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Timothy Geithner and BlackRock Inc.A Former Employer’s Business Associate Wins No-Bid Contracts
The AIG bonus fiasco cast a critical eye on Geithner. The benefactors of the bailouts he administered at the New York Federal Reserve Bank deserve equal scrutiny.
The American International Group has become a symbol for the corruption and greed that permeates Wall Street through their repeated abuse of taxpayer provided funds. The national outpouring of rage that AIG invoked was unparalleled by even Bernard Madoff. Popular discourse has focused on the $70 billion allocated to AIG through the Bush administration’s Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). However, the TARP funds provided to AIG pale in comparison to the financing the Federal Reserve Bank of New York extended to AIG while under Timothy Geithner’s leadership. Geithner injected AIG with capital from the Federal Reserve in both September and November of 2008. As of May 2009, AIG has received a total of $123.8 billion from the Federal Reserve. Geithner and AIG have many mutual friendships in their professional circle. From 1985-1988 Geithner was an employee of the Kissinger Associates, an international consulting firm devoted to providing advice and advocacy to their clients, which includes helping them to develop strategic partnerships and investment opportunities across the globe. The Kissinger Associates has been the target of numerous conspiracy theories, due to their secretive nature. Reportedly a clause in the contract with the Kissinger Associates prevents their clients from revealing their relationship. According to Henry Kissinger, Geithner was hired to help research a book. During the 1980s, the Kissinger Associates was an extremely small firm with only 25 employees, including Geithner and Henry Kissinger’s bodyguards. AIG’s relationship with the Kissinger Associates dates back to the time period when Geithner was an employee. In 1987, AIG appointed Henry Kissinger Chairman of their International Advisory Board. In 2000, AIG and Kissinger Associates launched a joint venture to provide financial advisory services to corporations. The third partner in the venture was the Blackstone Group, which has grown into one of the largest alternative asset management firms in the world. Pete Peterson, the co-founder of the Blackstone Group, was responsible for recruiting Geithner for the position of President of the New York Federal Reserve, which he filled from 2003 until his appointment as Treasury Secretary. An offshoot of the Blackstone Group, BlackRock Inc., received numerous no-bid contracts from the New York Federal Reserve in the buy-out of Bear Stearns, and the bailout of AIG devised by Geithner. In 1988, Laurence Fink launched BlackRock Inc. as a money management division of Blackstone. In 1993, BlackRock Inc. separated from the Blackstone Group to operate as an autonomous firm, and currently manages $1.28 trillion in assets. In April 2008, BlackRock Inc. received a no-bid contract worth $71.3 million from Geithner to manage the $30 billion in assets the New York Federal Reserve acquired from Bear Stearns to facilitate its buy-out by JP Morgan Chase. The deal came under fire from the Senate Banking Committee, and Geithner explained that the no-bid contract was a result of the frantic conditions under which the buy-out was negotiated. However, in October 2008, BlackRock received two no-bid contracts of an undisclosed amount to manage the assets the New York Federal Reserve acquired as part of its $123.8 billion bailout of AIG. BlackRock Inc. has applied to the Treasury Department to become the main manager of the Public-Private Investment Program created by Geithner.
The copyright of the article Timothy Geithner and BlackRock Inc. in American Affairs is owned by Abigail Adams. Permission to republish Timothy Geithner and BlackRock Inc. in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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