Sitting suspended at 11.37 a.m. and resumed at 12.07 p.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT:
| Deputy Pearse Doherty, | Senator Sean D. Barrett, |
| Deputy Joe Higgins, | Senator Michael D’Arcy, |
| Deputy Michael McGrath, | Senator Marc MacSharry, |
| Deputy Eoghan Murphy, | Senator Susan O’Keeffe. |
| Deputy Kieran O’Donnell, | |
| Deputy John Paul Phelan, |
Quinlan Private – Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Mr. Derek Quinlan, former Chief Executive and Founder, Quinlan Private.
Chairman
| Thank you. Before we commence there, do you have your phone switched off, Mr. Quinlan, have you? | 390 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Pardon? | 391 |
Chairman
| Do you have your phone switched off? | 392 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Oh I do, yes. | 393 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. All right, with that said so, I’ll get down to business and maybe if I could ask you to make your opening remarks please, Mr. Quinlan, to the committee. | 394 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Mr. Quinlan. We’ll commence with the questioning this morning, so if I can invite Deputy Joe Higgins. Deputy, you have 25 minutes. | 403 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| So just to clarify, are you putting all this then on the macro-financial situation internationally and—– | 406 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, Ireland was … in my view, Ireland was affected by the sub-prime crisis. Banks here were very seriously … because liquidity in the banking system dried up very, very quickly. | 407 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 409 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, in a mixed-use development … it would contain an element of retail, it might contain some warehousing, storage, all the things that would make a mixed-use development. | 411 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. Would land earmarked for future development come into … under that? | 412 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No. | 413 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| What would that be in? | 414 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, at the time, as you can see there, at that time, we didn’t have land for future development or very little, I would suggest. | 415 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| And in general how—– | 418 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| In general, Mr. Quinlan, you financed this large accumulation from a range of banks, Irish and international, would that be true? | 420 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 421 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| On the other hand, Mr. Quinlan, would the property bubbles and crashes, for example, in the Scandinavian countries in the 80s and 90s, would that not have given you pause for thought? | 428 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| Sorry what page? | 433 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| And was the use of extreme leverage a factor in the crash? | 436 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. Mr. Quinlan, speaking in general terms, the average loan discount of loans transferred by the banks to NAMA went from the 30% suggested initially by the banks to 58%, the write-down. | 438 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 439 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Did that size of discount surprise you or Quinlan Private at the time? | 440 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Well, the face loans … the face value of the loans before they were transferred and to when NAMA took them over was a haircut of 57%. | 442 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, I don’t understand, Deputy. Is that based on €74 million of debt—– | 443 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 444 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| —–or the cost price of the property? | 445 |
Chairman
| Mark to market—– | 446 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 447 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| The write-down was—– | 448 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, no—– | 449 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–NAMA told us in evidence—– | 450 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, I don’t understand. | 451 |
Chairman
| The book value, Mr. Quinlan. | 452 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| The book value? | 453 |
Chairman
| The book value, yes. | 454 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| The book value. But the book value, Mr. Chairman, could have been more than €74 million. That was the value of the debt. | 455 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Well, in any case, it was, would you agree, a substantial haircut? | 456 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Oh yes. | 457 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| In … do you agree that there was a bubble? Would you call it a property bubble that existed in the 2000s? | 458 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. Mr. Quinlan, in evidence to this inquiry, a US regulator and financial prosecutor, Professor Bill Black, you may have heard of him; perhaps you didn’t? | 460 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, I haven’t heard of him. | 461 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Is this going to come up on the screen? | 463 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, what page there? | 466 |
Chairman
| Yes, we need to assist the witness and just show him on a page where it is, Deputy. | 467 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| It’s in the very first of his oral evidence, of Mr. Black’s oral—– | 468 |
Chairman
| Yes, and what page? | 469 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| It’s page 1 and 2 from my—– | 470 |
Chairman
| Okay, all right. | 471 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I’m on page 260 here. | 472 |
Chairman
| Yes, that’s all right. | 473 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes, if you just … sorry, we are nearly there, just keep going … scrolling up, please. Now, yes, exactly. The last paragraph there, Mr. … oh, stop, stop. | 474 |
Chairman
| Yes, “Here is the”. | 475 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Okay. | 476 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| So, “Here is the recipe”; can you see that? | 477 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, I can see that now. | 478 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| Question, Deputy. | 483 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Do you recognise any prominent features that were manifest in the Irish property bubble and bust from Mr. Black’s theoretical outline there, Mr. Quinlan? | 484 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
