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发表于 2009-7-1 07:42 AM
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12# 风清扬
NEW YORK, June 30 (Reuters) - American International Group Inc got a new
slate of government-backed directors at a subdued annual meeting on Tuesday,
effectively revamping its board after the insurer's $180 billion taxpayer
bailout.
The meeting attracted far fewer investors than in years past and wrapped
up in less than an hour, with the outcome of company proposals all but assured
by the fact that trustees appointed to oversee the government's nearly 80
percent stake in AIG can swing any vote.
Only a handful of investors used the meeting as a forum to air
grievances, even though it was the first public opportunity to address AIG
management and directors since the company's implosion last September.
Less than 200 investors attended the meeting, held in AIG's soon to be
sold 72 Wall Street building, which was circled by security personnel. This was
in sharp contrast to overflow crowds in years past.
Shareholders have seen the value of their stock all but wiped out. The
shares, which traded as high as $100 at the beginning of the decade, have
languished below $2 nearly all year. In morning trading they were down 18 cents
at $1.15.
"I am sorry for what's happened to you," Chief Executive Edward Liddy
told a shareholder who said she and her husband had bought AIG shares in their
retirement plan and had lost a lot of money. "The story that you recount has
happened to so many folks," Liddy said.
AIG delayed its annual meeting, usually held in May, to give it more time
to shuffle its board, which has been almost entirely reconstituted over the last
year.
"They were like rats leaving a sinking ship -- goodbye and good
riddance," shareholder Kenneth Steiner of Great Neck, New York, said at the
meeting, referring to departed directors.
At least seven of the new directors were recommended by either the U.S.
Treasury Department or the trustees overseeing the government's stake in AIG.
Steiner also took aim at PricewaterhouseCoopers, AIG's outside auditor.
He called PwC "incompetent at best" for not alerting shareholders sooner to a
lack of internal controls. AIG disclosed that it paid the accounting firm $131
million in 2008.
Liddy defended PwC, which was reappointed as auditor for the coming year.
He said PwC cited AIG for a material weakness in controls in early 2008,
effectively forcing AIG to disclose that large losses could be lurking in a
derivatives portfolio.
AIG usually hands out thick, glossy, photo-filled annual reports at the
meeting, but not this year. Instead, it distributed bare-bones copies of its
10-K filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Committee, printed on cheap
newsprint. A spokesman cited financial constraints.
NEW LEADERSHIP
Liddy said he was confident the board would soon name a new chairman and
CEO. He plans to relinquish his spot on the board once candidates for CEO and
chairman are lined up to succeed him.
Liddy, responding to investors who asked if they should hold onto their
shares, said he could give no assurance that the government would ever
relinquish its stake in the insurer.
AIG is trying to sell assets to help repay $83 billion of government
loans. Liddy said the company had agreed to sell 25 assets so far and that there
was "an excellent chance" the government would be repaid.
Last week, AIG said it planned to give the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York stakes in two large life insurance units and eventually spin those units
off, reducing its debt to the government by about $25 billion.
On Tuesday, the company said it would sell its credit card business in
Taiwan to Far Eastern International Bank.
Liddy said AIG is trying to decide what to do with its aircraft leasing
unit, International Lease Finance Corp, citing its heavy debt load as a
detraction.
He said the financial products unit that triggered so much of AIG's red
ink has nearly halved its derivatives exposure, to $1.4 trillion from $2.7
trillion, and by year-end "our risk will have been reduced substantially from
its current status."
Shareholders approved six of the seven proposals submitted by AIG at the
meeting, the company said. The rejected proposal was an amendment to increase
the authorized number of shares of AIG common stock from 5 billion to 9.225
billion. |
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