The Committee met at 09.30 a.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, |
PricewaterhouseCoopers – Mr. Denis O’Connor and Mr. Aidan Walsh
Chairman
The following witnesses were sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Mr. Denis O’Connor, Partner, Advisory Service, PricewaterhouseCoopers.
Mr. Aidan Walsh, Partner, Advisory Service, PricewaterhouseCoopers.
Chairman
| Now once again, Mr. O’Connor and Mr. Walsh, welcome this morning and if I can invite you, in whichever order you like, to make your opening remarks to the committee, please. | 19 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
| Thank you, Mr. O’Connor. Mr. Walsh. | 27 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Mr. Walsh, and we’ll get questioning under way, and in doing so, if I can invite Senator Sean Barrett. Senator, you’ve 25 minutes. | 32 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And how did they react, Mr. O’Connor, when you informed them of your opinion? | 35 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| They were aware of the … that the issue was out there, but when they saw it coming from a third-party independent, they knew there was … that the numbers were, were accurate. | 36 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Because you only had – what nine days, wasn’t it – to come up with all that information? I think you said the first meeting was on 19 September and you … and you reported back to them on the—– | 37 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That is—– | 38 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| —–on the 28th. | 39 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That is correct, Senator, but on liquidity the numbers were easy to obtain. | 40 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Was there a sense of urgency? | 43 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes, extreme urgency. | 44 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| They were really worried by that state. | 45 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 46 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And, were there views expressed by IFSRA that you can recall from those meetings? | 47 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. The Department of Finance, what contribution did they make to those meetings? | 49 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| They were all offering the same type of advice. | 50 |
Chairman
| Which was what? | 51 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That we had only one attempt at this and we had to get it right. | 52 |
Chairman
| Okay, right so. | 53 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| The NTMA had concerns about putting any of the pension funds on deposit in Anglo. Was … did they feel vindicated or did they say anything to that effect? | 54 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That wasn’t discussed really. | 55 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes, but what was their contribution because they seem, within the public sector, it was seen as somewhat further away, I suppose, than some of the other bodies that you were meeting with. | 56 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Maybe they did but at that point in time we were two days before impact, as the man says, so we were all in the same boat, actually just put a plan in place, as opposed to look back historically. | 57 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And the Taoiseach’s Department, were they represented on that … on that group that you reported to? | 58 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No. | 59 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| No, not that I recall. | 60 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| So, because of the seriousness it was decided to, to extend the exercise to all the six banks, was that the … that was the decision on that day was it? | 61 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| That didn’t commence or wasn’t requested until 8 October. | 63 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| So there was an interval between the … at the end of Atlas 1 and the beginning of Atlas 2. | 64 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Atlas 1 actually didn’t finish for us until we reported to the regulator on 6 October. | 65 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| I see, but there was the meeting on 28 September where all the other—– | 66 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| That is right yes. | 67 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And were you involved in any of the discussions about the Government guarantee? | 68 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Did they ask you for your input, given all the up-to-date information you’d provided, or guidance, on the form of the guarantee? | 70 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| But if you describe how the two scenarios that you added to the information you collected, how were they put together? | 76 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. | 78 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Chairman, could we refer to Vol. 1, the PwC core documents, on page 5, please? It will come up on your screen, gentlemen. | 80 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s fine, yes. | 81 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s correct. I’ll start off and Aidan can chip in. Well, first of all, to scenario 1 and scenario 2—– | 83 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. | 84 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| But you were starting to look into, I suppose what I might call this can of worms and you found—– | 87 |
Chairman
| Mind now Deputy, or Senator. | 88 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I think it is fair to say that within the banks the people we were speaking to thought that our analysis was unbelievably pessimistic. | 91 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes, that is correct. | 93 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| How do … do accountants just record that or is there a wider need for the auditor to say “We really … I would have doubts as well that this model of banking can continue as in the past”? | 94 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| At that time—– | 101 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| —-brought this right to the fore? | 102 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| When you were choosing the scenarios, even just to model it, did anybody say “Let’s go to a 50% reduction in property”? | 104 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| We went to 45%, so there wasn’t—– | 105 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Well, how did the 45% so badly prepare the Government for the eventual bill that came in? You know, you were talking about—– | 106 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Because of NAMA particularly. NAMA … because of NAMA putting in a short-term—– | 107 |
Chairman
