EFTA01093302.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 135.1 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 2 pages
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-; December 23.2012
Could A.I.G. Happen Again?
EDITORIAL
The United States government recently sold the last of its shares in the American International
Group, more than four years after it bailed out the insurance giant with a package of assistance
that eventually totaled $18o billion. In announcing the sale, the Treasury Department also said
that the government had a "positive return" of $22.7 billion — a sum that fails to take into
account tax breaks A.I.G. received as a ward of the state. But whether the government profited
from the bailout is not important. The truly vital issue is this: Could this happen again?
Unfortunately, the troubling answer is yes.
A.I.G., whose chief business is insuring consumers and businesses, collapsed in 2008 because of
reckless speculation by a subsidiary, A.I.G. Financial Products. That unit bet big on the housing
and credit boom with credit-default swaps, which are financial instruments that mimic
insurance. By the time it collapsed, the division had guaranteed nearly $8o billion in mortgage
securities, often for large investment banks and hedge funds. The government stepped in to bail
out A.I.G. because its failure could have dealt mortal blows to other financial institutions that
the company had agreed to protect from losses.
In the aftermath of the financial crisis, policy makers in Washington, London and elsewhere
began working to address the shortcomings exposed by A.I.G. Congress passed the Dodd-Frank
reform law that imposes new controls on financial activity but leaves it to regulatory agencies,
such as the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, to fill in the details.
While those agencies have made some progress, like requiring derivative trades to be more
transparently traded and reported, they have completed just one-third of the rules required by
the law. The things regulators have yet to finish include imposing limits on the size of bets
investors can make using credit default swaps and other exotic financial instruments, and also
requiring investors to maintain sufficient reserves to make good on all of those bets.
Another cause for concern is that American, European and Asian policy makers have not
sufficiently coordinated their regulation of financial derivatives. That means investors looking to
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escape regulations in one country can do so by moving their trades to another part of the world.
The derivatives business is global and its regulation must also be international. One of the
reasons the A.I.G. Financial Products unit escaped the notice of regulators was that it was based
in London, where it operated under a French banking license. At the very least, U.S. agencies
must regulate the trading activities of the foreign branches and subsidiaries of American
financial institutions.
The blame for regulatory delays falls, in part, on an unrepentant financial industry that has
fought against regulation at every turn, on Capitol Hill or in the courts. It has, for instance, sued
the C.F.T.C. to block a rule that would have limited the size of investors' positions in certain
derivatives.
Such shortsighted opposition hinders rules that would help restore long-term confidence in the
financial system and the economy, which is in everybody's interest, including banks and
investors. But ultimately, the blame for the slow progress rests with the Obama administration
and policy makers in Europe and Asia, too.
After the Depression hit, the United States created several regulatory agencies like the Securities
and Exchange Commission and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation that helped maintain
relative financial stability and prosperity for almost seven decades before deregulation chipped
away at their effectiveness. It is imperative that policy makers speed up the rules to help correct
critical vulnerabilities in the financial system.
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EFTA01093303
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