| This is outside the terms of reference here, Mr. Quinlan—– | 488 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, so I’m saying … I’m answering the question, that the Deputy is not aware—– | 489 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 490 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| —–that our intention had nothing to do with what we ended up going for planning. We wanted to—– | 491 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes, it’s interesting, but—– | 492 |
Chairman
| Let’s get back to the questions of today now. | 493 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Pardon? | 494 |
Chairman
| I need to get back on to the reason why you’re—– | 495 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes I think Mr. Quinlan is happy to discuss this issue. | 496 |
Chairman
| Yes I am, but I need a report at the end of this work as well. | 497 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| No, I didn’t suggest that. | 500 |
Chairman
| Deputy. | 501 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry. | 502 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| I didn’t suggest that, but do you accept that there’s … it’s the land prices and the deals that were done at the time added hugely to the burden of young people trying to buy a home? | 503 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
| Finally, Deputy. | 505 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry. | 506 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, no, no. I didn’t say that. I said it was … I didn’t say that. I said we donated … let me get my statement. There wasn’t … it wasn’t to four candidates, Deputy. | 508 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Well then to four constituencies—– | 509 |
Chairman
| We need to get accurate … we need to get it accurate, Deputy, if you put it out there. | 510 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Well, it’s … I’m … | 511 |
Chairman
| 2.12 in the Mr. Quinlan’s statement, it said that—– | 512 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| “We made a contribution to the English Conservative Party for four seats at £5,000 each at a dinner with David Cameron.” | 513 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, that’s correct. | 514 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Not from the Department of Finance or anybody like that, Mr. Chairman, no. | 520 |
Chairman
| Where was the assumption of a soft landing coming from? | 521 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
| Right, thank you. Senator O’Keeffe. | 523 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Thank you, Chair. Mr. Quinlan, you explained to us at the start that you qualified as a chartered accountant and that your first property deal was in Tallaght. And then you moved in obviously—– | 524 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I … yes … | 525 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And as you say word of mouth, Mr. Quinlan, does that mean that you would approach people or that—– | 528 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No. | 529 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| ——the clients would approach—– | 530 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| The clients would——- | 531 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–you through each other? | 532 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And—– | 534 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| It was built from very, very small beginnings. | 535 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And did you see then, as you went through the ‘90s into 2000 and so on, could you see an increase in the number of your high net worth clients, were they growing all the time? | 536 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, they were growing. | 537 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And what did that tell you about the state of the economy and the business that you were in? | 538 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And as you were—– | 540 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| And—– | 541 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–managing their financial affairs—– | 542 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 543 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–were you just offering your expertise on the property side by now that had developed substantially or were you also offering other advices about financial matters? | 544 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, in general financial matters yes, but not … property was the one that we had the knowledge in and the expertise. So nobody ever asked me about what shares they should buy. | 545 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And as you say, part of what you were doing in 1989-1990 that was different was that you were forecasting where things would be and—— | 546 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| For the client. | 547 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| For the client. | 548 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
| You’re giving colour now, Mr. Quinlan—– | 552 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, I apologise. | 553 |
Chairman
| —–to Senator O’Keeffe. | 554 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I apologise. | 555 |
Chairman
| So if we can stay on the evidence—– | 556 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I apologise. | 557 |
Chairman
| —–if you don’t mind, please. Okay. Thank you. | 558 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So you knew Tallaght, so you were encouraged to do that—– | 559 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 560 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–but what about the urban renewal scheme in Tallaght? Was that—– | 561 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| That was … yes. | 562 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Was that an attraction? | 563 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So were you one of those people who believed in the urban renewal scheme, in the town renewal scheme, in the—– | 565 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And did you, Mr. Quinlan, ever lobby to retain those schemes and those allowances? | 567 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Absolutely, I have never lobbied any politician in my life. | 568 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Ever? | 569 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Ever. | 570 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. | 571 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| And that includes Mr. Cameron. | 572 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. Is it fair to say that you became known as a man who was good at understanding those schemes and could … and could, if you like, if you’ll excuse the parlance, work your way around them? | 573 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. | 575 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| There was no