| You’re leading now, Senator. Back to yourself, Mr. O’Connor. | 108 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| When you went to Atlas 3, that was having property people on board … wasn’t that right? Were they too optimistic about how property values would … would fare in Ireland? | 109 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I don’t know whether they were optimistic or not, but the figures that they came up with were consistent with our scenario 1 and scenario 2 . They were in the middle of both scenarios. | 110 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Bank records would change or vary from bank to bank—– | 112 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. | 113 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I think what NAMA found out was some of the security in place was not as expected. An auditor would not normally go into that level of detail on … checking security. | 116 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Should there have been closer contact between the auditors and the regulators? | 117 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| The lessons of this crisis for reforming the relationships between the auditors and the clients. Could you give us some views on those? | 119 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Sorry, say the question again. | 120 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Does auditing and the relationship with the clients … does auditing itself need to be reformed? Have we learnt lessons from what happened us in the years up to 2008? | 121 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you for that. Thank you Chair. | 123 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I was at a number of meetings at the Department of Finance where the guarantee was discussed. | 125 |
Chairman
| Prior or post? | 126 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Prior. | 127 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 128 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| The week of the 23rd or 24th, whatever it was, of September. | 129 |
Chairman
| That was the earliest there? | 130 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I can’t say the date but sometime in that date—– | 131 |
Chairman
| In or around. | 132 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| In or around that. | 133 |
Chairman
| Okay, so, in or about—– | 134 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
| Was that the only meeting that the guarantee was discussed or did you have others? | 136 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
| Who would have been at those meetings? | 138 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| IFSRA, Central Bank, Department of Finance, Merrill Lynch, Arthur Cox, all the advisers. There was 25 or 30 people at them. | 139 |
Chairman
| Would the Minister of Finance have been at—– | 140 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| He was at most of them and the Taoiseach was at one of them. | 141 |
Chairman
| The Taoiseach was at one—– | 142 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 143 |
Chairman
| —–and the Minister of Finance was at most of them, if not all, yes? | 144 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 145 |
Chairman
| Okay. So how many meetings in between, let’s say it was the 24th approximately, up to the eve of the guarantee? By your recall, how many meetings were there that discussed the guarantee? | 146 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| They were working groups. I was at two or three of them anyway and the Taoiseach attended one of those. | 147 |
Chairman
| How long did the meetings last in terms of discussing the guarantee? | 148 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Hours. | 149 |
Chairman
| Hours? | 150 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 151 |
Chairman
| Okay. So the guarantee would have been discussed for—– | 152 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No, the meetings were ongoing, the guarantee was part of the … there was one element of the meeting. | 153 |
Chairman
| So, how placed into the agenda of those meetings was the guarantee? | 154 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
| Were you there to just provide information or were you there in a passive position or in a more engaged position in that regard? | 156 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Probably providing information. | 157 |
Chairman
| Providing information, okay. And what were the questions from Government in regard to information sought from you in regard to the guarantee and other matters? | 158 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
| Okay. And what was the strategic options discussed? | 160 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Nationalisation, guarantee, park, those type of things were discussed but it was more in … I wasn’t involved in the total detail of those. | 161 |
Chairman
| Okay. Nationalisation of what? | 162 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| A bank, number of banks, any—– | 163 |
Chairman
| Which bank? | 164 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| The one that was nationalised in January 2009, Anglo. | 165 |
Chairman
| Anglo. So there was discussion—– | 166 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Sorry, a discussion would be harder to say. It was, “maybe we can do this, maybe we can do that, maybe we can do the next thing”. | 167 |
Chairman
| But the option of discussing Anglo, was it the … sorry, the option of nationalising Anglo, can you confirm or not whether it was discussed? | 168 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| It was discussed. | 169 |
Chairman
| By whom? | 170 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| By the whole meeting. | 171 |
Chairman
| The whole meeting. Was the Taoiseach at that meeting? | 172 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I am not sure if he was at that meeting or not. I can … possibly was but I cannot tell you for definite. | 173 |
Chairman
| Okay. And was at any time the option of how prepared the Government were or the Department of Finance in terms of the nationalisation of Anglo, preparation of legislation, anything like that? | 174 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Not to my knowledge. There was concern that people abroad could not distinguish between Anglo Irish Bank, AIB and AIB, plus the Bank of Ireland and Central Bank of Ireland. | 175 |
Chairman
| Mr. Walsh, have you anything to add to that? | 176 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I wasn’t at the meetings that are referred to. | 177 |
Chairman
