Fallen Giant
By
Ron Shelp with Al Ehr Bar
@ 2006, 2009
Review
Sampson I.M Onwuka
Hank Greenberg's recent book may be originated as a reaction
to the Fallen Giant. The book does not place Greenberg at the center of the
history of AIG but proves him instrumental in transforming the company and the
lives of those who came under his canopy and administrative genius at AIG. It
is common sense that books this nature forcing the history of AIG to weigh
against the earliest years in Shanghai may likely explain the heavy edited 'The
AIG Story' by Hank Greenberg.
According to the Fallen Giant, that “On March 14, 2005, Hank
Greenberg fell from this aerie of leadership in business, politics,
non-profits. Ironically, he was suddenly elevated to national even
international, prominence that had long-eluded him and been a real frustration,
probably because he had an insurance company instead of an industrial company,
an entertainment conglomerate, or a bank." It may not seem that a light on
such a long career is well witnessed, but it seems that the individual efforts
made by CEOs in certain industries received less light and perhaps exposure
than others in others such as Insurance.
In truth the consequence of certain leadership is the
failure to highlight their importance. A failure that may be seen from separate
angle, that some of the actions and events at the latter half of the whole
story buries the strident effort put up by AIG to advance the interest on
shareholders. It is not impossible to suggest that Ron Shelp and Al EhrBar may
have summarized their position in the context of several questions, that
(1) “Why would Hank Greenberg, one of the most successful
CEO’s ever, nearly 80 years old and already a billionaire several times over,
allegedly risk his reputation and potentially even his freedom over what turns
out to be fairly modest “fiddling” with A.I.G reported earnings?”
(2) “Why did AIG’s outside directors, each of them flattered
to be hand-picked by Greenberg to serve on one of the most illustrious boards
ever, turn to him so quickly and force him out in such a humiliating way?”
(3) “Why did Eliot Spitzer go after Greenberg with such
incredible zeal, labeling him a criminal on national TV before he had been
charged with anything – and then never charge him with a crime? Would this be
the ultimate victory?”
Some of C.V Starr compatriots - Houghton Freeman, Sorbanes -
Oxley, Enron, Worldcom (General Re), Stare foundation, Council on foreign
Relations, Richard Holbrooke, NASDAQ president Frank Zarb, former defense
secretary - William S. Cohen, attract some degree of exposure and in their
career all else, that there is something more important than the theory of
general consumptive behavior to investment attitude, especially in the case of
China and perhaps India in their adoption and re-entry into World Trade
Organization.
There are foundation differences between these two books,
but the later explicate the defensive persuasion on the authority. In
difference with this theory, we can suggest that one great hall marks of any
product is enduring sense of vista, I for one can suggest that a sense of
narrative in Ron Shelp, Al Ehr-Bar is far more compellingly and defensive of
Hank Greenberg than Hank Greenberg and the AIG Story. We may state for the record that the AIG
Story contain certain information that the Fallen Giant did not spare, that the
account by Fallen Giant may throw light perhaps throw light on perhaps the
whole story - especially why and how it matters most for corporate Americans.
Whereas the AIG Story narrates the actions taken by the
State of New York and Eliot Spitzer as necessarily responsible for the lack of
leadership qualities towards the end of AIG, the Fallen Giant did not fail to
throw light on the subject, it affirmed the story - but differently,
that,"...Spitzer, SEC, and Insurance regulatory investigations that for
many months seemed to compound exponentially, with new investigations and
lawsuits on almost a daily basis. Two weeks after Greenberg resigned as CEO,
files were removed from AIG office in Bermuda and Spitzer threatened criminal
action against AIG.”
On Dec 5th 2005, Spitzer charged Greenberg for defrauding
the Starr Foundation and on October 17th SICO – counter sues AIG defending
ownership of shares following the SICO attempt $20 billion worth of shares
possession. 1999 AIG made a splash by purchasing (Sun America) and the
insurance company franchised out of Europe and Eastern Europe following the
fall of the curtain and within the interim years AIG ended up acquiring life
insurance policy by China.