mystery about it, in other words. | 576 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Although I think people did argue and report that you were just particularly good at it or particularly quick at it. | 577 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Maybe I was able to explain it, Senator, to the clients. | 578 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. That’s fair enough. Now, in the bookBreakfast with Anglo, Simon Kelly’s book, which I’m—– | 579 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 580 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, we bought the property and if the allowances came with the property … we never split the thing. | 582 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, that’s correct. | 584 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I don’t know the internal processes—– | 586 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| I appreciate that. | 587 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And did you see, at all, any change in the way banks behaved towards you? Now, I don’t mean their internal processes, because clearly you couldn’t say—– | 589 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I think, you know—– | 590 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–but you were the client, if you like. | 591 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But possibly not … possibly not the case 20 years later or 15 years later, but anyway. | 593 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. No. | 594 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But my point is, did you see a change? Or how did the banks behave towards you now that you were, if you like, a player? | 595 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So they were coming to you. | 597 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| They were coming to me. | 598 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And what would they say, Mr. Quinlan? What were they … how would they do that? Take you to lunch or—– | 599 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| “We want to do … we want to do business with you.” | 600 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Right. | 601 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I, in general, refuse all corporate invites, in general. I’m making a generalised statement. But I got to know lots of very serious bankers. | 602 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And what would make you choose, if you like, one serious banker out of another? If all of us here are bankers, why would you choose one or two? What … what … what attracted you? | 603 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And how, given that they were obviously competing for your business—– | 605 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 606 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| If I may, Chairman, just illustrate what I was not aware of that was happening in the middle ‘90s when we first got involved in the IFSC, and—– | 608 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Too long ago, Chair? | 609 |
Chairman
| No, we’ll facilitate … like, if … if … if … if answers are drifting—– | 610 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I want to—– | 611 |
Chairman
| I have to allow the … the questioner, but I do need to return to questioning here at some stage or another. | 612 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| All right. I apologise. | 613 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| That is the question. | 614 |
Chairman
| Mr. Quinlan, please. | 615 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| All right. | 616 |
Chairman
| Mr. Quinlan, you have the floor. | 617 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So how did you work out how to make—– | 619 |
Chairman
| When did this happen, Mr. Quinlan? Can you just give us a timeline for this, please, if you don’t mind? | 620 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Okay. Sorry. | 621 |
Chairman
| When was the period of this? | 622 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| This was in 1996. | 623 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 624 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I can go forward, Chairman. I apologise. | 625 |
Chairman
| Okay. Thank you. | 626 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| But I’m just saying, you know, we were not aware that that was happening at the time 20 years ago, or 19 years ago. | 627 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But, obviously, Mr. Quinlan, that kind of capability, I assume other sorts of arrangements that banks offered … interest only, repayment free, rolling up the interest, I mean, how—– | 628 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| It totally depended on the asset, Senator. | 629 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. | 630 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| But the German banks … I started dealing with the German banks because they were prepared to finance at less than 1% margin. | 631 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Now—– | 632 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| The increased availability of access to cheap wholesale credit—– | 634 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 635 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–has been identified as a cause of the explosion in borrowing. | 636 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 637 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| What would you … would you agree with that? | 638 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, yes, I do agree with that statement. | 639 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And did it have an adverse effect, do you believe, or not on the degree of loan risk assessment carried out by banks in the years … I’m talking here now of the 2000s, not the ‘90s? | 640 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. But—– | 642 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| And performing means that the interest was being paid and that the loan-to-value covenants that you would have signed up to at the start were being maintained. | 643 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| In the years 2002-2008 … I think is when you said you retired, is that correct? | 644 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| 2009. | 645 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| 2009, I beg your pardon. Did you observe any key differences in the way that loan applications were assessed by Irish banks? | 646 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, not really, except that the Irish banks were very keen to lend money. | 647 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Well, when you say very keen, I mean, did they show their keenness in a particular way? | 648 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, hindsight is a great thing—– | 649 