AIG To Taxpayers: It’s Raining

Last week, Bloomberg reported that insurance giant AIG was not going to award bonuses to top executives. Or are they? From Bloomberg’s Hugh Son back on November 26:

American International Group Inc., the insurer that said yesterday it scrapped bonuses for top executives after a U.S. bailout, will still pay 130 managers “cash awards” to stay with the firm, including $3 million to retirement services chief Jay Wintrob.

Wintrob, 51, will get the “retention” payment in two installments, the first in April 2009 and the rest a year later, New York-based AIG said today in a regulatory filing. The firm previously disclosed the program in a Sept. 26 filing and said today that Wintrob and Chief Financial Officer David Herzog elected to get the payments four months later than planned.

“The expectation from the public and Congress was that they weren’t getting bonuses, not that they’d be pushed off by several months,” said David Schmidt, a consultant at executive pay firm James F. Reda & Associates. “That clearly violates the spirit of AIG saying they’ll forgo their bonuses.”

AIG’s response? Son wrote:

“We’ve said they aren’t eligible for annual bonuses, and they’re not,” Nicholas Ashooh, spokesman for AIG, said today in an interview. “What we’re talking about are retention agreements — they’ve been pushed back by several months — and it’s our hope that those businesses will be sold in several months.”

What’s that saying? “Don’t piss on my leg and tell me it’s raining.”

Source:

“AIG Gives ‘Retention’ Pay After Scrapping Bonuses (Update2)”
Hugh Son
Bloomberg, November 26, 2008

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