The Conservative Papers

March 8, 2010

Obama Stimulus funds pays for Cocaine and Monkey’s

Filed under: Barack Obama, Financial — Tags: , — alpineski @ 6:37 pm

Monkeys are getting high on Cocaine in North Carolina, thanks to Obama.

An analyst at the Civitas Institute seized on that image when selecting a cocaine addiction study at Wake Forest University Medical School as No. 1 on a list of the “10 worst federal stimulus projects in North Carolina.” Civitas’ Brian Balfour takes swipes at projects, writing that they “seem completely unrelated to avoiding an economic ‘catastrophe,’ but rather an ad hoc satisfaction of countless dubious wish lists.”

So, what is the $71,623 federal stimulus grant paying for?

Well, a job, said Mark Wright, a spokesman for the Wake Forest University School of Medicine.

“It’s actually the continuation of a job that might not still be there if it hadn’t been for the stimulus funding. And it’s a good job,” Wright said. “It’s also very worthwhile research.”

The study is examining the effects of cocaine on a particular neurotransmitter among monkeys who have had a long-term addiction to cocaine.

The medical school boasts a significant body of work studying addiction. Ultimately, the study could lead to better treatment for recovering cocaine addicts.

Balfour also cited another Wake Forest study. This one is studying whether yoga and other non-pharmaceutical therapies such as wellness classes can help alleviate hot flashes and other symptoms of menopause.

“How does this study help revive the economy?” Balfour asked.

Well, again, jobs, said Nancy Avis, a professor in the Department of Social Sciences and Health policy at the medical school. The funding, more than $147,000 over two years, will contribute to the salaries of six people.

February 3, 2010

Barack Obama Admits That “By Design” You Remain Unemployed

Filed under: Barack Obama, Financial — Tags: , , , , — kalel @ 3:51 am

Posted by Erick Erickson

“Barack Obama refused to help get unemployment down in 2009 by design so he could get credit in the 2010 election year instead.”

Many of us have been saying it for a while. The White House intended that the stimulus money, which the White House intended to use to save or create jobs, would not really be spent in 2009 as unemployment soared to over 10%.

On page 9 of Obama’s budget proposal, we find that, in fact, the White House is now admitting this fact. You are still unemployed by government design.

Barack Obama writes,

All told, as of the end of November 2009, about 50 percent of Recovery Act funds—or $395 billion—has been either obligated or is providing assistance directly to Americans in the form of tax relief. By design, the bulk of the remaining 50 percent of Recovery Act funds will be deployed in the coming months of 2010 and during the beginning of 2011 to support additional job creation when our economy continues to need a boost. Many of the programs slated to receive additional funding in the near future are those with significant promise of job creation. These include more than $7 billion in broadband expansion, approximately $8 billion in funds to lay the foundation for a high-speed rail network, and continued funding for other transportation projects. All told, the Recovery Act is on track to meet the goal of disbursing 70 percent of its funds in the first 18 months of its life.

(Budget at p.9)

So wait? Even after 18 months all the money won’t be spent?

To put this in perspective, consider what the President said in his State of the Union address:

One year ago, I took office amid two wars, an economy rocked by severe recession, a financial system on the verge of collapse, and a government deeply in debt. Experts from across the political spectrum warned that if we did not act, we might face a second depression. So we acted – immediately and aggressively. And one year later, the worst of the storm has passed. 

But the devastation remains. One in ten Americans still cannot find work. Many businesses have shuttered. Home values have declined. Small towns and rural communities have been hit especially hard. For those who had already known poverty, life has become that much harder.

This recession has also compounded the burdens that America’s families have been dealing with for decades – the burden of working harder and longer for less; of being unable to save enough to retire or help kids with college.

So I know the anxieties that are out there right now. They’re not new. These struggles are the reason I ran for President. . . .

For these Americans and so many others, change has not come fast enough. Some are frustrated; some are angry. They don’t understand why it seems like bad behavior on Wall Street is rewarded but hard work on Main Street isn’t; or why Washington has been unable or unwilling to solve any of our problems.

What the hell? This man says last week that “we acted — immediately and aggressively” and this week says “by design, the bulk of the remaining 50 percent of Recovery Act funds will be deployed in the coming months of 2010.”