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Sure, but—– | 650 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| —–there’s no doubt about it. | 651 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–you can tell us what happened. | 652 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Pardon? | 653 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| You can tell us what—– | 654 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| You know, I mean—– | 655 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. | 656 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| —–they clearly … they were all very anxious to extend their client base, extend their lending. | 657 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But … okay … we understand that and we know that but what I’m asking you is whether or not you can indicate to us how … how they did that? | 658 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I … I … well, I could tell you a story. | 659 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay, if it’s relevant. | 660 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, Mr. Chairman. Well, it’s relevant. | 661 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Thank you. | 662 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Financial institutions themselves got involved in buying property, didn’t they? | 664 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| They did. | 665 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And how did that change the market that you were operating? You were buying and selling. | 666 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, we had … we were not buying … we were not buying much property in Ireland after 2003. | 667 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Because? | 668 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Because there were opportunities in different locations out of Ireland that we felt were very attractive. | 669 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But why would you stop? I mean, you could have done both, no? | 670 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But I take it that you still followed the market here and you still obviously had some interest here and some clients here? | 672 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Oh yes, we’d clients here but we weren’t very involved in the Irish market. | 673 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So do you .. do you have a view, or not, as to the impact that financial institutions buying properties might have had on the market? | 674 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| That was a change from the way the banks—– | 676 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| That was, yes. The banks weren’t doing that, yes. | 677 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So what … why did they, do you think, why did they—– | 678 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I think they probably looked at somebody like myself and said “Well if he’s doing that, we can do it”. Banks were interested in making a profit, Senator. | 679 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, we … we had an office … we opened an office in … in London and in New York. | 681 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And did you have bankers and politicians in your—– | 682 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But the private clients themselves, did they come from a range of backgrounds? | 684 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Could financial institutions be … the … the expression “cashing out”, could they have been cashing out through buying properties? | 686 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I don’t see how they were cashing out. They were, they were trying to build the … the banks, and I’m making a generalised statement—– | 687 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. | 688 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| In your statement, Mr. Quinlan, you refer to “Ireland Inc”, I think, was the expression you used. | 690 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 691 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. You were “a big believer in the idea of “Ireland Inc”.” | 692 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| That’s right. | 693 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| How … how do you believe your … your business model and your business benefited Ireland Inc? | 694 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| What contribution do you believe developers and people in the business … what contribution did they make to the … to the crisis that we had? | 696 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And … and you said yourself you didn’t foresee that. | 700 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I didn’t foresee that, no. | 701 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I mean, I have a number of regrets. You know, I’m not living in Ireland, Senator. You know, some of my children live here. It’s not by choice and, you know, I miss Ireland every day. | 703 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I, Mr. Chairman, if I may address the Chairman, I have a commercial relationship with—– | 705 |
Chairman
| NAMA. Fair enough, and I—– | 706 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| That’s fine. | 707 |
Chairman
| And that is in your opening statement. | 708 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 709 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| That’s fine. | 710 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
| Not only no obligation but they can argue the rent after three years in a different way to an Irish tenant could argue the rent after three years. | 713 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Oh, yes, that is correct. Yes. | 714 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I believe it would have been an influencing factor; there’s no question or doubt about it. | 716 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| In my belief, yes. | 718 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. Senator Marc MacSharry. | 719 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, who said that? | 721 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Sorry, that was … it’s from the transcipt from the London court of 14 October 2010. | 722 |
Chairman
| Okay, we could be bumping outside of terms of reference now, Senator. | 723 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Can I put the question and then maybe you can—– | 724 |
Chairman
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Absolutely. So, I’ll just put the question and you can tell me then whether—– | 726 |
Chairman
| No, no … I … If you have been warned by legal that the question is already out of order, it’s out of order right now. | 727 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes. I’m referring to a statement now, okay? | 728 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 729 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, whose statement? | 730 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yours. | 731 |
