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Greenberg seeks chance to bid on AIG assets

NEW YORK
Tue Sep 30, 2008 10:18pm EDT

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CV Star, Inc. Chairman and CEO and former AIG Chairman and CEO Maurice Greenberg speaks at a luncheon on American competitiveness in the global market at the New York Law School in New York, April 24, 2006. REUTERS/Keith Bedfordd

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Maurice Greenberg, former chief executive of American International Group (AIG.N), has asked the company's current chief executive Edward Liddy for the chance to bid on AIG assets as the company seeks to repay an emergency loan from the federal government.

Liddy took the helm of AIG, once the world's largest insurer, two weeks ago, after the government agreed to lend AIG $85 billion dollars in exchange for a 79.9 percent stake in the company to stave off potential bankruptcy protection.

AIG has been preparing to sell off assets to begin paying off that loan as a group of shareholders seeks to keep control of the company. Among the assets AIG is considering selling is its aircraft leasing unit, reinsurer Transatlantic Holdings, and London City Airport, according to reports.

Greenberg made the request in a letter dated Sept 29, and said the process of the selling of assets has been taking place "without transparency and without providing the opportunity for the participation of alternative purchasers" that would help AIG get the best price for shareholders.

The authenticity of the letter, first reported by the Wall Street Journal's Website on Tuesday, was verified by Greenberg's spokesman Glen Rochkind.

In the letter, Greenberg told Liddy he has a fiduciary duty to obtain the best possible price and "you cannot do so by ignoring offers from qualified potential purchasers."

"AIG welcomes any reasonable expressions of interest in the businesses we plan to sell," said AIG spokesman Joe Norton, who confirmed Liddy's receipt of Greenberg's letter. Norton declined to comment further.

Greenberg left AIG in 2005 following an accounting scandal under the threat of prosecution from then New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. He has denied any wrongdoing.

(Reporting by Phil Wahba, additional reporting by Lilla Zuill; editing by Bernard Orr and Carol Bishopric)



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