That is not immediately and aggressively. He says “one in ten Americans still cannot find work” but also says in his budget, “the Administration moved rapidly to sign into law, just 28 days after taking office, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (the Recovery Act) to create and save jobs, as well as transform the economy to compete in the 21st Century.” (Budget at p.
Obama is trying to have it both ways. He admits his stimulus money is dragging out and that even after 18 months it won’t all be spent. At the same time, he tells the public at the State of the Union that the reasons there is still 10% unemployment is “bad behavior on Wall Street is rewarded but hard work on Main Street isn’t” and “Washington has been unable or unwilling to solve any of our problems.”

Well, he has the last bit right. Washington was “unwilling to solve” the problems because 2009 was not an election year and 2010 is. The President of the United States refused to help get unemployment down in 2009 by design so he could get credit in the 2010 election year instead.

January 31, 2010

McCotter: Obama’s Stimulus has Failed

Filed under: Barack Obama, Financial — Tags: , , , , — kalel @ 4:49 am

By: Jim Meyers

U.S. Rep. Thad McCotter tells Newsmax that President Obama was “contradictory” when discussing the economy during his State of the Union speech — and stated flatly that Obama’s stimulus plan has failed.

The Michigan Republican, Chairman of the Republican House Policy Committee, also chastised Obama for expressing criticism of the Supreme Court during his speech Wednesday night.

Newsmax.TV’s Ashley Martella noted that Obama spoke at length about jobs in his speech, and that Michigan’s unemployment rate is the highest in the nation. He asked Rep. McCotter if he heard Obama say anything that made him feel optimistic.

“I’m very concerned, actually, because of the contradictory nature of the speech,” said McCotter, a member of the Committee on Financial Services.
“On the one hand the president says the stimulus is working, it’s the best thing since sliced bread, and in the next breath he says he wants a jobs bill.

“The stimulus, which is supposed to bring employment and protect jobs and allow the economy to grow, has failed. The president’s refusal to admit this while there is still $500 billion in taxpayers’ money to be expended does not give us much prospect that somehow this administration has a plan other than spending. And as we know, spending is not a plan for economic recovery; it’s an obstacle to it.

“My largest concern is that the president’s fundamental premise on economic policy is that prosperity comes from the government. And as we all know, prosperity comes from the private sector, not the public sector.”

Martella asked what Obama is not doing that he should be doing in regard to the economy.

“I think you have to look at some of the meat and potatoes things that have hindered job creation and production in the United States,” McCotter responded.

“[We need] regulatory reform, litigation reform, tax relief for families, for small businesses, much of which was put in the stimulus alternative that House Republicans put forward over a year ago at the president’s request.
“That advice was not followed, and what we are seeing is a trillion-dollar spending bill that I think is actually going to impair job creation down the road and potentially lead to stagflation.”

In his speech, Obama blasted the recent Supreme Court decision that political ad spending by corporations and unions is protected by the First Amendment, Martella observed.

“I think the president should be reminded that we have three separate, equal branches of government, and if one wishes to facilitate change and cooperation and conciliation in Washington, the executive branch should not attack the judicial branch, nor the legislative branch,” McCotter said.

“This does not seem to be a particularly fruitful way to go about getting a better environment to do the job for the American people.”

McCotter said Scott Brown’s victory in the Massachusetts in the race for Ted Kennedy Senate seat was not the result of a “right-wing revolt” but a “centrist revolt against one party, the Democratic Party, having an overwhelming majority and trying to drag the country to the left.”

He also said he hoped Americans would reject “the president’s call to trust in Washington politicians and start seeing Washington trust the American people. Because in every decision this administration has made to date, they have come down on the side of expanding government at the expense of the American people, and that is absolutely antithetical to keeping this the greatest country on earth.”

January 3, 2010

Biased Obama Stimulus Favors Democratic Areas

Filed under: Barack Obama, Financial — Tags: , — alpineski @ 10:13 am

A December study from George Mason University showed that Democratic districts have received nearly twice as much stimulus money as Republican districts — and the cash has been awarded without regard to how badly an area was suffering from job losses or income problems. Blue districts garnered the majority of the $787 stimulus package, getting an average of $439 million per district to the Republican average of $232 million.

The data is sure to fuel skepticism about the $787 billion stimulus bill passed in February that only garnered three Republican votes. While the administration claims it has created 640,000 jobs, critics point to the still-soaring 10 percent unemployment rate in arguing that the stimulus has had a nominal effect.