| Okay. Thank you very much. Deputy O’Donnell. | 178 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Deputy, I don’t know off the top of my head. Like, we have 2,000 people in the office so a fair bit of work has gone on but I can’t … I don’t know off the top of my head. | 180 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Well, specifically, your department, what’s your remit? Are ye corporate services—– | 181 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Yes. | 183 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| —–in the financial services sector over the last, now, seven years. | 184 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But, specifically, we’ll say on … we’ll say, the … take just the Project Atlas programme, right – what would have been the type of teams, the size of teams you would have had involved? | 185 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| On Atlas? | 186 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Yes. | 187 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| We’d about 25 to 28 people across the six different banks. | 188 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And at partner level, manager level, what would they break down at? | 189 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| They’re mainly partners, directors and senior managers. | 190 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And the type of fees that you would’ve earned for Project Atlas, we’ll say, for those three … what was the total fees that ye earned for Project Atlas? | 191 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Atlas 1 was €320,000. Atlas 2 was €1.6—– | 192 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| €1.6 million? | 193 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| €1.6 million, and Atlas 3 was €450,000. | 194 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| —–50,000, so in total, your total there would be—– | 195 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| €2.4 million. | 196 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Sorry. | 197 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| €2.4 million. | 198 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| €2.4 million. And that was the total fees for the overall Project Atlas, for all the work on Project Atlas. | 199 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| For PwC work. | 200 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And this was in Project Atlas 2. | 203 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 204 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And three. | 205 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Two. | 206 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Just two. | 207 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I think it was two, yeah. | 208 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And the only difference between two and three—– | 209 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Was property. JLL. | 210 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| With JLL, to come up with valuations. So, we’ll say, Atlas 1 was a desktop general overview just dealing purely with Anglo and Irish Nationwide. Am I correct? | 211 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| And ILP. | 212 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And ILP. | 213 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| And focused more on liquidity than loans. | 214 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| JLL. | 216 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| —–to look at valuations. | 217 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s right. | 218 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Fine. So, really, the substantive work was done in Atlas 2. | 219 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s correct. | 220 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, if we go into Atlas 2, tell me why Irish Nationwide were given sight of the assumptions and their views and the others weren’t? | 221 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| The people in the other banks ran the models. | 223 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Ran the models for us. | 224 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Where did it end up with Irish Nationwide? Where did—– | 225 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| It ended up with what’s there, like. They—– | 226 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Ye overruled them. | 227 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Well, absolutely. We reported on scenarios as we’d given to them and they expressed the views quite forcefully to us that they were hopelessly pessimistic. | 228 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| This is turning into a speech. I need the question, Deputy. You’ve gone on quite a bit. | 232 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| The question is made. Now I need time for a response. Mr. O’Connor and Mr. Walsh. | 234 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And what about the fact that the taxpayer has ended up forking out €30 billion for Anglo Irish Bank on the—– | 236 |
Chairman
| That’s a fact. Can I get a question from you? | 237 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| As we said, at that stage the tier 1 ratio was only 4%; it increased to 10%—— | 239 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But you also said—– | 240 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| —–and November—– | 241 |
Chairman
| Deputy, I don’t want to be too intrusive now but I have to allow the witness the same amount of time at least to yourself that you have taken for questioning. Mr. O’Connor. | 242 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Tier 1 ratio before 10% is a big difference and this is all before NAMA came in where there was an asset write-down of 60-odd% in Anglo’s banks, which we hadn’t foreseen. | 243 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Explain that because that’s – oh, you were talking about the equity on the loans. | 246 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 247 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So effectively … and when you looked at it further were there situations whereby there was nearly 100% gearing across the board on all loans? | 248 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s correct. | 249 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| In core documents, page 5, you see them down there on the impairment basis points. Scenario 2, this is for a year, out of three-year assumptions, residential mortgages: 15 basis points. | 252 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| That would mean the value of the property would fall 15—– | 253 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Residential mortgages—– | 254 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| No, that would be based on the loan. These—– | 255 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Explain for a layman. What do you mean by saying that the 15 basis points for mortgages? | 256 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| If there was £100 mortgage loan, then that’s 0.15% provision against the £100 loan. | 257 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But did ye build into your scenarios in terms of projected fall in the value of property? | 258 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| In relation to mortgages particularly, we did no detailed work on the mortgage books. | 259 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But in terms—– | 260 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| But in Atlas 1 and Atlas 2, we took the highest level of provision that was made across the system and added 20% or 25% to that in arriving at that level for—– | 261 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Could I just emphasise that we didn’t set out to do a worst-case scenario. | 263 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But you did a worst-case scenario. | 264 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But it’s the highest stress. What will then … in the highest stress scenario, what did you provide for that in terms of fall in the price of property? Commercial land. | 266 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| On the development land without planning permission it was 45%, and on development land with planning permission it was 30%, and that was against the loan value, not against the collateral. | 267 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And that was land. What about property itself? | 268 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| On commercial and corporate loans, we provided 375 basis points, which was about 4%. | 269 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, 4%. And do you believe that was adequate, considering the fall in property—– | 270 |
