The Times West Virginian

West Virginia

October 4, 2008

State eyes suing Wall Street firms over financial losses

CHARLESTON — West Virginia is considering suing investment firms at the center of the national financial crisis to recoup millions of dollars in losses to its multibillion-dollar portfolio.

Gov. Joe Manchin has asked his staff to research possible legal action following a briefing last month from the state’s the Investment Management Board. The board manages the portfolio, the bulk of which reflects public employee pension funds. Its returns also fund retiree health benefits, workers’ compensation, insurance for cities and counties and prepaid tuition programs.

“I want somebody to pay,” Manchin said.

At least one public pension fund has already filed such a lawsuit. The City of New Orleans Employees’ Retirement System sued AIG directors and key executives on Sept. 17 in Delaware Chancery Court. The action came one day after the global insurance giant received an $85 billion loan from the U.S. government in exchange for a 79.9 percent equity stake.

That lawsuit seeks to recover for AIG’s shareholders “its staggering losses from its exposure to and grossly imprudent risk-taking in the subprime lending market.”

West Virginia’s investment holdings include stocks and bonds in big Wall Street players whose bankruptcies, forced sales or government takeovers have punctuated the ongoing financial crisis: AIG, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch and Washington Mutual.

The board bought those securities over time for a total of $95.2 million, according to its latest figures. Those securities amount to a fraction of a percent of the portfolio’s $10.9 billion value. But their value had dropped by nearly $23 million as of Aug. 31 from the time they were purchased.

Manchin said the firms should be held accountable if they breached their duties to shareholders. He said the state also may target executives from those financial firms who pocketed hefty exit packages, without singling out any particular company or individual.

“It’s outrageous. We should be looking at the people who walked away with the money,” Manchin said.

Manchin and other officials had touted signs Tuesday that West Virginia can weather the financial crisis: a larger-than-average “rainy day” fund, healthy revenue collections and a sufficient pool of on-hand cash. But besides investment losses, his administration said the turmoil has at least delayed the sale of bonds for upcoming highway and college campus construction projects.

Spokeswoman Lara Ramsburg said the governor is assessing whether Friday’s $700 billion government bailout measure, passed by Congress and signed by President Bush, will help that market.

“We don’t expect an overnight fix but hopefully this will start things moving again,” Ramsburg said Friday.

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West Virginia
  • Three aging state power plants to close

    FirstEnergy Corp. announced Wednesday it will shut down three aging coal-fired power plants in West Virginia later this year.
    The company’s Monongahela Power subsidiary will retire the Albright, Willow Island and Rivesville power stations by Sept. 1, affecting a total of 105 workers.

    February 9, 2012

  • Bills would ban children from tanning, tattoos

    West Virginia lawmakers are looking to protect children from unhealthy decisions and to give parents more say in their children’s body art choices.
    Bills moving through the Legislature would set the minimum age minors can receive their first tattoo and would ban indoor tanning for all children.

    February 9, 2012

  • Hackers post officers’ personal information

    Hackers affiliated with the group Anonymous obtained personal information for more than 150 police officers from an old website of the West Virginia Chiefs of Police Association and posted the data online.
    The FBI is investigating, said William Roper, the association’s president and the police chief of Ranson said.

    February 9, 2012

  • Bill would clarify secretary of state’s power

    A West Virginia legislator wants state law to say clearly that the secretary of state has the authority to verify whether candidates running for election are eligible to hold office.
    Sen. Clark Barnes, R-Randolph, introduced a bill Tuesday that would allow the secretary to refuse to certify candidates and keep them off the ballot if they don’t meet all the legal and constitutional requirements to serve.

    February 8, 2012

  • USDA kills 8 coyotes at University Town Centre

    U.S. Department of Agriculture employees have killed eight coyotes in a hilltop shopping center complex near Morgantown. They aren’t sure how many remain nearby.

    February 7, 2012

  • Texting bill evolves, heads to House

    West Virginia drivers could get a ticket for texting or talking on their cellphone while driving under a bill the Senate unanimously approved Monday.

    February 7, 2012

  • W.Va. texting bill evolves, heads to House

    The Senate has approved a bill that would allow police to ticket drivers for texting or talking on their cellphones while on the road.

    February 6, 2012

  • Report: Residents lacking savings

    A nonprofit group says nearly one in five West Virginia residents have almost no savings or other assets to weather a financial crisis.

    February 6, 2012

  • Lawmakers navigate lobby ban, social media

    In this era of Twitter and smartphones, citizens and lobbyists alike have all sorts of ways to reach out to lawmakers at a moment’s notice. But the West Virginia Legislature has rules meant to insulate its members from last-minute pressures while they’re debating and voting on bills.

    February 6, 2012

  • Firm shows off ‘Guardian Angel’ for miners

    A West Virginia company is working on a piece of equipment designed to keep miners safer.
    Trinity Resources, headquartered in Putnam County, demonstrated its a mobile mine safety chamber this week at the West Virginia Mining Symposium in Charleston.

    February 5, 2012

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