Oddly, the Mercatus study found far more stimulus money went to higher-income areas than lower-income areas.

“We found no correlation between economic indicators and stimulus funding. Preliminary results find no effect of unemployment, median income, or mean income on stimulus funds allocation,” the report said.

December 17, 2009

Detroit’s Unemployed Near 50%

Filed under: Barack Obama — Tags: , , , — alpineski @ 6:41 pm

obama100
As the Obama administration celebrates it claim to victory on the economy, thousand more lose their jobs each month and thousands of other receive knocks on the door, its the sheriff informing homeowners the bank now owns their home and they have 30 days to pack up and leave.

Nearly half of Detroit’s workers are unemployed, Obama stimulus has done nothing to help them, the 3 million jobs Obama promised, nowhere to be seen. Most have given up hope, ironically Obama hope pictures are seen all around as the homeless sleep under them in the cold Michigan winter.

Despite an official unemployment rate of 27 percent, the real jobs problem in Detroit may be affecting half of the working-age population, thousands of whom either can’t find a job or are working fewer hours than they want.

Using a broader definition of unemployment, as much as 45 percent of the labor force has been affected by the downturn.

And that doesn’t include those who gave up the job search more than a year ago, a number that could exceed 100,000 potential workers alone.

“It’s a huge number, and we should be concerned about it whether it’s one in two or something less than that,” said George Fulton, a University of Michigan economist who helps craft economic forecasts for the state.no_hope

Mayor Dave Bing recently raised eyebrows when he said what many already suspected: that the city’s official unemployment rate that the Obama administration also uses was as believable as Santa Claus. In Washington for a jobs forum earlier this month, he estimated it was “closer to 50 percent.”

Officially, the unemployment rate in Detroit was estimated at 27 percent in October. But that number does not include people working part-time who want full-time work, nor does it include “discouraged” workers, who have stopped looking for work. It also doesn’t include people who have gone back to school rather than search for a job. The unemployment numbers in Detroit are as promising as any third world country.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimated that for the year that ended in September, Michigan’s official unemployment rate was 12.6 percent. Using the broadest definition of unemployment, the state unemployment rate was 20.9 percent, or 66 percent higher than the official rate. Since Detroit’s official rate for October was 27 percent, that broader rate pushes the city’s rate to as high as 44.8 percent.

Detroiter Michael Kapusniak, 61 an Obama supporter, is familiar with the problem. He lost his job at a Hamtramck bar when it closed earlier this year and the funeral home where he occasionally helps out has seen most of its business move to the suburbs. He thought Obama would save Detroit, he realizes he was wrong. He sees no recovery and questions the Whitehouse boasts of a recovery.

“Everybody’s closing up,” he said. “I’ve been looking everywhere.”

So Kapusniak is left to the fruitless task of filling out applications as his checking account dwindles,”There’s nothing I can do. The bills are piling up,” he said. In the mean time the Obama administration is writing huge checks to contributors and corporations in his so called stimulus plan.

“Jobs are the key to revitalizing Detroit,” Bing said in a statement released to The Detroit News. “The statistics tell part of the story, but we can’t run from the reality that the need for jobs and investment is far greater than any statistic could measure.” The higher taxes the Whitehouse proposes will not entice small business to open and thrive. Detroit is run by mostly Democrats and they seem to have no answers.

December 15, 2009

Mission Not Accomplished

Filed under: Barack Obama, Financial — Tags: , , , , — alpineski @ 10:13 am

mission
Peter Schiff-Although Barack Obama has refrained, at least for now, from delivering triumphant speeches in a naval flight suit, there is nevertheless a strong tone of accomplishment emanating from the President and his deputies. Over the weekend, top White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers even pronounced that the recession is now over. Without hedging his bets, Summers declared that thanks to the Obama Administration’s wise stewardship, economic stimuli, and emergency bailouts, another Great Depression, set up by the prior Administration, had been narrowly averted. Summers saw no impediments to the return of sustainable growth. He may as well have delivered these remarks from the deck of an aircraft carrier.

I hate to shoot down these high-flying expectations, but the economy is not improving. All that has changed is that we are now more indebted to foreign creditors, with even less to show for it. Washington’s current policies have once again deferred the fundamental, market-driven reforms needed to redirect us onto a sustainable path. Instead, through aggressive monetary and fiscal stimuli, we are trying to re-inflate a balloon that is full of holes. This was the Bush Administration’s exact response to the 2002 recession. It’s shocking how few observers note the repeating pattern, especially the fact that each crash is worse than the last.

