AIG chair says 'hands tied' over multi-million dollar bonuses

Embattled insurer American International Group has agreed to revamp its bonus structure after Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner…

Embattled insurer American International Group has agreed to revamp its bonus structure after Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner objected to its plans to pay out substantial sums for 2008.

AIG, which has received three government bailouts totaling $180 billion, will sharply cut remaining salaries for 2009 for top executives of its AIG Financial Products unit and will work with Treasury to realign 2008 bonuses to reflect the company's restructuring and repayment goals, AIG Chairman Edward Liddy said in a letter to Mr Geithner.

AIG Financial Products was the unit that made bad bets on toxic mortgages that led to the company's near collapse.

Mr Liddy said the firm was legally obligated to make already-committed 2008 employee-retention payments, the value of which were set last year before problems arose at the Financial Products unit.

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"Some of these payments are coming due on March 15th, and, quite frankly, AIG's hands are tied," Mr Liddy said, adding that he found the arrangements "distasteful."

But he said he would work with Mr Geithner to resolve the issue.

An Obama administration official said it was unacceptable for Wall Street firms receiving government assistance to pay million-dollar bonuses, but concluded that the retention payments were legally binding.

The Treasury will continue to negotiate with AIG to bring these payments down and seek to recoup the funds through mechanism outside of these contracts.