Geithner's Replacement
Thursday, January 7, 2010 at 08:18PM AIG said in a draft of a regulatory filing that the insurer paid banks, which included Goldman Sachs Group Inc.and Societe Generale SA, 100 cents on the dollar for credit-default swaps they bought from the firm. The New York Fed crossed out the reference, according to the e-mails, and AIG excluded the language when the filing was made public on Dec. 24, 2008. The e-mails were obtained by Representative Darrell Issa, ranking member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
The New York Fed took over negotiations between AIG and the banks in November 2008 as losses on the swaps, which were contracts tied to subprime home loans, threatened to swamp the insurer weeks after its taxpayer-funded rescue. The regulator decided that Goldman Sachs and more than a dozen banks would be fully repaid for $62.1 billion of the swaps, prompting lawmakers to call the AIG rescue a “backdoor bailout” of financial firms.
“It appears that the New York Fed deliberately pressured AIG to restrict and delay the disclosure of important information,” said Issa, a California Republican. Taxpayers “deserve full and complete disclosure under our nation’s securities laws, not the withholding of politically inconvenient information.”
[End Quote]
So I'm just guessing here, but based on what I said earlierabout Dodd popping up somewhere in the Obama Administration as pay back for allowing some other dem to try and save his Senate seat for the party, I'd say he's got a shot at Secretary of the Treasury.
The only thing that might save Timmy Geithner is an abrupt recovery, which is almost impossible at this point. So the doomsday clock is ticking. How long can he last?
Bloomberg,
Chris Dodd,
Tim Geithner in
Bail Out,
Corruption,
Democrats 

Reader Comments