Obama’s claim of success largely derives from the slowing tally of job losses, the seemingly renewed strength in the financial system, the pickup in home sales and home prices, and the positive GDP figures. But these ‘achievements’ fall apart under close examination.

First, a closer look at the jobs numbers shows that employment improved in sectors that benefited most directly from monetary or fiscal stimulus: government, healthcare, financial services, education and retail sales. Meanwhile, sectors such as manufacturing continued to shed jobs at an alarming rate. These dynamics actually exacerbate our economic imbalances. Recent trade deficit figures (in which the deficit-reduction trend of early 2009 has sharply reversed) show how this employment growth is preventing needed rebalancing. Essentially, the Administration is nurturing firms that cannot survive without subsidies and support.

Once stimulus is removed, the “saved” jobs will be among the first to go. If the President has not figured this out yet, I am sure Fed Chairman Bernanke has. As a result, the market should discount as pure bluff any claims from the Fed about an eventual “exit strategy” from current stimuli. Such an “exit” would bring about Bernanke’s greatest fear – spiking unemployment.

Second, major investment and commercial banks are not back on their feet, but remain fundamentally insolvent. Their current business model of risk-free speculation depends upon the maintenance of government backstops, the continued availability of cheap money from the Fed, and the use of accounting gimmicks that allow them to conceal losses behind phony assumptions.

Third, while it is true that home prices have stopped falling, this represents failure, not victory. True success would be a drop in home prices to a level that homebuyers could actually afford. Instead, we have maintained artificially high prices with tax credits, subsidized mortgage rates, low down payments, and foreclosure relief. With 96% of new mortgages now insured by federal agencies, market forces have been completely removed from the housing equation. With so many government programs specifically designed to maintain artificially high home prices, devastating long-term consequences for our economy are inevitable.

Finally, it is true that the GDP yardstick shows an economy returning to growth. However, as I have often repeated, this measure has deep flaws that render it almost useless for judging the soundness of an economy. Currently, the figures are merely reporting increasing indebtedness as growth. Using GDP as the main financial indicator is equivalent to judging a man’s success by the cost of his house, car, and wristwatchch. Rather than gauging income, these figures merely indicate a level of spending and have nothing to do with earning power.

Paul Volcker, the only independent voice in the Administration, has not been deceived by his colleagues’ sunny claims. He recently noted that our economy still evidences “too much consumption, too much spending relative to our capacity to invest and export” and that the problem is “involved with the financial crisis but in a way [is] more difficult than the financial crisis because it reflects the basic structure of the economy.” Yet, President Obama has chosen not to address these concerns.

As Summers and Obama like to point out, the vast majority of economists take it on faith that, with the right finesse, the stimulus can be withdrawn without pushing the economy back into recession. But based on the distortive effects of stimuli and bailouts, our economy has adapted to a climate where cheap credit is not only plentiful but critical.

Eventually, the cheap credit will dry up. Not because the Fed decides it should, but because our foreign creditors stop lending. When that happens, this Administration will look as clueless about economics as the last one was about the pitfalls of nation-building.

But for now, the chattering classes believe strong government action has delivered us from calamity. For them, at least, it’s “mission accomplished!”

December 14, 2009

GOP Fights to Shut Down TARP Slush Fund, Return Money to Taxpayers

With the federal government coming off a $1.42 trillion deficit (“roughly twice individual income tax revenue“) and Washington already another $292 billion in the red, the president and his allies are determined to ramp up government “stimulus” spending even more and turn the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) into a slush fund for politicians. 

But Republicans are fighting to shut down the TARP slush fund and return the money to taxpayers. House Republican Leader John Boehner (R-OH) called the Democrats’ plans “the worst idea I’ve ever heard of” and signed a letter by Rep. Randy Neugebauer (R-TX) calling on the Treasury Secretary to allow TARP to expire. According to Bloomberg News:

“More than 100 House Republicans asked Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to let the Troubled Asset Relief Program expire at the end of the year. …

“In a letter to Geithner signed by 103 House Republicans, Neugebauer said Congress approved $700 billion in TARP spending last year as an emergency move to stabilize the teetering financial system. Any unused or repaid funds should be returned to taxpayers, he wrote.”

