WSJ - Wall Street Journal - WishList
1960s
- <WishList> - 1967 0905 - WSJ - Insurers Under Fire, Critics Say Practices of Industry Confuse Life Insurance Buyers
1980s
- <WishList> - 1986 0202 - WSJ - Your Money Matters: Return on Universal Life Insurance Can Be a Lot Less Than Expected - p. 37.
- 1987 - AP- ARIA - The Rate of Return on Universal Life Insurance - 22p - JSTOR
- <WishList> - 1988 0328 - WSJ - Your Money Matters, owners of universal life policies.
- 2011 - Book - Agent Ethics and Responsibilities - Michael Lustig, Denise Iona
- On Monday, March 28, 1988, a “Wall Street Journal” column entitled Your Money Matters, told a story about disenchanted owners of universal life policies.
- 2011 - Book - Agent Ethics and Responsibilities - Michael Lustig, Denise Iona
2000s
- <WishList?> - 2008 1009 - WSJ - Further Loan To AIG Shows Fed Miscalculated Risks, By Liam Pleven, Carrick Mollenkamp and Craig Karmin - [link]
- Doug Slape, Texas Insurance Commission
- <WishList> - 2008 1030 - WSJ - Securities-Lending Sector Feels Credit Squeeze, by Karmin and Leslie Scism
- <WishList> - 2008 1031 - WSJ - Behind Fall, Risk Models Failed to Pass Real-WorId Test, byCarrie Mollenkamp, Serena Ng, Liam Pleven, and Randall Smith, <and/or 1103 2008>
2010s
- 2010 0629 - LC - Transatlantic vs AIG - Affirmation of Anthony J. Albanese - 116p
- 78. AIG Investments senior executive and then-AIG Chief Investment Officer Win Neuger was instrumental in the decision.
- <WishList> - As reported by the Wall Street Journal on February 5, 2009, "Mr. Neuger and Kevin McGinn, who has been AIG's chief credit officer since 2004, signed off on the proposal, agreeing in a memo that the guidelines didn't subject the [Program] portfolio to undue risk."
- 78. AIG Investments senior executive and then-AIG Chief Investment Officer Win Neuger was instrumental in the decision.
- 2010 0202 - WSJ - What I Learned at the AIG Meltdown: State Insurance Regulation Wasn’t the Problem, Eric Dinallo - [link]
- [<WishList>: Bonk: What Newspaper is this from?] - "State laws segregate the assets needed to protect policyholders within the highly regulated subsidiaries at AIG and if they were to fail, state guarantee funds exist to ensure claims are paid. Have Fed and Treasury staff . . . studied state . . . insurance regulatory schemes and deemed them inadequate?"