We’ve heard America ‘loudly and clearly’

AIG boss: Some of firm’s execs are already returning bonuses

Image: Edward Liddy
Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
The CEO of failed insurance conglomerate AIG Edward Liddy testified before the House Financial Services Subcommittee Wednesday. Liddy told lawmakers the large bonuses paid to AIG workers are ‘distasteful’
Live video
Edward Liddy
AIG chief grilled on bonuses
LIVE VIDEO: AIG chief Edward Liddy testifies before Congress.

NBC News

Video
  Liddy vows to 'clean up the mess at AIG'
March 18: AIG CEO Edward Liddy makes his case to save AIG before the House Financial Services Subcommittee investigating the company's viability, and executive bonus awards.

MSNBC

  Market update
Index
Last
Change
 
% change
• DJIA 7486.58 +90.88 +1.23%
• NASDAQ 1491.22 +29.11 +1.99%
• S&P 500 794.35 +16.23 +2.09%
Enter company symbol   • Look up symbol
Data: MSN Money and ComStock
Cartoons

more photos

  Economy in Turmoil
We’ve heard America ‘loudly and clearly’
  The head of bailed-out insurance giant AIG declared Wednesday that some of the firm’s executives have begun returning all or part of bonuses totaling $165 million.

Video
  Prickly open to AIG hearing
March 18: Opening remarks at the House AIG hearing ran the gamut from anger at AIG, to questions over the firm's bailout, to frustration with the Obama administration. CNBC's Mary Thompson reports.

CNBC

updated 13 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - The head of battered insurance giant AIG told Congress on Wednesday that “we’ve heard the American people loudly and clearly” in their rage over executive bonuses.

Under intense pressure from the Obama administration and Congress, the head of the bailed-out insurance giant declared that some of the firm’s executives have begun returning all or part of bonuses totaling $165 million. He said the payouts were a legal obligation of the company, although he called them “distasteful.”

Edward Liddy, brought in last year to oversee a company that has received $182 billion in federal bailout funds, offered no details. Buffeted by congressional outrage, he said he was angry, too, but did not respond directly when advised in pungent terms to pay to the Treasury all the money handed out last weekend in “retention payments.”

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

“Eat it now. Take it out of your profits down the road. It’s a lot sweeter now than it’s gonna be later,” said Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y.

Liddy slid into the witness chair at a congressional hearing as President Barack Obama sought anew to quell a furor that has bedeviled his administration since word of the bonuses surfaced over the weekend.

Obama, who took office just under two months ago, told reporters his administration was not responsible for a lack of federal supervision of AIG that preceded the company’s demise, nor for the decision made last year to pay what he called “outrageous bonuses.”

Still, he said, “The buck stops with me.” He said that “my goal is to make sure that we never put ourselves in this kind of position again,” and he disclosed the administration was consulting with Congress on the possibility of creating a new agency to govern the meltdown of large financial institutions such as AIG.

He also gave a strong vote of confidence to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, who has been the target of growing Republican criticism.

Obama spoke as congressional Democrats worked on legislation designed to recoup most or all of the $165 million by exposing it to new taxes. A House vote was likely Thursday on a bill placing a 90 percent tax on the payments to top-paid executives at companies like AIG that received large bailouts from the federal government.

Republicans raised pointed questions about the extent of Geithner’s advance knowledge of the bonuses, and stressed they had been locked out of discussions earlier this year when Democrats decided to jettison a provision from legislation that could have revoked the payments.

“The fact is that the bill the president signed, which protected the AIG bonuses and others, was written behind closed doors by Democratic leaders of the House and Senate. There was no transparency,” said Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the senior Republican on the Senate Finance Committee.

Liddy’s presence in a congressional hearing room was evidence of a bipartisan opposition to the bonuses, although his status as a $1-a-year CEO called out of retirement last year to try and untangle AIG’s financial mess made him a less-than-easy target for expressions of outrage.

“No one knows better than I that AIG has been the recipient of generous amounts of government financial aid,” he said. “We have been the beneficiary of the American people’s forbearance and patients,” he added, acknowledging that patience was wearing thin.

Liddy said that on Tuesday, he had “asked those who have received retention payments in excess of $100,000 or more to return at least half of those payments.” Some have “already stepped forward and returned 100 percent,” he added.

Asked by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., whether he would turn over the names of individuals who received the money, as well as the amounts, he said he would do so only if assured the information not be made public.

When Frank said he might seek a subpoena, Liddy said he was concerned about the safety of the employees and their families, and read aloud from a death threat received by one of them.

Frank said he would be guided in part by security considerations, but Ackerman later noted that Andrew Cuomo, the New York attorney general, was already seeking the names with a subpoena.

Liddy said he had not yet complied, sidestepped several times when asked whether he would, and finally said “it would be our intent” to do so.


Global Housing, Corp. 33 Wood Ave, South, Suite 600 Iselin, NJ 08830
Phone: Fax:

For Buyers | News | Press Release | Real Estate Glossary | Selling Your Home | Home | Buying Foreclosures/REO's

Copyright © 2010 Global Housing, Corp.
Portions Copyright © 2010 a la mode, inc.
Another XSite by a la mode, inc. | Admin LoginTerms of UseSite Map
All rate, payment, and area information are estimates and approximations only.