Chairman
| What statement and where? | 732 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 733 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| On the first page of a statement—– | 734 |
Chairman
| Of Mr. Quinlan’s statement. | 735 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| What statement? | 736 |
Chairman
| Your opening statement, please. | 737 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Your opening statement. | 738 |
Chairman
| Your opening statement, Mr. Quinlan. | 739 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| My opening statement here? | 740 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes. It says, “On advice KPMG I moved from my home in Ireland so I could maximise the returns to my creditor banks.” So, in an article … am I allowed quote from an article? | 741 |
Chairman
| If you … The general advice I give to members is to speak to legal before they ask any questions of any witness, so if you’ve been speaking to legal in this regard—– | 742 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I wanted to maximise the returns to my creditor banks. | 744 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And how—- | 745 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| I understand. Just for the benefit of people watching at home, why would moving to another country facilitate that? | 747 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| You could minimise that by being—– | 749 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. I took that advice. | 750 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So, in your experience of the crisis, did many developers … was this a done thing? Did developers go abroad to maximise the repayment potential? | 751 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I can’t speak for any other developer. | 752 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| When one has a commercial relationship with NAMA, or they’re with NAMA, are they prohibited from buying or selling property in Ireland? | 753 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| As I believe, yes. Not selling. | 754 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. | 755 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I’ve sold property recently. | 756 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Is it your view that all people who have commercial relationships with NAMA, in the interest of full recovery for the taxpayer, should pay everything they owe? | 757 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| No, I can’t ask about specifics, so I’m asking generally, just. So I’m asking generally: do you feel that it’s reasonable that NAMA, on behalf of the people, should expect to get full payment? | 759 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| It just depends on the circumstances. | 760 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So are there circumstances where they shouldn’t? | 761 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, it depends… I mean, what is full payment? The £100 that was owed? The £74 that was owed? Or the £32 that NAMA paid, I don’t know. | 762 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Let’s say a minimum of the £74. | 763 |
Chairman
| It’s getting a bit leading, now, Senator. So, Mr. Quinlan I’ll give you a bit of space here as to where you want to go with responding. | 764 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, I can’t … If I may … You referred to my commercial relationship and I don’t wish to discuss—– | 765 |
Chairman
| Okay, so if you’ll move on Senator. | 766 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Your company put together syndicates to purchase property, isn’t that correct? | 767 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 768 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So were the investors in this, were they sophisticated investors or were they people putting in pensions or savings or … what kind of profile would—– | 769 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| The profile of the average investor would have been that they would have been sophisticated investors who knew what they were doing. | 770 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So where … Would they have gone from people like me putting in life savings to pensioners to—– | 771 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, I don’t believe we had any pensioners as clients. | 772 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Did property syndicates, in your view, contribute to the crisis? | 773 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I am not in a position—– | 776 |
Chairman
| Mr. Quinlan … Mr. Quinlan is still within the NAMA structure. The … we were very, very clear about this … in the difficulties that that creates for Mr. Quinlan in discussing any—– | 777 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| But I’m not asking about Mr. Quinlan, I’m asking about—– | 778 |
Chairman
| Yes, and Mr. Quinlan isn’t going to go into that area, I don’t think. | 779 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| That’s grand. The … the questions that I put have not been specific. | 780 |
Chairman
| Okay. No, I understand, Senator, that you have had a bit of discussion with legals before this and they’ve given you plenty of direction on a whole series of questions that you actually had. | 781 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes. Can I ask what impact, in the general sense, transfer of loans into NAMA has had on your business? | 782 |
Chairman
Senator Marc MacSharry
| No, in fairness, Chairman … Chairman, I think you might have to go into private session because the most recent—– | 784 |
Chairman
| No, I am not going into private session because—– | 785 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| —–the most recent question—– | 786 |
Chairman
| —–if you actually look at the end of Mr.—– | 787 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Chairman
| I certainly have no difficulty—– | 789 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So maybe you need to go into private session to decide why we are taking up Mr. Quinlan’s time at all today. | 790 |
Chairman
| I certainly have no difficulty—– | 791 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Chairman
| We can certainly—– | 793 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So I think we should go into private session. Maybe there might be a seconder for that around the—– | 794 |
Chairman
| I’ll actually second that, Deputy, or … Senator. | 795 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Good. Let’s go. | 796 |
Chairman
Chairman