The end of Hank Greenberg’s career stint at AIG was 2006
beginning in 2005 March 14th, allowing to make the transition of AIG –
especially in transition. The Resignation itself was not unexpected - but how
the resignation resonated to all Americans was for all intent of purpose a
question of that decade.
We can also summarize that the role of Elliot Spitzer, AIG
and C.V Starr. 1999 AIG made a splash by purchasing (Sun America) and the
insurance company franchised out of Europe and Eastern Europe following the
fall of the iron curtain and within the interim years AIG ended up acquiring
life insurance policy by China. The Author's counted backwards that "It is
based on the merits of the case and what strike me as fair. First, it is clear
SICO legally owns the stock. It is a private company and has an unquestionable
ownership. The original $110 million set aside has grown to a staggering $20
billion in a little 30 years”
If AIG had separate long term compensation one respected
attorney asked – “How is it that an AIG executive can also work for one or two
private companies (C.V Starr and Starr International) that do business with AIG
where he gets paid by both or all three and there is not a conflict of
interest? And how come we report all this to the SEC in our 10k and no
questions are asked? That never changed until the crisis that led to
Greenberg’s ouster”, that the offer was $600 million short of Greenberg’s
expectations “But on a de facto basis, AIG and SICO were treated as one entity
when Greenberg was head of both. One AIG director commented; “Hank saw it all
as one big pot – AIG, C.V Starr, SICO.” Berkshire Hathaway and Ace Ltd…, The
AIG suit accuses the Starr agencies of “flagrant misconduct and self-dealing
contrary to the best interest of AIG.”
The book added that, "In February 2006, AIG challenged
SICO in court to give it details of its sales of AIG shares and its plans for
future stock sales as the companies continue their messy divorce. This was in
reaction to the fact that Starr had sold about 2 million of the 311 million
shares it holds. Starr indicated it is willing to turn over information about
its sales and the disposition of these shares. In a letter to the presiding
judge, Starr International said it intends to continue selling AIG shares and
will use those proceeds for general corporate purposes, including
re-investment.”
Short view
Although a case for Hank Greenberg can be advocated in the
light of his actions during the turn of 70's, that for instance, "When the
Shah fled in 1979, AIG's vice president for the Middle East happened to be
there at the time and was caught in Iran for three weeks before getting a
flight out just before Ayatollah Khomeni returned. Shadow wasn't so lucky. The
Ayatollah government seized AIG's assets and threw him in jail." and 80's,
especially in bringing Communism back to the common market, took personal
change for releasing - Shabani from jail and getting out of Iran, engaged ILFC
- International lease finance corporation and under the auspices of SICO - instrumental in creating the Sarbanes - Oxley
laws, he was indirectly affiliated with creating and facilitating Enron, WorldCom,
etc., two American Giants that eventually collapsed within a sprain of years.
The totem issue may be seen from the 9/11/2001 collapse of world trade center,
or that the investors in conditions similar to the pyramid scams of Madoff
shunted between the new facility of (a) Deferred Compensation Profit
Participation plan (DCPPP) and SICO - Starr International which was the more
parent foundation. In a shy rear-view of the competency of DCPPP in netting
some of the payout to workers and shareholder, a foundation that owns a fat
tail of a brightened company struggle with duration and settlement pattern for
its members. This case was not that simple, the incident may have ended the
insurance package for many companies in Europe, and it was common place for the
actions taken by several Premiums based Insurance companies that seem to
falsify short term value or quotes for long term market based investment
function or derivative. An example of DCPPP based derivative is Prudential and
the 'Serpent on the Rock' that eluded the rest of us when long term view, but filed
for bankruptcy within a matter of weeks. A derivative upon the existing
shareholders is based on debts - usually a product of merger and acquisition
leading to a balance sheet problem of future returns and sometimes deferred
payment (preferred shares/debentures) suffer from the problem of liquidity. If
there is any reason why Enron, WorldCom, and several auto-industries failed in
the 2000s, it was the false bias of over-stated return. Many of these
corporations - including Lehman were affiliated directly with AIG.
WHY would you try a Sistine Chapel when Insurance is not exactly a personal item
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