AIG To Pay $8 Million to Settle Lawsuit Over Oregon Pension Fund Losses

February 26, 2010

The Oregon Public Employee Retirement Fund will recover losses that were attributable to a pattern of poor disclosure and bid-rigging by insurance giant American International Group Inc. (AIG), under a settlement announced by State Treasurer Ben Westlund and Attorney General John Kroger.

The company agreed to pay $8 million to settle the lawsuit, which alleged securities fraud. The suit was filed by the State Treasurer’s Office and Public Employee Retirement System Board.

“We go to great lengths to protect Oregonians and their public investments,” said Treasurer Westlund. “

The State Treasury, with the guidance of the Oregon Investment Council, manages the state’s investment portfolio. The largest fund is the Oregon Public Employee Retirement Fund, which is invested globally and had a value of $51.5 billion as of Jan. 31. Oregon’s public employee retirement system (PERS) has roughly 320,000 working and retired members, including police officers, firefighters and schoolteachers, who rely on the pension fund for a substantial part of their retirement security.

According to the initial legal complaint, AIG’s actions caused the pension fund to lose about $15 million because shares of the company were inflated in value between 2000 and 2005. The too-high price was caused because the company repeatedly failed to disclose unethical and improper activities, including a bid-rigging scheme with other insurers, the lawsuit said.

AIG was one of the major players internationally in the proliferation of credit default swaps, a debt accounting maneuver that has been cited as a catalyst for the market collapse of 2008 and 2009.

The company was found to have employed more of the credit default swaps than they could pay for, and it failed to properly account for that debt in regulatory filings.

The value of AIG stock declined repeatedly after the corporate behavior was unearthed, and after the company corrected what were then-misleading corporate disclosure documents.

AIG admits no guilt as part of the settlement. The state will receive the $8 million in March. AIG is a Delaware company whose principal location is in New York.

Source: AG

Subscribe Like this article?
Subscribe to our free email newsletter.

Latest Comments

  • February 26, 2010 at 2:44 am
    Oregonian says:
    PERS (Oregon Public Employee Retirement Fund) has had issues for a long time with being underfunded for the massive benefits they provide public employees. It's no suprise the... read more
  • February 26, 2010 at 12:30 pm
    Dawn says:
    Not only did they have to know they were going to lose this lawsuit, they are handing out over $100M in bonuses, they lost $8B and they - get this- I would laugh if it wasn't ... read more
  • February 26, 2010 at 11:52 am
    wudchuck says:
    how many more news do we need to hear? now we as a taxpayer/stockholder, we have to now pay 8 million out for this lawsuit. how many other states will file a lawsuit as well... read more
See all comments

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

More News
More News Features