| Please Senator, there’s just about three minutes left on the clock. Senator. | 799 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Did you find that, as your reputation grew, with your clients and so on, were banks competing? | 802 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 803 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So, did this, with the benefit of hindsight, ever affect the underwriting quality, in your view, as banks approached you to wish to finance Quinlan Private’s next deal? | 804 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. | 806 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| So you would have a significant number of banks wanting to finance what they considered to be prime real estate. | 807 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Would you have ever have had funding requests declined by financial institutions? | 808 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 809 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| At the height of activity, or—– | 810 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Oh yes, and I remember in 2005 I was very surprised when … I’d prefer not to mention the bank—– | 811 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Sure. | 812 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And was that down to the asset quality, or—– | 814 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| To this day, I don’t know and the asset quality was the best. | 815 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So it’s a mystery. | 816 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| It’s a mystery. And that is one of the few times that I can remember that there was a problem. | 817 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Next questioner is Senator Michael D’Arcy. | 818 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| You made the point, and you spoke about Mr. Greenspan and Mr. Bernanke and the losses in the sub-prime. Now the Irish banks were not exposed to the sub-prime—– | 821 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| But they were exposed to the—- | 822 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| The liquidity. | 823 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I can’t comment on the quality. I don’t know what the quality of the loan books was. | 826 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Were you aware of the market sentiment towards Irish banks prior to 2008? | 827 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Did you hear the contrarian views in the Irish media or other sources in relation to the Irish banking sector prior to 2008? | 829 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, I wouldn’t have been that guided by what was happening in the media. | 830 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Should you have been? | 831 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| As I say, we … I would have … wasn’t necessarily being guided by the media. | 832 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Did you hear of David McWilliams? | 833 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, I did. | 834 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Morgan Kelly? | 835 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 836 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| George Lee? | 837 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 838 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And you didn’t take—– | 839 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Mr. Quinlan, if I could, ask you … you said earlier that Anglo was expensive. | 843 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And you said that from your period of initial work when you left college … from … until about 1990, you were on a similar salary? | 845 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Pardon. No, I didn’t say that. | 846 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Sorry. | 847 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I said I was the only—– | 848 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Sorry. | 849 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| —–only pupil, I believe, only accountancy pupil trainee from 90 in the class of 1970 in Cooper Brothers who was earning less money 20 years later. | 850 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Would you describe that as your frugal period? | 851 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, you may describe it any way you like. | 852 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| But can I … I’m not trying to be funny but why did you go to Anglo? Why did you become one of their major clients when they were expensive? | 853 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, they changed their margins. Their … back in the early 90s, they were looking for margins over the cost of funds of around 3.5%. | 854 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And subsequent to that then, they were competitive with the other—– | 855 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| I can just revert back to your clients of Quinlan Private. What is the structure? Is there a charging structure to become a client or do they invest in particular products? | 857 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| It would be typical of what you would experience in any other accountancy practice. People were charged on the basis of time spent on their affairs. | 858 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Okay. And in terms of their investment, was their investment at risk? | 859 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Every investment that you make, there are risks, but I can’t say any particular investment was at risk. | 860 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Were there investments where there was no risk available? | 861 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| In terms of your staff or the number of staff who participated with you in business, as your numbers … as your loan book increased, did your staff numbers increase? | 863 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 864 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And did you employ more staff in terms of … to assess the risk that was potentially available with the large—– | 865 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| We believed we hired the best available professionals. | 866 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And no-one saw what was coming? | 867 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Nobody saw what was coming. | 868 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Nobody at all? | 869 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| You were in the commercial real estate market? | 871 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. It’s a totally different market. | 872 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And that was the market that Dan McLaughlin, who in evidence to this committee, said was the sector that crashed … the Irish banking sector. | 873 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I can’t comment on what Mr. McLaughlin said. | 874 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Do you have a view in relation to what he said? | 875 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| What … can you say that to me again, please? | 876 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Chairman