Chairman
| Mind now, ask the question, don’t give a judgment. | 271 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| No—– | 272 |
Chairman
| Was it sufficient, Mr. Walsh? | 273 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But, Mr. Walsh—– | 275 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But, Mr. Walsh, ye took a 45% expected reduction in development land without planning. Over what period of time was that for, did ye think? | 277 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Over three years. | 278 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| No, anything that was partially built would have fallen into the development categories and what was in commercial and corporate lending was income-producing. | 280 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| The majority of value, yes, was in the commercial property area. | 282 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| In hindsight, yes. At the time, it was significantly higher than any of the banks were forecasting for their books. | 284 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| First of all, ask the question is he familiar with it, and then we’ll talk about it. | 286 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s the same man. | 288 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Same man, right. Are you Dan or Denis? | 289 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Denis. | 290 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay, we’ll call you Denis. | 291 |
Chairman
| We’re meeting you all over again. | 292 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Chairman, it makes reference … are you familiar with the note? | 293 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I am, yes. | 294 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Can I just make reference to it and ask you … the Taoiseach was present and the Minister for Finance was present at that meeting. Was that meeting on 25 or 28 September? | 295 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| The 25th. | 296 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| It’s all part of Atlas 1 and 2. It was all rolled in together. | 298 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Were you asked for your comments, to give your opinion on the night, or your observation as to whether Anglo and Irish Nationwide were solvent at that time? | 299 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No, we weren’t asked at that time. | 300 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did it come up for discussion at that time? | 301 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Whether they were solvent? | 302 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Yes. | 303 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No, it didn’t, no. | 304 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Do you believe, yourself, that Anglo and Irish Nationwide with solvent on the night of the guarantee? | 305 |
Chairman
| Are you able to answer the question? | 306 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Well, I’d say Mr. O’Connor is a highly qualified man. I’d say—– | 307 |
Chairman
| Let the witness determine his own credit—– | 308 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| Okay. | 310 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Prior to the guarantee being put in place, was Anglo and Irish Nationwide solvent? | 312 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s a different question to answer, but—– | 313 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Sure that’s why I’m asking the question. | 314 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And what contingency plan did you recommend be put in place? | 316 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| They had to get cash from the ECB, or from somebody else along the line, to replace deposits that were not going to be replaced themselves. | 317 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, technically, prior to the night of the guarantee, technically, was Anglo and Irish Nationwide Building Society – I suppose, Anglo in particular – was it insolvent? | 318 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Well, the Anglo calculations produced by management themselves would have indicated that it would have extreme difficulty in paying its bills as they fell due after 30 September. | 319 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And if you’d been asked on that meeting of 25 September whether Anglo or Irish Nationwide were solvent, what response would you have given? | 320 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So therefore, technically, prior to the guarantee it wasn’t solvent, they were insolvent. | 322 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| If there was no plan. Maybe, they had a plan. But, if they didn’t do anything, if the money kept going out the door, they had a problem. | 323 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| No work. And did you at all, when you had initially looked at the … in Project Atlas 1, you reported on that on was it 27 September, am I correct? | 328 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Or middle of … the second week of October. | 329 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Second week of October. Did you advise the Financial Regulator and the Government that there was a need for more in-depth review of the loans of the banks? | 330 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes, and that is what we did in Atlas 2. | 331 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay, Mr. Walsh. | 335 |
Chairman
| Deputy O’Donnell, I will let you back in again in the wrap-up. | 336 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| All right. I will bring you back in at the end, Deputy, and to wrap up, Mr. Walsh. | 338 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I think the … scenario 2 showed that in one of the banks, that they would breach their then 4% capital ratio and it’s clear, in hindsight, that that 4% write-down was inadequate, but the—– | 339 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| I suppose, the question I’m asking—– | 340 |
Chairman
| I am sorry now, Deputy. I will bring you back in the wrap-up again. | 341 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| It is a very simple question, Chairman. | 342 |
Chairman
| You can come back to it. It doesn’t matter how simple the question is. The witness must respond to the earlier question. | 343 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| All—– | 345 |
Chairman
| Mr. Walsh, and without interruption, and then I am moving on. Mr. Walsh? | 346 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| All the banks, I don’t know. But it’s clear that, at scenario 2, Anglo would breach its core tier 1 ratios. | 347 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| At 4%? | 348 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Yes. | 349 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So … but you didn’t say that. | 350 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 351 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| We did. | 352 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Sorry, say it again. | 355 |
