Thursday, April 2, 2009

In The End, It's Always Three-Card Monte

A big, huge, doorstop of an expose' of AIG at Big Picture by Chris Whalen, but it details the fact that AIG was a massive fraud of a company even before it got into the credit default swap business. The bottom line is this (emphasis mine):
One of the first things we learned about the insurance world is that the concept of “shifting risk” for a variety of business and regulatory reasons has been ongoing in the insurance world for decades. Finite insurance and other scams have been at least visible to the investment community for years and have been documented in the media, but what is less understood is that firms like AIG took the risk shifting shell game to a whole new level long before the firm’s entry into the CDS market.

In fact, our investigation suggests that by the time AIG had entered the CDS fray in a serious way more than five years ago, the firm was already doomed. No longer able to prop up its earnings using reinsurance because of growing scrutiny from state insurance regulators and federal law enforcement agencies, AIG’s foray into CDS was really the grand finale. AIG was a Ponzi scheme plain and simple, yet the Obama Administration still thinks of AIG as a real company that simply took excessive risks. No, to us what the fraud Bernard Madoff is to individual investors, AIG is to the global financial community.

As with the phony reinsurance contracts that AIG and other insurers wrote for decades, when AIG wrote hundreds of billions of dollars in CDS contracts, neither AIG nor the counterparties believed that the CDS would ever be paid. Indeed, one source with personal knowledge of the matter suggests that there may be emails and actual side letters between AIG and its counterparties that could prove conclusively that AIG never intended to pay out on any of its CDS contracts.

The significance of this for the US bailout of AIG is profound. If our surmise is correct, the position of Feb Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner that the AIG credit default contracts are “valid legal contracts” is ridiculous and reveals a level of ignorance by the Fed and Treasury about the true goings on inside AIG and the reinsurance industry that is truly staggering.

And I don't believe for a microsecond that Helicopter Ben and Timmy didn't know exactly what was going on. They knew full well that the largest insurance company on Earth was running the largest insurance fraud on Earth, and the cost of taking these guys down still remains the fact that if AIG's counterparty obligations collapse, the entire global financial system collapses with it.

It's extortion. Instead, Helicopter Ben has to print trillions up and destroy the dollar in order to pay off all the bullshit that AIG owed. It owed more than the GDP of several countries, folks. It got Too Big To Fail, and if it fails, we all fall with it.

As it is, fixing the problem will almost certainly lead to massive hyper-inflation in the coming months as we have no choice but to print our way out of the hole we're in. They have no options left. Much like those scary sci-fi films where an asteroid is heading towards Earth, we're pretending that the financial system is still solvent. It's not. It's built on air and rot on a foundation of quicksand and mirrors.

In the end, we were killed by greed.

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