| There’s a phone there going off. Wherever they are, they’re coming off that microphone there, please. If you turn them off. Sorry. | 878 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, in hindsight, obviously the write-offs were of a size that nobody would have anticipated. | 880 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Pardon? | 882 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Do you regret the hubris of the Irish construction sector? | 883 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I wasn’t involved, as I said to you, in residential development in Ireland. | 884 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| In real estate, you were involved? | 885 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| We were involved in commercial real estate. Correct. | 886 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| The sector that, according to Dan McLaughlin, crashed the banking sector in Ireland. | 887 |
Chairman
| That is leading now, Senator. | 888 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| I’m not. Mr. McLaughlin made that point, Chairman. | 889 |
Chairman
| Okay. All right. | 890 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Do you regret the hubris of the Irish construction sector? | 891 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, like, I’m not hear to answer on behalf of the Irish construction sector. | 892 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| In terms of your role in the Irish development sector? | 893 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Like, what we invested in here, I believe was prime real estate. | 894 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And was it? | 895 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. The IFSC was a glowing example, in my view, of prime real estate and as I said to you earlier … as I said today, it’s a huge contributor to the Irish economy. | 896 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| How would you describe—– | 897 |
Chairman
| Wrap up there, Senator. | 898 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Just to wrap up. How would you describe the Glass Bottle site? | 899 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| A disaster. | 900 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Not prime? | 901 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Not prime. | 902 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Mr. Quinlan. Deputy John Paul Phelan. | 903 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| As a former tax adviser and inspector with the Revenue Commissioners, do you have a view as to how different Governments used tax reliefs during the boom period and in the lead-up to the boom? | 908 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| You said that you hadn’t lobbied politicians on the issue. | 910 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| That’s correct. | 911 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Had you ever spoken to any people from the Department of Finance or indeed any other civil servants? | 912 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I knew nobody in the Department of Finance. | 913 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Okay, in August 2008, you wrote inThe Irish Times that people must remain confident in Ireland—– | 914 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes—– | 915 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| —–and to quote you directly you said, ‘’The bears see no way out for Ireland. I do.” Why then, did you leave Ireland the following year? | 916 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Sorry, I believe that had the case and I’ve already explained, it was on advice from KPMG received in May 2009 to maximise the returns to my creditor banks. | 917 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Like, I can quote and I have the quotes here to reply to what the feeling was in 2006 and I can quote from any of the banks. I have all the chairmen’s statements here. I can give—– | 921 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| I’m talking about your own view. | 922 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I believed that things were … there was no … in 2006, I didn’t see any problems on the horizon—– | 923 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Okay—– | 924 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| —–and I was not alone in that. | 925 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Following the Lehmans, I think you—– | 926 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, | 927 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| —–referenced Lehmans earlier on—– | 928 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 929 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| —–did you take steps as executive chairman of QP to protect your clients? | 930 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| From … I have learned a lot of lessons. | 935 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Can you briefly summarise, because—– | 936 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I think the best lesson I’ve learned is who are your real friends, Mr. Chairman. | 937 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Do you believe that the valuation process influenced—– | 940 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I can’t … I can’t … I don’t know the answer to that question. | 941 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Okay, thank you. | 942 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| May I ask you one question, please, Mr. Chairman? | 944 |
Chairman
| Sure. | 945 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| What date is that report from? Is that with a value of view of hindsight? | 946 |
Chairman
| The—– | 947 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Or was it current? | 948 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, I understand. | 950 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I would say in certain instances, yes. | 954 |
Chairman
| Okay. All right. And did you observe any differences between the Irish banks and non-Irish banks which you engaged with in the level of rigour applied to valuation requirements? | 955 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I didn’t see any difference, from my experience of dealing with the banks. | 956 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 958 |
Chairman
| In what other jurisdictions would you have seen that model in operation? | 959 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, that was certainly operating in the UK. | 960 |
Chairman
| In the UK, which had upward-only rent reviews as well by the way. | 961 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, correct. | 962 |
Chairman