Chairman
| Could either of you explain as to why the Government announced in December ‘08 that it intended to inject €1.5 billion into Anglo? | 356 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I don’t know. | 357 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| No, I don’t know. We weren’t involved in the discussions leading up to that decision. | 358 |
Chairman
| Okay. So there was no analysis or services, to your knowledge, that PwC gave that informed the Government to come out with that announcement. | 359 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| The only information they had from us at that time was Atlas 2. | 360 |
Chairman
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I’m unaware of what informed the Government. | 362 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Sorry, what was the question? | 369 |
Chairman
| I said, in your management discussions, what was the background and the rationale for the major lending positions and the level of loan provisions in this regard? | 370 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Chairman
| In that regard, was there a view that loan loss provisions were not sufficient for relevant loans? | 374 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| In the banks themselves, they were happy the provision they had booked were adequate. | 375 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| And they were quite robust about that. | 376 |
Chairman
| Okay. Could you give us an example of that robustness? | 377 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Well, they disputed every additional provision and any negative comment that we would have made. | 378 |
Chairman
| And were you challenging that position with the bank? And could you, maybe, give us an example of that discourse as to how that went back and forth? | 379 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Just very strong discussions. I can’t think of specific things, but each bank … each lending officer was defending his own loans to the hilt. | 380 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 382 |
Chairman
| —–there was just this equity. Is that the type of discussions that you had in regard to … well, how the loans were securitised and supported? Was it in that area or somewhere else? | 383 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
| Okay. | 385 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| —–a massive exercise. This was not the case for developers. | 386 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That was coming from the regulator. | 388 |
Chairman
| The regulator said that you—– | 389 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 390 |
Chairman
| —–needed to—– | 391 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 392 |
Chairman
| —–drill down further—– | 393 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 394 |
Chairman
| —–in that regard. And was that done? | 395 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 396 |
Chairman
| And what … did it reflect something different or something new or much the same? | 397 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Very consistent, very the same. | 398 |
Chairman
| Very consistent. | 399 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| The … consistent, yes. | 400 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No. | 402 |
Chairman
| Was that a surprise to you? | 403 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| We didn’t know about it until more or less it came out in the transcript that we saw there recently. | 404 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Well, we knew the Department of Finance were looking at the information and the regulator but we hadn’t thought about where else it was going after that—– | 406 |
Chairman
| If you—– | 407 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| —–and we didn’t know the pace at which things would develop. I have to say that I was very surprised when I heard the news on the morning of the 30th, driving into work. | 408 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Not really. The information on liquidity was all factual. “This is the position as of now; this is what’ll happen the next few days.” And on credit, we had nothing done. | 410 |
Chairman
| Okay. Other than the option of nationalisation, which we discover … discussed earlier, was … what were then other strategic options available to the Government before 30 September 2008? | 411 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I think that applied to one particular bank that didn’t have a mortgage book and most of the collateral was coming from mortgage lending rather than from commercial lending? | 414 |
Chairman
| Which bank was that? | 415 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Pardon? | 416 |
Chairman
| Which bank was that? | 417 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Anglo. | 418 |
Chairman
| Anglo, okay, yes. | 419 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Chairman
| Okay. And in your discussions with the Financial Regulator, did you ever express material concerns about additional liquidity and quality of the supporting collateral? | 421 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Chairman
| And—– | 423 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Yes, but they were factual discussions rather than—– | 424 |
Chairman
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Chairman
| Okay. The reason why I’m asking you is to, kind of … to expand upon why that wasn’t pursued is that the Government subsequently gave a guarantee which was a contingent commitment. | 427 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Yes. | 428 |
Chairman
| This is the State standing behind its banks and it’s not a funding instrument. | 429 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Yes. | 430 |
Chairman
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Well, we were looking at ELA before the Government guarantee was given. After the Government guarantee was given, the liquidity position in the banks improved quite significantly and—– | 432 |
Chairman
| Because of the guarantee or because of—– | 433 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Because of the guarantee. | 434 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 435 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| So people were now prepared to put … they were able to get more money in the wholesale money markets and more corporate deposits coming back into the banks. | 436 |
Chairman
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I couldn’t estimate what that would be. | 438 |
Chairman
| Okay. Would the State have been exposed through the ELA in the same way? | 439 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I’m actually not sure of the chain of security on an ELA arrangement. I don’t know the detail, I’m afraid. | 440 |
Chairman
| Okay. You wouldn’t be able to give us, to the best of your ability, an analysis of the different exposures from … one from the guarantee and one from seeking the ELA. | 441 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Chairman
