Federal
regulators said Tuesday they have unanimously agreed to subject
insurance giant American International Group and GE Capital to tougher
government scrutiny and financing requirements because they could pose a
threat to the financial system in a crisis.composite resinThe
Financial Stability Oversight Council gave final approval to the
designations of the two non-bank financial companies as "systemically
important"— the first such action taken under the 2010 Dodd-Frank
financial reform act.carbon sheets It
means the firms will be regulated by the Federal Reserve and will have
to maintain larger capital reserves, among other requirements.tyre changer The
council said it voted Monday.The oversight council, an interagency
panel formed after the 2008 financial crisis and headed by Treasury
Secretary Jacob Lew, tentatively identified the companies as
systemically important in early June. A third company that received the
preliminary designation, Prudential Financial, said last week it would
appeal the decision."Today, the council has taken a decisive step to
address threats to U.S. financial stability and create a safer and more
resilient financial system," Lew said in a statement.
In
a statement, AIG said that it "did not contest this designation and
welcomes it."GE Capital said: "We have been prepared for this ...
decision. We have strong capital and liquidity positions, and we are
already supervised by the Fed. We are prepared to work with the Fed and
(the council) on the implementation of this designation."Some financial
analysts have said the designations could make it more difficult for
companies to buy back shares and raise dividends.During the financial
crisis, the troubles of some non-bank firms threatened the U.S.
financial system and the broader economy. AIG, for instance, nearly shut
down because of the obligations it assumed from its sale of
credit-default swaps,Vintage faucets which
provided insurance against the risk that certain mortgage-backed
securities would default. The firm was rescued by a $182 billion federal
bailout.In a report explaining its ruling, the stability council said
AIG's life insurance and retirement investment products have "features
that could make them vulnerable to rapid and early withdrawals by
policyholders."
Such
withdrawals could force AIG to sell "a substantial portion" of its
"large portfolio" of corporate and foreign bonds and asset-backed
securities. That could disrupt broader financial markets, spread to
other insurance providers and cause significant losses among numerous
AIG customers and counterparties to its financial contracts, the council
said.The panel also cited AIG's position as the nation's top commercial
insurance underwriter, noting that a shutdown of the unit "could be
protracted and disorderly."GE Capital, meanwhile, is a large provider of
commercial paper, which is short-term debt used by corporations to fund
daily operations and purchased by money-market funds. Financial
troubles at the company could trigger a run on money market funds and a
broader withdrawal of investments from the commercial paper market, the
council said.Like a big bank, the company is also a major holder of
assets,tyre equipments such
as loans, and financial troubles could force it to quickly sell the
assets, driving down their prices and causing losses for other financial
firms. Since it's a large provider of credit to middle-market
companies, distress at GE Capital could hurt those borrowers during a
weak economy or financial-industry troubles, the council said.
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