Sunday, March 21, 2010 6:54pm EST
Make this your Home Page | RSS 
AIG's Minority Racket
Earl Ofari Hutchinson | Posted March 18, 2009 4:56 AMAIG ignited the national firestorm of rage with its shell out of $160 to $600 million in tainted bonuses to its tainted executives. But what has gotten almost no attention is a big reason that AIG had to stiff the government and everyone else. That's the role that the company played in the subprime loan racket -- a racket that hurt and still hurts tens of thousands of would be black and Latino homeowners.
The lender's bait and switch tactics, the deliberately garbled contracts, deceptive and faulty lending, questionable accounting practices, and charged hidden fees, all with the connivance of sleepy-eyed see-no-evil oversight of federal regulators, are well known and documented. Their snake oil loan peddling wreaked havoc with thousands of mostly poor, strapped homeowners. A disproportionate number of them were Latinos and African-Americans.
Enter AIG. It saw a, treasure trove of fast buck riches in the subprime business. AIG dumped $33 billion into bonds and securities that were tied directly to subprime loans. This was nearly four times more than the next insurer, the German-based Allianz SE, had invested in the subprime loans. In fact, AIG was the only US based life insurer that had more than 3 percent of its general account assets in debts tied to subprime loans.
In early 2007 things started to unravel. AIG reported a first quarter loss of more than $2 billion in its subprime mortgage bonds. This set off the first warning bell that AIG could implode. Bond traders openly worried that AIG's subprime securities losses could drag the market down. They had good reason to worry.
AIG is first and foremost an insurer. And in addition to its plunging bond and security holdings, the company also insured restructured subprime home bonds. The assumption by the subrprime bond holders was that the bonds would lose only a fraction of their value. But by then subprime defaults had piled up to a ten-year high and the subprime lending market -- that was all of it stocks, bonds and insurance -- had badly frayed.
AIG's stock had plunged 60 percent within the year. The top rating agencies, Moody's and Standard and Poor's, concerned over AIG's continuing losses on subprime and other mortgage-backed securities, downgraded AIG's credit rating. They demanded the company pay billions to creditors in order to bump back up its ratings. That was billions that AIG by then didn't have.
AIG was clearly on a non stop down hill roller coaster ride, and many banks and lenders, were heading to perdition with them. The company briefly flirted with the notion of filing for subprime mortgage lenders bankruptcy.
But there was a better deal to be had courtesy of a then panicked President Bush and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. They shoved out tens of billions in cash in what turned out to be only the first installment of cash to save AIG's hide.
We may never know the full extent of the financial damage that AIG caused in the subprime market. Nor how many prospective minority homeowners suffered losses both financial and personal from the company's greed. United for a Fair Economy, a public advocacy research group, in an in-depth study on sub prime lending, estimates that the tab for minorities for the dubious blending practices runs to more than $200 billion in lost equity and income during the years AIG and the subprime bank lenders ran amok. The group called the home losses the most massive loss of wealth for African Americans in U.S. history.
The ultimate tragedy is that many blacks who were enticed by the lenders through their web of lies and deceit into taking the risky sub prime loans didn't really need them. Data from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act found that about 40 percent of the black subprime borrowers could have qualified for cheaper mainstream mortgages.
But that was the last thing that the subprime lenders, let alone AIG, wanted. This would have taken a big bite out of their fantasy level profits. In the end, those profits turned out to be a smoke and mirrors illusion just as the subprime illusion was.
AIG happily aided and abetted the banks and lenders in their decade-long fast and loose play with the lending rules. Taxpayers are, of course, paying and paying dearly for AIG's greed and malfeasance. But thousands of blacks and Latinos who hoped to be homeowners are also paying for that greed. AIG's minority racket is yet another sorry chapter in the AIG saga.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst whose radio show, "The Hutchinson Report," can be heard weekly on KTYM Radio and blogtalkradio.com.
- Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas's wife launches Tea Party group (75 comments)
- 'All black people' told to leave NJ Wal-Mart (63 comments)
- Is this as good as it gets for Mo'Nique and Gabourey? (35 comments)
- Artist defends 42nd Street mural under fire (23 comments)
- Texas Board of Education writes Hip-Hop out of history books (19 comments)
-
LL commented on The final push:
"Don't do it for me. Don't do it for the Democratic Party. Do it for the American people,"...
-
xfactor commented on The final push:
Republicans keep saying that we have one of the best health care systems in the world. Well that i...
-
Anne commented on Why we can't wait ... for health care reform:
I sincerely hope a good bill gets passed, and that the Pary of No (along with their voting-against-...
-
Heather commented on If Dr. Conrad Murray caused Michael Jackson's death, then so did I:
As adults we need to be responsible for our actions. Deciding what we eat and enjoying tobacco are ...
-
Cecil Jones commented on Why we can't wait ... for health care reform:
I can hear Pres. Obama's words in my head, "We couldn't wait to give GOP kids on cadillac insurance...
Mark Allen
John Amaechi
Maya Angelou
Crystal McCrary Anthony
Patricia Arnold
Algernon Austin
Randall Bailey
Rick Blalock
Kola Boof
Keith Boykin
Mario Brossard
Michael Brown
Theresa Caldwell
Clay Cane
Jasmyne Cannick
Charisse Carney-Nunes
Audrey Chapman
Gordon Chambers
Staceyann Chin
Mark Corece
Gilda Daniels
Yvonne R. Davis
Terrance Dean
Marcia Dyson
Damon Evans
M. Franklin
Lenora Fulani
Ron Glover
Keli Goff
Peter Gomes
Deondray Gossett
Kia Gregory
Zulema Griffin
Malcolm Harris
Marc Lamont Hill
Alicia Hines
Dennis R. Holmes, M.D
Earl Ofari Hutchinson
Jessica Ingram-Bellamy
Jacqueline Jackson
Avis Jones-DeWeever
Quincy Lenear
Carl Lewis
Rae Lewis-Thornton
Shannon J. Love
Rod McCullom
Terry McMillan
M.W. Moore
Alphonso Morgan
Nicholas Nelson
Clarence Nero
Charles Ogletree
Spencer Overton
Shirley Parker
Deval Patrick
Charles Pugh
Anwar Robinson
Eugene S. Robinson
Rashad Robinson
Mark Sawyer
Tara Setmayer
Rev. William Sinkford
Alexander Smalls
Basil Smikle
Nadine Smith
Doug Spearman
John Stanley
Jamal Story
Ronald Sullivan
David Dante Troutt
Omar Tyree
Linda Villarosa
Dorian Warren
Isaiah Washington
Robin Washington
Diane Weathers
Reg Weaver
Marcia J. Williams
Nathan Hale Williams
Jeff Winbush
Kai Wright



MySpace
flickr
YouTube

2009-03-18 11:25:02
2009-03-18 12:14:00
To see your comment, wait approximately two minutes, then simply refresh the page.
Report issues/abuses to suggestions@thedailyvoice.com