| But in any other jurisdiction where there wasn’t upward-only rent reviews? | 963 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Not … no, not … certainly not in Germany, Mr. Chairman. | 964 |
Chairman
| What was the requirement in Germany? | 965 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| In Germany … the German banks operated in … they gave you the cheapest money but they had very strict terms in terms of loan-to-value or interest cover. | 966 |
Chairman
| Did Germany have a property crash any way similar to what happened in Ireland? | 967 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Nothing like … nothing … nobody … nobody, unfortunately … I mean, what’s happened in Ireland has been devastating. | 968 |
Chairman
| Yes. Was the Irish property crash a domestic creation or was it, on balance, an international phenomenon? | 969 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I believe the sub-prime was a huge factor in it. | 970 |
Chairman
| Okay. Is it … are you saying, on balance, that it was an international calamity or that it was home grown? | 971 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| That was an American phenomenon really. | 972 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, I personally was not … yes. | 976 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| The tax incentives definitely had, in my view, a positive impact in terms of the urban renewal, which was the whole purpose of the tax incentives. | 978 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, home buyers and retailers fall into a totally different … and we … remember incentives … that the urban renewal incentives were severely restricted in Mr. McCreevy’s budget of 1997. | 980 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| We never availed of any investment in property with tax breaks in this period. | 982 |
Chairman
| But given your familiarity with the market, there were tax breaks out there and you would have been familiar with them? | 983 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| There were and they were to encourage investment in certain parts of the country, as far as I’m aware. | 984 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 985 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| But I didn’t … we didn’t—– | 986 |
Chairman
| So you weren’t a beneficiary of any of the tax breaks? | 987 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Absolutely not. | 988 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. Deputy Higgins. | 989 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| So it was intense competition? | 992 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I think there is no doubt about that, yes. | 993 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| The … I wasn’t involved in the selection of the awards, Deputy. And, in hindsight, clearly, as I’ve said earlier, the Irish Glass Bottle site was a disaster. | 997 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| And the media role? | 998 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Pardon? | 999 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Was the media … play a role in the development of the bubble, do you think? | 1000 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Probably. | 1001 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Absolutely. We didn’t advertise at all. | 1005 |
Chairman
| Okay, right. Senator O’Keeffe. | 1006 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| That is correct. | 1008 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And what happened? | 1009 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| It wasn’t the … it wasn’t possible to deal … Goldman Sachs were advising the Nationwide and it was an impossible situation. | 1010 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Because? | 1011 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Because the … at the time, from memory, and this is now, remember, I think in 2006 or 2007, the whole thing … it was a floating morass and I decided that this was not one for us. | 1012 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Chairman
| —–now Senator. | 1014 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| I don’t think, Mr. Chairman, it’s fair to—– | 1016 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Derek Quinlan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Indeed, but did the relevant tax laws at the time allow you—– | 1019 |
Chairman
| Finish up, Senator. | 1020 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| The tax … yes, the tax certainly … it would never have worked because the equity was about €14 million which back in 1997, was a lot of money. | 1021 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Thank you. | 1022 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Oh, in … well obviously in Ireland, although we, you know, we had loss … you know, we didn’t have a huge investment in Ireland by 2008, but Ireland clearly was not a good place to be. | 1024 |
Chairman
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, it was certainly … it was part of something globally, but nobody would have foreseen how property values fell so quickly here. | 1026 |
Chairman
| But if there’s a global dilemma, there is a kind of a global average. | 1027 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes. | 1028 |
Chairman
| Was your impact in Ireland average of a global dilemma? | 1029 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No, in Ireland the impact was much more severe. | 1030 |
Chairman
| So, evidentially, how would you say that Ireland then was part of a global property crash when you, financially, were impacted more here, significantly, than any other jurisdiction? | 1031 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes, because the losses here, Mr. Chairman, were much greater. | 1032 |
Chairman
| Why? | 1033 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Well, I can’t answer why property prices fell so much, but they did. | 1034 |
Chairman
| Were they overpriced? | 1035 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| At the time they didn’t look overpriced, Mr. Chairman. But, in hindsight it’s easy to say, I mean, I gave you the example of the IFSC, the value went to €15 million in 2010. | 1036 |
Chairman
| Was there anywhere else in the world where the difference between what the high end and low actually was? | 1037 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Not that I’m aware of. | 1038 |
Chairman
| Okay. And would that make Ireland unique in that regard? | 1039 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| Yes we were unique. We are still unique. | 1040 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. I’m going to bring matters to a conclusion, Mr. Quinlan. I’d like to invite you to make any closing remarks or any further comments that you would so wish. | 1041 |
Mr. Derek Quinlan
| No I have no further comment to make. | 1042 |
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 2.19 p.m. and resumed at 3.15 p.m.