‘The federal government does not need a dedicated support fund for the financial system,’ Neugebauer wrote. ‘The emergency has ended, and TARP must end as well.’”

When President Obama outlined his plan to turn TARP into a slush fund yesterday, Politico says he “carefully avoided saying how much the new plans would cost.” Perhaps that’s because it’d be on top of a costly government takeover of health care, a jobs-killing “cap and trade” national energy tax, and new financial regulations that force taxpayers to finance a “permanent bailout.”

Republicans have better solutions for helping small businesses create new jobs without increasing government spending or adding to the deficit. You can learn more about these plans here.

READ MORE:

Bank Of America Has Screwed Taxpayers Again

Filed under: Financial — Tags: , , , — alpineski @ 11:17 am

bofa
A few media outlets cheered the announcement that Bank of America was repaying its $45 billion of bailout money ahead of time. Bank of America is now obviously healthy again, so it’s time to celebrate, right?

Well, no.

The main reason Bank of America paid back the money was to get out from under the onerous pay caps that makes it harder to keep its people and attract a new CEO. To make the payment, Bank of America had to take huge dilution at what a year ago would have been considered an appalling price. Bank of America may be healthier than it was 9 months ago (maybe), but shareholders certainly didn’t consider selling $19 billion of equity at $15 a share cause for celebration.

But aren’t taxpayers better off now that Bank of America has paid us back?

Not if you thought the control and pay restrictions TARP provided were a good thing.

What Bank of America has done is simply replace one form of taxpayer sponsored capital (TARP) with equity and another form of taxpayer sponsored capital–loans from the Fed. Those loans carry super-low interest rates, so they’ll help Bank of America make more money at taxpayer expense. Those loans also, importantly, come with NONE of the restrictions that TARP does.

In case you’re not following exactly what happened here, let us explain:

Bank of America raised $19 billion of new equity. It paid the government $45 billion of TARP funds back. To make up the difference, it borrowed $26 billion of new funds from the Fed (at a subsidized rate, no less).

And taxpayers are on the hook every bit as much with the Fed loans to Bank of America as they were for the TARP capital. The only thing that has changed is that taxpayers don’t have any control anymore. Bank of America can now take that money and do whatever it wants with it, including paying out tremendous bonuses for making stupid loans.

And, god forbid, if Bank of America isn’t healthy and gets itself into trouble again, taxpayers will be right there to bail it out again.

Because this is America, land of bailouts. And TARP-free Bank of America is still too big to fail.*

December 7, 2009

Pelosi Endorses ‘Global’ Tax on Stocks, Bonds, and other Financial Transactions

By Matt Cover, Staff Writer
 


House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi arrive for a press conference after House passage of the health care reform bill at the U.S. Capitol on Saturday, Nov. 7, 2009. (AP Photo/J. David Ake)

(CNSNews.com) – House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) endorsed the idea of a “global” tax on stock trades and other financial transactions, saying the estimated $150 billion in annual revenue from such a tax could be used to help fund more stimulus spending.
 
At her weekly press briefing on Thursday, Pelosi said the financial transactions tax (HR4191) currently before Congress would have to be made “global” to keep U.S. investors from taking their business overseas and out of taxable reach.
 
The House speaker said that a transaction tax could be imposed in conjunction with congressional efforts to divert funds from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), with funds from both going to fund a second stimulus spending package. (The first stimulus bill, $789-billion, was signed into law by President Barack Obama on Feb. 13, 2009.) 
 
“I believe that the transaction tax still has a great deal of merit,” Pelosi told reporters. “The concern that many of us or others have had is that it will send, it will send transactions overseas.
 
 
 
“Well, let’s see, the fact is, what we are talking about is a global transaction [tax],” she said, “something that we would do in conjunction with other G nations, whether it is G8, G20, whatever the current G number is. Because it is really a source of revenue that has really minimal impact on the transaction, but a tremendous impact on helping us meet our needs.”
 
Pelosi said she thought the idea might have currency among a public eager to see Wall Street firms “pitching in” to help the government grow the economy.
 
“I think there would be a market for it among the American people to say that we are all participating in the economic prosperity of our country, and we are all pitching in to continue that prosperity,” said Pelosi.
 
