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  • Ouch! Now It's Serious

    Investment Banking

    A.I.G. Said to Dismiss Goldman

    May 7, 2010, 2:46 am



    As its legal troubles mount, Goldman Sachs is losing a big corporate client: the American International Group.

    A.I.G., the insurance giant that planned to retain Goldman to help reorganize its businesses, has replaced Goldman as its main corporate adviser, according to three people with knowledge of the matter, which was not intended to be public. Instead, the insurer is turning to Citigroup and Bank of America, Eric Dash and Louise Story report in The New York Times.

    The move is the first in what some analysts warn could be a series of defections among Goldman’s clients after accusations — vigorously denied by Goldman — that it defrauded customers in a complex mortgage investment. A Goldman spokesman declined to comment.

    As Goldman’s legal problems have escalated — first with a civil fraud suit filed by the Securities and Exchange Commission, and then with a federal criminal investigation — some investors have grown increasingly anxious about the potential damage to Goldman’s reputation and business.

    A.I.G.’s decision leaves Goldman out of the mix at a pivotal moment for the insurance company and breaks a traditionally close relationship. A.I.G., which has yet to repay billions of dollars of federal aid, helped to insure billions of dollars of Goldman’s mortgage securities, including seven deals like the one involved in the securities fraud case filed last month by the S.E.C.

    While A.I.G. is the first company that is known to have canceled major work with Goldman, European officials and some local officials in the United States have also said they are reconsidering their relationships with the bank. Several shareholders have filed suits against Goldman and its board and executives, saying they should have disclosed the S.E.C. investigation earlier.

    Goldman executives have told analysts that the bank’s business has not suffered since the case :rolleyes:. The bank’s most recent quarterly profit — $3.3 billion — was a huge success by almost any standard, and Goldman officials said the results were proof that they were doing right by their clients :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:.

    An A.I.G. spokeswoman declined to comment. Bank of America and Citigroup did not immediately respond to requests for comment.;)


    http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/20...dman&st=Search

  • #2
    Re: Ouch! Now It's Serious

    The squid is getting squizzed.
    My guess is that they will bankrupt this company (or close it) and move on to the next bubble-machine.

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    • #3
      Re: Ouch! Now It's Serious

      Originally posted by Anon21456 View Post
      The squid is getting squizzed.
      My guess is that they will bankrupt this company (or close it) and move on to the next bubble-machine.

      http://www.toarkoudi.gr/Recipes/tou_...hp?sec=malakia
      tasty

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      • #4
        Re: Ouch! Now It's Serious


        in action on the economie politique

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        • #5
          Re: Ouch! Now It's Serious

          It's true... The xenomorph squid is a far better representation of GS than earth's vampire squid... Great idea don !

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          • #6
            Re: Ouch! Now It's Serious

            Originally posted by don View Post
            As its legal troubles mount, Goldman Sachs is losing a big corporate client: the American International Group.

            A.I.G., the insurance giant that planned to retain Goldman to help reorganize its businesses, has replaced Goldman as its main corporate adviser, according to three people with knowledge of the matter, which was not intended to be public. Instead, the insurer is turning to Citigroup and Bank of America, Eric Dash and Louise Story report in The New York Times.
            Both Citi and AIG are largely held by the Federal Reserve, no? Last week's dip severely altered the profitability of selling Citi shares that the Fed touted just weeks ago.

            Conflict of interest, anyone?

            Originally posted by don View Post
            ...A.I.G., which has yet to repay billions of dollars of federal aid, helped to insure billions of dollars of Goldman’s mortgage securities, including seven deals like the one involved in the securities fraud case filed last month by the S.E.C.
            ---
            An A.I.G. spokeswoman declined to comment. Bank of America and Citigroup did not immediately respond to requests for comment.;)
            Move along. Nothing to see here.

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