below, as far as I know Obama did not pick Barofsky, he was appointed as part of the oversight team after TARP passed.

:shrug:

AIG and Systemic Risk
Geithner says credit-default swaps weren't the problem, after all.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704204304574543822135042160.html

"TARP Inspector General Neil Barofsky keeps committing flagrant acts of political transparency, which if nothing else ought to inform the debate going forward over financial reform. In his latest bombshell, the IG discloses that the New York Federal Reserve did not believe that AIG's credit-default swap (CDS) counterparties posed a systemic financial risk.

Hello?

For the last year, the entire Beltway theory of the financial panic has been based on the claim that the "opaque," unregulated CDS market had forced the Fed to take over AIG and pay off its counterparties, lest the system collapse. Yet we now learn from Mr. Barofsky that saving the counterparties was not the reason for the bailout.

In the fall of 2008 the New York Fed drove a baby-soft bargain with AIG's credit-default-swap counterparties. The Fed's taxpayer-funded vehicle, Maiden Lane III, bought out the counterparties' mortgage-backed securities at 100 cents on the dollar, effectively canceling out the CDS contracts. This was miles above what those assets could have fetched in the market at that time, if they could have been sold at all.

The New York Fed president at the time was none other than Timothy Geithner, the current Treasury Secretary, and Mr. Geithner now tells Mr. Barofsky that in deciding to make the counterparties whole, "the financial condition of the counterparties was not a relevant factor."

This is startling. In April we noted in these columns that Goldman Sachs, a major AIG counterparty, would certainly have suffered from an AIG failure. And in his latest report, Mr. Barofsky comes to the same conclusion. But if Mr. Geithner now says the AIG bailout wasn't driven by a need to rescue CDS counterparties, then what was the point? Why pay Goldman and even foreign banks like Societe Generale billions of tax dollars to make them whole?

......."



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