| Maybe just to arrive to the fundamental of it – and this is my very last question – by the State giving the guarantee, who ends up with the responsibility of the debt? | 443 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| The taxpayer ends up with responsibility. | 444 |
Chairman
| Okay. By the bank being afforded the ELA, who ends up with the responsibility of any liability on the ELA? | 445 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Well, the Central Bank and the ECB. | 446 |
Chairman
| Okay. Thank you. Deputy Michael McGrath. | 447 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Our managing partners’ office was contacted on 17 September with a request that a partner would meet with Mr. Neary the following day to discuss a very confidential assignment. | 449 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 450 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| And that’s the first contact we had with Mr. Neary then when we met him on the 18th. | 451 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. So the meeting happened the following day following the initial contact. Was there any procurement process involved for the appointment of PwC? | 452 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. And can you comment if you were requested for any input into the scope and specification of the engagement or was this provided to you by the Financial Regulator at the time? | 454 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| We had a discussion with Mr. Neary and his colleagues in relation to what their needs were and what work we felt we could do within a very tight timeframe. | 455 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 456 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Sure, and were there a number of drafts of the letter of engagement between the regulator and your firm? | 458 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| There was probably one or two, but as I say, in terms of the scope there wasn’t any substantive change from what we discussed and then—– | 459 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 460 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| —–documented initially. | 461 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Probably is JLL and VAT. | 463 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 464 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| JLL got €670,000, so €2.4 million, €700,000, €3.1 million, plus VAT gets you up close enough to that. | 465 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay, so the €2.4 million you quoted is excluding VAT. | 466 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 467 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 470 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| —–but that type of jobs were done. | 471 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes. So you were using a liquidity measure of solvency, as such—– | 474 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| A liquidity measure, yes, yes. | 475 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–in arriving at that conclusion. | 476 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| So, after the guarantee it … it was back in a solvency position again. | 477 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Correct. | 479 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| So, similarly, development land without planning permission is 10% in scenario 1 and 15% in scenario 2. | 480 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Correct. | 481 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| On an annual basis. | 482 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| For three years. | 483 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes. Just so we’re getting our zeros correct. And this was the assumption for scenario 1 and scenario 2 for one year. | 484 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. | 485 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And it was clear in the report that the overall assessment was based on a repeat of that for three successive years. | 486 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Absolutely. | 487 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| That was clear in the documentation because it’s not clear in the extracts we have here. | 488 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| But it … it is clear in the overall document which was furnished … which we … was furnished to us from yourselves. | 489 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes, okay. So the projection for development land without planning permission was, under scenario 1, that it would fall by 10% in 2009 and 15% in 2009 under scenario 2. Is that correct? | 490 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Yes. | 491 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| And they were provisions against the loan balances, rather than the underlying collateral. | 493 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. Yes, these are impairments of the loan balance. | 494 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Yes. | 495 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 498 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| —–for the same period. | 499 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| When did the tier 1 capital requirement go from 4% to 10%? | 500 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I think—– | 501 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Because you’ve referred to it a number of times. | 502 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I think in ‘09 or … in 2010, I think, and that’s … not certain on that. I think 2010. | 503 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| 2010, so it wasn’t in any way relevant at the time when—– | 504 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No. | 505 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–when these reports were being compiled? And when did PwC conclude that additional capital would have to be put into Anglo Irish Bank? | 506 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s—– | 509 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| No, I think—– | 510 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Through 2009 and 2010. | 511 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I think that’s … that’s not correct. I think, under scenario 2, we said that Anglo could breach its capital requirements at 4%. | 512 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I don’t have that document in front of me, but if you’re reading it out there that must be it. | 514 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
| Finish up now, Deputy. | 517 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Chairman
| A question, Deputy. | 519 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. So Project Atlas 1, 2 and 3 did not identify or examine any issues in relation to the underlying security underpinning the loans given to the largest borrowers of Anglo. | 522 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s correct. | 523 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Thank you. | 524 |
Chairman
