Editor's note: This is a special bonus column for TheStreet.com readers. Peter Eavis' commentary regularly appears on RealMoney.com. To sign up for RealMoney, where you can read his commentary every day, please click here for a free trial.
If Eliot Spitzer really wants to clean up the insurance industry, he should look into an insurance-like product that has been used again and again to cook companies' books. Financial reinsurance is the name most frequently given to the product. It has been sold by some of the biggest names in the insurance business -- including companies run by Warren Buffett. It has played a key role in masking weaknesses at a number of companies that have later collapsed, leaving huge, previously undisclosed losses and depriving ordinary people of coverage. By its very nature, financial reinsurance is so open to abuse that any investigation of such deals could easily turn up eye-popping revelations at many large insurance companies. The product is deeply mistrusted by insurance regulators, and U.S. and state accounting rules have been written to prevent chicanery. But all indications are that financial reinsurance is still a problem. As reluctant as insurance regulators might be to see the New York attorney general on the scene, only he may have what it takes to rid the industry of this toxic product.



