(Reuters) - American International Group Inc , the insurer rescued by
the U.S. government in 2008 with a bailout that ultimately totalled
$182 billion, may now join a lawsuit against the government alleging the
terms of the deal were unfair, the company said on Tuesday.
The news prompted a swift reaction
from one of AIG's saviours, with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
saying the insurer could have just as well chosen bankruptcy four years
ago and wiped shareholders out entirely.
The move would be something of a
shock, given that AIG just launched a high-profile television ad
campaign called "Thank you, America," in which it offers the public its
gratitude for the bailout.
"If AIG enters this suit it would be
the equivalent of a patient suing their doctor for saving their life,"
said Mark Williams, a former Federal Reserve bank examiner who teaches
in the finance department at Boston University.
"AIG needs to look at only itself as a
company that recklessly engaged in excessive risk taking. Government
action gave AIG a second life," Williams said.
AIG confirmed on Tuesday that its
board would meet Wednesday to discuss joining a lawsuit filed against
the government by the insurer's former chief executive, Maurice "Hank"
Greenberg.
Greenberg, whose Starr International
owned 12 percent of AIG before its near-collapse, has accused the New
York Fed of using the rescue to bail out Wall Street banks at the
expense of shareholders, and of being a "loan shark" by charging
exorbitant interest on the initial loan.
A federal judge in Manhattan
dismissed Greenberg's suit in November; it is being appealed. A separate
suit under different legal theories is still pending in the U.S. Court
of Federal Claims.
In his ruling, dated November (Xetra: A0Z24E - news)
19, Judge Paul Engelmayer said AIG had notified the court it would hold
a board meeting January 9 to discussing joining one of the suits, with a
decision expected by the end of the month.
An AIG spokesman declined to comment
beyond confirming that the board would meet as planned. The
deliberations were first reported by the New York Times.
The New York Fed said Tuesday there was no merit to any allegations that the bank harmed AIG.
"AIG's board of directors had an
alternative choice to borrowing from the Federal Reserve and that choice
was bankruptcy. Bankruptcy would have left all AIG shareholders with
worthless stock," a representative of the bank said Tuesday.
The U.S. Treasury declined to
comment. It completed its final sale of AIG stock in mid-December,
concluding the bailout with what Treasury called a positive return of
$22.7 billion.
AIG shares fell 1.6 percent to $35.35
in morning trade. After losing half its value in 2011, the stock rose
more than 52 percent in 2012, tripling the gains of the broader S&P
insurance index .
(Reporting By Ben Berkowitz and Jonathan Spicer in New York; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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