Here is $500,000 to discuss risk management

Oh dear. I suspect that this is only the start of a cavalcade of naming and shaming of Wall Street companies involved in the financial crisis. It is also very bad news for all of those multi-million dollar pay packages and related perks.

Andrew Cuomo, the New York attorney general, has just announced his crackdown on expenses at American International Group, the insurance company that was bailed out after hitting trouble with its financial products business.

Here are the painful details, from Mr Cuomo’s press release this afternoon:

Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo met today with Edward M. Liddy, the new Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of American International Group, Inc. (“AIG”) In a candid discussion, the Attorney General laid out his serious concerns regarding executive compensation issues and exorbitant expenses at AIG.

The meeting in the Attorney General’s New York City Offices occurred one day after Attorney General Cuomo informed AIG that it must recover improper bonuses and other payments and perks from its former executives or Cuomo would do so pursuant to New York law.

During the meeting, Mr Liddy agreed to take several significant actions with respect to expenditures at AIG. First, AIG has agreed to provide the New York Attorney General’s Office with an accounting of all compensation paid to its senior executives and has agreed to assist the Attorney General’s Office in recovering any illegal expenditures. This includes all forms of compensation paid to former CEO Martin Sullivan and the former head of the Financial Products Unit, Joseph Cassano.

Second, AIG has agreed to establish a Special Governance Committee within AIG which will institute new expense management controls. Also, AIG will be issuing today a new Expense Policy Guidebook. These controls and protections will be designed at the Board level to prevent any future unwarranted expenditures, such as salaries, bonuses, stock options, severance payments, gratuities, benefits, junkets, and perks. The new controls will include direct supervision by Chief Administrative Officer Richard Booth.

Third, AIG has agreed to take several immediate actions. Effective today, AIG will not make any payments pursuant to the multi-million dollar employment agreement of Steven Bensinger, the company’s chief financial officer, who will be leaving AIG.

Attorney General Cuomo has specifically asked AIG not to make payments pursuant to that agreement in light of the Attorney General’s ongoing review of the propriety of such payments.

AIG has also agreed to immediately cancel all junkets or perks which are not strictly justified by legitimate business needs. AIG will be cancelling more than 160 conferences and events, some exceeding more than $750,00 per event, for a total savings of more than $8 million. Events being cancelled include:

● A “Best Operator” Conference scheduled in Las Vegas and costing approximately $750,000

● A Risk Management Conference scheduled for October 2008 at the Ritz Carlton in Half Moon Bay costing approximately $500,000

● A sales conference at Sea Island scheduled for November 2008 costing approximately $350,000; and

● A meeting in Scottsdale, Arizona scheduled for January 2009 costing approximately $190,000

A risk management conference that would have cost $500,000? I wonder if they were planning to discuss reputational risk?

On a broader level, there are an awful lot of Wall Street and investor conferences in hot places that fill up plenty of resort hotels across the US. I suspect the trading outlook for those hotels is dimming as we speak.

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John Gapper is an associate editor and the chief business commentator of the FT. He has worked for the FT since 1987, covering labour relations, banking and the media. He is co-author, with Nicholas Denton, of All That Glitters, an account of the collapse of Barings in 1995.

Andrew Hill is an associate editor and the management editor of the FT. He is a former City editor, financial editor, comment and analysis editor, New York bureau chief, foreign news editor and correspondent in Brussels and Milan.

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