| Thank you, Deputy. Senator Susan O’Keeffe. Senator, ten minutes. | 525 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| That’s correct. If you think about it—– | 527 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And what … and if so, why? | 528 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Correct. Sorry, apart from two e-mails that I sent to the Department of Finance confirming the positive outflows in three banks on 29 September and inflows on 30 September. | 533 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. So did anybody pick up the phone, did anybody talk to any of you between the evening of the 28th and the evening of the 29th? No. | 534 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No. | 535 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And so, why was there, if you like … ‘cause that was a Monday, wasn’t it? | 536 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Yes. | 537 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| It was an option being discussed. I wouldn’t have said it was the only option, but it was discussed. | 541 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I wouldn’t share … it was the only option being discussed at—– | 543 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| No, again, Mr. O’Connor—– | 544 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No, I wouldn’t share that … his total opinion on that. | 545 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. Mr. Walsh? | 546 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I wasn’t at those meetings on the 24th and 25th. | 547 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| We were still working on our reports. | 549 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. | 550 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes, but—– | 551 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So, on the morning of the guarantee, you’d heard it on the news, you didn’t go in and go “Okay. We need to meet them, we need to talk to them, we need to give—–“. No? | 552 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No. | 553 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| No. | 554 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Why do you think that was? | 555 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So in the first ten days it was evident, even if all the detail of it wasn’t evident. | 559 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes, well the … the balances were building up as you went through your work because, as my colleague has said, the connection is not easily tracked down on day 1—– | 560 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Sure. | 561 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| —–because it could be any combination of loans in this … controlled by this individual. | 562 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I can’t tell you the exact date of the meeting, but it would have been … come through fairly early … very early in our work, probably in early October. | 564 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Early October. Not before the guarantee, even though it was clear in the first ten days. | 565 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. So nothing was known about the individuals and their concentrations prior to the guarantee. | 567 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| As far as I can remember. | 568 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| According to you, I mean. | 569 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes. Yes. | 570 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Information available in INBS or at the regulator? | 572 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| In the regulator. Those basic questions could not be answered by the regulator about INBS. | 573 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. Mr. McDonagh also suggested at one point that he would like to share the Goldman Sachs information with PwC to get their view. Did that happen do you recall? | 575 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I … I presume so because everything was shared at that stage. | 576 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Everything was shared. | 577 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Yes, yes, yes. | 578 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay, and did anything coming from there change your view in any way? | 579 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No. | 580 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Those e-mails you’re referring to obviously came from the teams down along the line in the different banks. We hadn’t discussed them or agreed them with the more senior management. | 582 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Why was that? Was that because—– | 583 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Because of time. Because of time. | 584 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–they wouldn’t meet you or because there wasn’t time? | 585 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No, no. They just hadn’t time. | 586 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And do … should it … I mean, by the time you were going into that meeting on the 28th, should you not have had that opportunity to talk to senior management before you went into that meeting? | 588 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Chairman
| Allow an answer now, Senator. I’ll allow a response and I’ll allow you back in again once more. | 591 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| There’s been a lot of discussion about, you know, trying to keep Anglo going to the next weekend and; nobody wanting to intervene or do anything during the week. | 592 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
| A brief supplementary now – a supplementary and then we’re moving on, Senator. | 594 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So sorry, when you say the depositors wouldn’t be able to distinguish between Anglo and AIB, why? | 595 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No, the personal deposits holders in Anglo would be very small. It’s mainly all corporate deposit holders. | 598 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No, well there was concern—– | 600 |
Chairman
| There might be confusion but the people were actually voting with their feet and put the money in. There was no confusion with them when you look at the profile of the two banks. | 601 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| What you’re saying is right but if Anglo Irish Bank was to fall over on any one of those … at that point in time – 29 September, 30 September – it would have impacted on AIB as well. | 602 |
Chairman
| Alright – Senator Marc MacSharry. | 603 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Chairman
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Understood. Where did I lose you there gentlemen? | 606 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| To answer your question, we—– | 607 |
Chairman
| Sorry, I’m just going to stop proceedings for a moment until the phones are switched off there. Mr. O’Connor, just hold on a minute and I’ll stop the clock. | 608 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I’m good. | 609 |
Chairman
| Okay, is it good? Okay, we’ll resume so please. | 610 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| We looked at the arrears portfolio. We looked at all the watch lists there at the end of August, the—– | 611 |
Chairman
