The AIG & Goldman Sachs saga is getting more interesting by the week with more information coming to light for analysis. Here is a Wall Street Journal article about how Goldman Sachs was the middleman in many of these credit-default swaps (CDS) and in the transaction where it took the liabilities on their own books they used AIG to insure against the risk of default.
What is even more interesting is when they insure against AIG defaulting when they had such a large amount of risk with a single counter-party. It makes one wonder if they knew that AIG was in over its head and that because of the amount of liabilities this is why the government bailed out AIG CDS bets with Goldman Sachs being the largest recipient. So is it true the Goldman Sachs was actually insolvent until they got bailed out?
The trades yielded Goldman less than $50 million in profits, which were mostly booked from 2004 to 2006, according to a person familiar with the matter. But they piled risks onto AIG’s books, which later came to haunt the insurer and Goldman. The trades also gave Goldman a unique window into AIG’s exposure to losses on securities linked to mortgages.
When the federal government bailed out the insurer, Goldman avoided losses on its trades with AIG covering a total of $22 billion in assets.
A Goldman spokesman says that up until AIG was rescued by the government, the insurer “was viewed as one of the most sophisticated financial counterparties in the world. It wasn’t until the government intervened in September 2008 that the full extent of AIG’s problems became apparent.”
“What is lost in the discussion is that AIG assumed billions of dollars in risk it was unable to manage,” the Goldman spokesman added.
Analysis: This is more and more started to smell like a cover-up of a much larger fraud that needs to be investigated further. The WSJ has taken it this far and now its time for the FBI and DOJ to take the ball in run. It is very unlikely that our entire financial meltdown was caused entirely because of incompetence and lack of knowledge over the risks of these new “financial innovations”.