I found the follow-up story from Tavakoli's web site:
http://www.tavakolistructuredfinance.com/TSF21.html
Did AIG Insure Dodgy Mortgage Products for Goldman Sachs?
TSF - March 53, 2009 (Click above for file as pdf)
by Janet Tavakoli
In the video below, Janet Tavakoli, president of Tavakoli Structured Finance, explains that AIG had a lot of cliff risk in some of their credit derivatives linked to mortgage backed products, and she questioned these trades in August of 2007. Goldman Sachs was a key trading partner. Some of the mortgage products coming out of Goldman Sachs Alternative Mortgage Products looked dodgy. AIG seems to have done most of its trades with Goldman during Hank Paulson's tenure as CEO at Goldman, and tough questions should be asked about the nature of the risk that AIG put on with Goldman Sachs
According to the Wall Street Journalâs Serena Ng ("Goldman Confirms $6 Billion AIG Bets" March 21, 2009) prior to AIGâs September 2008 bailout, Goldman had insured $20 billion of chiefly mortgage backed products, and Goldman had already received $7.5 billion in collateral that contributed to AIG's cash problems. From the time of the bailout until the end of 2008, Goldman received another $8.1 billion in collateral from AIG for a total of $15.6 billion before the end of 2008 (the remaining exposure was said to be hedged with credit default swaps among other hedges).
The key question is whether Goldman asked AIG to insure products that were as dodgy as the deal from Goldman Sachs Alternative Mortgage Products exposed by Fortuneâs Allan Sloan in his October 16, 2007 Loeb Award winning article: âJunk Mortgages Under the Microscope.â
Was the lack of disclosure at the time of the bailout to save Goldman from embarrassment or is there a perfectly innocent explanation?
An explanation is due because one could argue that Hank Paulson as former Treasury Secretary (prior to that he was Goldman's CEO) was an interested man. Another interested man, Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman's current CEO, had discussions with Treasury Secretary Geithner, although it was denied the discussions were about AIG.
Notice I said these were interested men, not persons of interest. Yet a detailed explanation of the underlying risk that AIG insured for Goldman Sachs--and others--is in order.
VIDEO: Early Warning on AIG and Questions on Goldman's Role â Fox Business â March 18, 2009.<embed type='application/x-shockwave-flash' src='http://foxnews1.a.mms.mavenapps.net/mms/rt/1/site/foxnews1-foxbusiness-pub01-live/current/videolandingpage/fullPlayer/client/embedded/embedded.swf' id='mediumFlashEmbedded' pluginspage='http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer' bgcolor='#000000' allowScriptAccess='always' allowFullScreen='true' quality='high' name='undefined' play='false' scale='noscale' menu='false' salign='LT' scriptAccess='always' wmode='false' height='275' width='305' flashvars='playerId=videolandingpage&playerTemplateId=fullPlayer&categoryTitle=Latest Video&referralObject=3837063&referralPlaylistId=1292d14d0e3afdcf0b31500afefb92724c08f046' />
http://www.tavakolistructuredfinance.com/TSF21.html
Did AIG Insure Dodgy Mortgage Products for Goldman Sachs?
TSF - March 53, 2009 (Click above for file as pdf)
by Janet Tavakoli
In the video below, Janet Tavakoli, president of Tavakoli Structured Finance, explains that AIG had a lot of cliff risk in some of their credit derivatives linked to mortgage backed products, and she questioned these trades in August of 2007. Goldman Sachs was a key trading partner. Some of the mortgage products coming out of Goldman Sachs Alternative Mortgage Products looked dodgy. AIG seems to have done most of its trades with Goldman during Hank Paulson's tenure as CEO at Goldman, and tough questions should be asked about the nature of the risk that AIG put on with Goldman Sachs
According to the Wall Street Journalâs Serena Ng ("Goldman Confirms $6 Billion AIG Bets" March 21, 2009) prior to AIGâs September 2008 bailout, Goldman had insured $20 billion of chiefly mortgage backed products, and Goldman had already received $7.5 billion in collateral that contributed to AIG's cash problems. From the time of the bailout until the end of 2008, Goldman received another $8.1 billion in collateral from AIG for a total of $15.6 billion before the end of 2008 (the remaining exposure was said to be hedged with credit default swaps among other hedges).
The key question is whether Goldman asked AIG to insure products that were as dodgy as the deal from Goldman Sachs Alternative Mortgage Products exposed by Fortuneâs Allan Sloan in his October 16, 2007 Loeb Award winning article: âJunk Mortgages Under the Microscope.â
Was the lack of disclosure at the time of the bailout to save Goldman from embarrassment or is there a perfectly innocent explanation?
An explanation is due because one could argue that Hank Paulson as former Treasury Secretary (prior to that he was Goldman's CEO) was an interested man. Another interested man, Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman's current CEO, had discussions with Treasury Secretary Geithner, although it was denied the discussions were about AIG.
Notice I said these were interested men, not persons of interest. Yet a detailed explanation of the underlying risk that AIG insured for Goldman Sachs--and others--is in order.
VIDEO: Early Warning on AIG and Questions on Goldman's Role â Fox Business â March 18, 2009.<embed type='application/x-shockwave-flash' src='http://foxnews1.a.mms.mavenapps.net/mms/rt/1/site/foxnews1-foxbusiness-pub01-live/current/videolandingpage/fullPlayer/client/embedded/embedded.swf' id='mediumFlashEmbedded' pluginspage='http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer' bgcolor='#000000' allowScriptAccess='always' allowFullScreen='true' quality='high' name='undefined' play='false' scale='noscale' menu='false' salign='LT' scriptAccess='always' wmode='false' height='275' width='305' flashvars='playerId=videolandingpage&playerTemplateId=fullPlayer&categoryTitle=Latest Video&referralObject=3837063&referralPlaylistId=1292d14d0e3afdcf0b31500afefb92724c08f046' />