The tax idea, the brainchild of British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, would mean that all major financial centers – Asia, the EU, U.S., and U.K. – would all have to pass a similar transaction tax to avoid disadvantaging one country’s stock exchange. This would ensure that no matter where a person wanted to buy stock, they would have to pay the new tax.
 
Brown originally proposed the idea on Nov. 7 at a meeting of G20 finance ministers in St. Andrews, Scotland.


Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.)

The American version, H.R. 4191, introduced by Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.), would levy a separate tax on all stock trades, futures contracts, swaps, credit default swaps, and stock options in an effort to tap the trillions of dollars of such transactions.
 
Seeking to circumvent concerns about further deficit spending on stimulus programs, the bill attempts to raise approximately $150 billion every year.
 
“The jobless recovery suggests that the Federal Government must continue to prime the economy, but the record deficit is a real obstacle,” the bill reads.
 
“To restore Main Street America, a small securities tax on Wall Street should be invested in job creation for Main Street,” says the bill. “This transfer tax would be assessed on the sale and purchase of financial instruments such as stocks, options, and futures. A quarter percent (0.25 percent) tax on financial instruments could raise approximately $150,000,000,000 a year.”
 
The transaction tax proposal was met with opposition from some House Democrats, who signed a “Dear Colleague” letter outlining their opposition to the tax and urging other members of Congress to join them.
 
“A $150 billion tax on financial transactions will fall on millions of hardworking Americans who are saving for their future through their 401k plans, mutual funds, pensions and other savings vehicles,” wrote Reps. Michael McMahon (D-N.Y.), Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), and Debbie Halvorson (D-Ill.) in the letter, which is still being circulated on Capitol Hill, a copy of which was obtained by CNSNews.com.
 
“Supporters of the proposal promote it as a way to make Wall Street pay for economic stimulus, because it would apply only to stocks, futures, forwards and derivatives,” the letter states. 
 
“In reality, it would be a tax on all investment and savings vehicles because mutual funds and money market fund transactions are, by definition, purchases and sales of securities and bonds,” it added.
 
The three Democrats said that the American version of the proposal would not exempt middle class Americans, as it claims to do, because while the tax would be paid by major stock brokers, those brokers would pass the cost down to everyday investors, pension, and retirement funds.
 
“Proponents of a transaction tax argue that a small 0.25 percent tax on stocks would be paid for by the highly paid financial traders and would not affect most Americans,” reads the letter. “This is simply not true. A tax on stock transactions would affect every single person who owns and invests in stocks from small business owners to senior citizens.”
 
“Americans saving for their retirement, to pay for college or ‘a rainy day fund’ to meet future emergencies will be subjected to a tax that will reduce the value of their savings at a time when they are just starting to recover the losses they incurred at the height of the financial crisis,” the letter states.

Pelosi’s office did not return calls for comment on this story.

December 2, 2009

AIG Slashes US Debt Under Deal With New York Fed

Filed under: Financial — Tags: , , , — alpineski @ 9:32 pm

AIG_logo_new2
AIG Slashes US Debt Under Deal With New York Fed

Bailed-out insurer AIG said on Tuesday it had closed a pact with the New York Federal Reserve that slashes its debt under a credit facility by more than half, to $17 billion.

This is the same AIG that spend nearly $500,000 of our bailout money at the St. Regis Monarch Beach Resort for it’s executives after reviving the bail out funds, the same Bailed-out AIG after pressure had to tell its new chief executive Robert Benmosche that he could not use the company-owned jet for his personal use.

St. Regis, Monarch Beach

St. Regis, Monarch Beach

The deal is your taxpayer money in use by our government and American International Group’s week efforts to repay loans from a massive taxpayer bailout.

AIG said that as of Dec. 1, the outstanding principal balance owed to the New York Fed, from loans received as part of the 2008 bailout, had been reduced to $17 billion. That compares with an outstanding balance of about $45 billion last week, including interest and fees.

AIG shares rose more than 11 percent to above $31, partly reversing a steep fall in the stock on Monday after investors were spooked by concerns over a possible shortfall in reserves for non-life insurance claims.

AIG’s former CEO Maurice “Hank” Greenberg agreed to pay $15 million to settle government accusations that he altered AIG’s financial records to inflate its earnings between 2000 and 2005, U.S. securities regulators said on Thursday.

Older Posts »

Powered by WordPress