Federal investigators are focusing their attention on three employees at American International Group Inc.’s financial products unit amid a probe into derivatives contracts that nearly destroyed the insurance giant, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal.
In a statement, ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ said it is aware of ongoing investigations by the Department of Justice and Securities and Exchange Commission tied to the valuation of derivatives contracts and related disclosures. ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ noted it is cooperating with the investigation, but added it is not “aware of any fraud or malfeasance in connection with the underwriting and creation” of the derivatives contracts.
The investigation is focused on possible ways the three executives might have misled ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½’s auditors and investors about the value of derivatives products ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ sold, according to the report citing anonymous sources.
In September, ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ was undone not by its traditional insurance operations, but its financial products business which underwrote risky credit derivatives contracts known as credit default swaps. The swaps are essentially insurance contracts protecting an investor against default on an underlying investment, such as mortgage-backed securities.
Rising defaults amid the underlying investments led to worries that ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ would not be able to cover all the outstanding swaps contracts and the effects would touch of a new, even more intense period of the credit crisis.
On the brink of collapse amid the mushrooming credit crisis and amid fears that ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ could not cover all its potential obligations, the government provided ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ with an $85 billion loan in September. As market conditions worsened and losses piled up at the insurer, the government has revised and expanded its loan package to ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ multiple times. The package of loans now totals nearly $180 billion after being expanded in March when New York-based ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½ reported a fourth-quarter loss of $61.7 billion, the largest ever quarterly corporate loss in U.S. history.
As part of the loan package, the government has also taken a roughly 80 percent stake in the insurance giant.
A spokesman for the SEC declined to comment. The Justice Department was not immediately available to comment.
Topics ÌìÃÀÍøÕ¾´«Ã½´«Ã½
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