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Insurance giant AIG teetering on the brink as it attempts to mount rescue plan

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Published Date: 17 September 2008
SHARES in US insurance giant AIG were under renewed pressure last night as the firm tried to cobble together an 11th-hour rescue plan.
AIG, which employs about 3,000 staff in the UK out of some 116,000 employees globally, suffered a further day of stock market pain after credit ratings agencies downgraded the firm, making it even more difficult for it to raise money.

The insurer
had been granted a $20 billion (£11.2bn) lifeline on Monday to help shore up its finances but concerns grew yesterday that it would need more cash to survive the fallout from the demise of Lehman Brothers.

Reports suggested that the US government was at least discussing extending a financial lifeline to the company.

AIG confirmed on Monday that it was reviewing its operations and looking at options with outside parties after shares fell dramatically last week.

The firm operates under three main brands in the UK – AIG UK, AIG Life and AIG Direct. It also sells insurance through high street names such as Argos and Boots, while the firm underwrites product warranties for John Lewis department stores.

However, the group is better known in the UK for its sponsorship of Manchester United, having signed a £56.5 million sponsorship agreement with the club in 2006 – the biggest shirt sponsorship deal in English football.

Meanwhile, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani yesterday said ailing US companies such as AIG should seek financial lifelines abroad since they were as important to the global economy as within the United States. "I would think that, for AIG especially, international help would not be unrealistic," he said at a hedge fund conference.

Former chief executive Maurice "Hank" Greenberg, who ran AIG for 38 years before stepping down in 2005, said the private sector should come to AIG's aid.





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  • Last Updated: 16 September 2008 8:33 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Evan Owen,

Snowdonia 17/09/2008 07:23:46
This is the most rapid form of financial cancer.

Now the Fed owns 80% of AIG, I ask 80% of what?
2

Proximaking,

Aberdeen 17/09/2008 07:31:09
What was it someone famous once said? "You can't buck the markets." And when the markets have puffed themselves to the top of an imaginary hill that isn't there anymore (even in their deluded eyes) it is free-fall time back to reality and no-one or nothing now to stop them. And it looks as if they are dragging the US government with them into the pit, .... couldn't happen to a nicer country.
3

Paul Spencer,

Glasgow 17/09/2008 08:13:59
One of the most scarey moments, if AIG had gone down the swannie, then the whole thing would have imploded, as it is the great American century has gone pop, the US government is now even more in hock to the chinese and the arab governments, it will only be a matter of time till these regimes put pressure on the US to change its policies. By 2020 Taiwan will be no more, Israel will be told to make its peace on arab terms in the middle east, the mighty military machine that is the US of A will be a husk, as its ill-advised jaunts come to an end on the back of trying to balance a budget. Of course I could be wrong the US came out of the depression, via a war, a rather big one, but that is too frightening to contemplate for a repeat performance.
4

Here Today HBOS Tomorrow,

17/09/2008 09:16:28
#2, you cannot buck the market hmm, I remember various lecturers telling me such things. However the market can be easily bucked when exceptional events (read greed and incompetence) are involved.
5

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

17/09/2008 17:19:52
Morgan Stanley piling down now. Looks like they're next. Royal Bank taking a beating too...

I gotta say: this is truly awesome to watch.

6

SouthernGent,

18/09/2008 00:22:36
"couldn't happen to a nicer country"

Best to think again if you think this crisis will be limited to one country. The world financial markets are too entertwined to stop at one country. And just how much money do you think china or the arab countries will get when there isn't any? These companies keep falling, it will be a mighty big snowball heading down the hill.

 

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