| Sorry, I’m just going to suspend for just 30 seconds before the phones are switched off there—– | 612 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Do, yes, for security. | 613 |
Chairman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. Did you seek to understand the material … the number of material loans by clients that were restructured in advance, say, in the period up to 2008? | 619 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So there was no analysis done then of, for want of a better expression, the deterioration of loan quality? | 621 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Kevin Cardiff. | 624 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Did the Minister speak much or listen? | 625 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Mainly listened. | 626 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. Did the Taoiseach make any interjections at the meeting he attended? | 627 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| He listened. | 628 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| He just listened. Okay. Was there any agenda being pushed by the chair or by the politicians that were present at various meetings? | 629 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I didn’t feel there was any agenda being pushed. | 630 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I didn’t feel there was any agenda. I thought it was totally open and totally all in the same boat to get it sorted. | 632 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Well there was the concern would a plan be state aid? Can we put money into this bank without it being state aid? | 636 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Well that’s more the Commission that the ECB, isn’t it, in terms of state aid? | 637 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Well whatever it was … to come back to your first question, was there an open agenda, there was an open agenda but there also was … we had to make sure we ticked all the boxes to get it through. | 638 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I don’t recollect that being an issue. | 640 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Could I maybe make an observation on that? | 642 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And would you say that there’s a need then in legislation to put an onus on financial institutions or individuals to declare such things in the future? | 645 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I … absolutely and I think that’s one of the recommendations that’s being pursued at the moment in terms of a credit register. | 646 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. Thank you very much. | 647 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Senator. I’m going to move to wrap up, three minutes each. Senator Barrett. | 648 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I can’t remember today whether … what numbers would be considered but, at the end of the day, the consensus was we’d provide 15% per annum over a three-year period. | 650 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| So nobody had more input into those ranges than anybody else at the meeting, that you can recall. | 653 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Not that I can recall. | 654 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| You say in your own—– | 659 |
Chairman
| Final question now, Senator. | 660 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Could I just offer a view, that I think the problem—– | 662 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| I think that was Mr. O’Connor’s, but never mind, yes, thank you. | 663 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| I think the problem is not in the accounting. The problem is in the judgments in relation to the lending. | 664 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. | 665 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you very much. | 666 |
Chairman
| Deputy O’Donnell, three minutes to wrap up and then we’ll conclude. | 667 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Scenario 2. | 669 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| It was felt at a meeting that it was unrealistic to jump everything up. | 671 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Sorry? | 672 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| It was felt at the meeting we were at, where this … numbers were discussed, that it was unrealistic to increase everything. | 673 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Because we’re looking at it in total, not individual components of it. | 675 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But corporate commercial lending was the majority of the lending; particularly certainly in the Anglo case it was the majority—– | 676 |
Chairman
| A question please. | 677 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| Finish now, Deputy. This is your last question. | 681 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Is it logical on the basis? It’s a critical point, Chairman. | 682 |
Chairman
| Yes I know, but you need to ask the question properly. That’s why it’s critical. Ask the question and we’ll wrap up. | 683 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| A question please, Deputy—– | 685 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| What was the reason for that? | 686 |
Chairman
| —–because I’m wrapping up. Mr. Walsh, Mr. O’Connor, please. | 687 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But the final question, if—– | 691 |
Chairman
| Deputy, you’re out of time. | 692 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Yes, but sure, Chairman, it’s—– | 693 |
Chairman
| Hang on a second please Deputy—– | 694 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| —–the critical question in this—– | 695 |
Chairman
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Deputy, I’ll say at the start that these figures were agreed with by a number of people and the—– | 698 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Agreed with by whom, Mr. O’Connor? | 699 |
Chairman
| Sorry, Deputy, I’m moving on. I’m closing things up. | 700 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Sorry, just let Mr. O’Connor finish. | 701 |
Chairman
| No, please, no. No. You have been afforded more time than any other member—– | 702 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| No, but I’d like to hear the answer, Chairman. | 703 |
Chairman
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Nothing further to add. | 705 |
Chairman
| Mr. O’Connor, do you have anything you’d like to add to it? | 706 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I’m fine thanks. No. | 707 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| Not that I can recollect. | 709 |
Chairman
| Okay. You’ve no recollection of any solvency being discussed. | 710 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| There were no discussions on solvency at that time, no. | 711 |
Chairman
| Okay. And would you have any views on whether the Irish State should have been engaged in the protection of insolvent banks? | 712 |
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| I don’t have any views. | 713 |
Chairman
Mr. Denis O’Connor
| No, I’m fine thanks. | 715 |
Chairman
| Okay. Mr. Walsh? | 716 |
Mr. Aidan Walsh
| Thank you for your time today. | 717 |
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 11.42 a.m. and resumed at 12.05 p.m.