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, |
Sitting suspended at 1.16 p.m., resumed in private session at 1.18 p.m., suspended at 1.21 p.m. and resumed in public session at 2.41 p.m.
Central Bank-Financial Regulator – Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Mr. Brian Patterson, former Chairman, Financial Regulator.
Chairman
| Once again, Mr. Patterson, welcome in before the committee this afternoon, and if I can invite you to make your opening remarks to the committee, please. | 780 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. | 807 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Thank you, Mr. Patterson, for your opening statement. And if I can invite Deputy Kieran O’Donnell to lead off. Deputy, you’ve 25 minutes. | 816 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t need to refer to the document, Chairman, I understand the question. | 818 |
Chairman
| Thank you. | 819 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| By whom? | 821 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| By various members of the authority, and by various members of the Central Bank board. | 822 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did you voice them yourself? | 823 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I did. | 824 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And where … and how did … how … what was the outcome of that? | 825 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So you’re saying the financial construct under which the new bank regulatory system was set up in ‘03 was flawed from day one? | 827 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Had you an office on the seventh floor? | 829 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I did, a small one, yes. | 830 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Right. | 831 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| And we have—– | 832 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But you made it … you made it to the seventh floor? | 833 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Why not? | 835 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, absolutely. | 838 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And at the time did you make that known to the CEO of the financial regulatory authority? | 839 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Correct. | 842 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| First of all, what I said was that there was nobody on the board of the authority with banking regulation experience. | 844 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Correct. But, sure, that’s what the Financial Regulator … was a key component of it. | 845 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, I agree. I agree, absolutely. | 846 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So you were there from the start. | 847 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 848 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So why did you not insist on people being on the board with, with bank regulation experience? | 849 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I was appointed chairman before the board was appointed—– | 850 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Correct. | 851 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| —–and I did try in conversations with the Minister and his staff. | 852 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Who was the Minister at the time? | 853 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Mr. McCreevy. | 854 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Right. And? | 855 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| And his staff. I tried to make the point that the board needed to have regulatory experience. There were people with banking experience on it. | 856 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| What was the outcome of those discussions? What—– | 857 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It didn’t happen. | 858 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| What did Mr. McCreevy say to you? | 859 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I didn’t hear anything until the members of the, of the authority were announced in the media. | 860 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, you were ignored? | 861 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I guess. | 862 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And why, if you were ignored, if you felt so strongly about it, why did you proceed to take up position as chair? | 863 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| That’s a fair question. I believed at the time that we had good people on the board; they were good people. | 864 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But, sure, they’d no banking experience. | 865 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| They had bank … some had banking experience, but not—– | 866 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Very little. | 867 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| —–not banking … No, no. | 868 |
Chairman
| We can’t—– | 869 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Sorry, okay. | 870 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| We did have people with banking experience on the board, but not regulation experience. That’s the difference, all right? | 871 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Correct. | 872 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Okay. This, Chairman, will probably be a long answer because I need to—– | 875 |
Chairman
| Yes, I’ll give you time for it, that’s fine. | 876 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| All right. | 878 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Who were they, Mr. Patterson? | 880 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| I can give you his name, he was Kaarlo Jännäri. | 882 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| What was the salary on offer at the time? | 886 |
Chairman
| Hold on a second and just allow … continue please, Mr. Patterson. | 887 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| What was the salary on offer at the time? | 889 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I would have to check that. My feeling was that it was €140,000 or something like that. | 890 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| That’s a considerable salary, Mr. Patterson. | 891 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It is, yes. | 892 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So you’re telling me that the only person you could recruit on both situations were people from inside the system on that level of salary? | 893 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| That’s the way it turned out. They were the best people available from the candidates that we had in front of us. | 894 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So these were members of the board—– | 897 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| They were. | 898 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| —–who had no bank regulation experience? | 899 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Who had bank … no bank regulation experience, correct. Sorry? | 900 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So did you not think of getting an independent review of the CEOs in terms of people that would have bank regulation experience? | 901 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Not at that time, no, we didn’t. | 902 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Like what? | 905 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| We could have, well there’s the famous old moral suasion, although I think in the climate of the day—– | 906 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| It’s kind of become a bit of an echo—– | 907 |
Chairman
| I think we need to allow a bit of time. Only comment upon the questions, please Deputy? Okay. | 908 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay, but it has become a bit of an echo. | 909 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| I suggest you should have listened. | 911 |
Chairman
| I suggest you get on there with questioning there, Deputy, and pull back on making remarks. | 912 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Why didn’t you do it? | 914 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Because, and I’m sorry, Chairman, I’ll be saying this again and again. We simply did not see the calamity that was coming down the track. | 915 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And what was your view on contrarian views like Morgan Kelly at the time? What was your view—– | 916 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| External ones? | 917 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Yes. That were saying there was major problems at the time as early as 2006. | 918 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I think those external contrarians, they were a small minority and their voice, I think, looking back, got drowned out by the what Peter Nyberg calls the “groupthink”. | 919 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| You’re on record as saying that you had issues with what Morgan Kelly was saying. | 920 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t recall that. | 921 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Do you not in terms of … at a Kilkenny Chamber of Commerce do? | 922 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I remember the chamber of Kilkenny … the Chamber of Commerce in Kilkenny do. I do, indeed, yes. | 923 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did you not make reference to Mr. Kelly’s comments? | 924 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t recall it but if you tell me I did, then I did. | 925 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes—– | 927 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| —–hosted by the Irish Banking Federation | 928 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Correct. | 929 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| I appreciate that. | 932 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It took place in November of that year. | 933 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Glad to see you recovered well. | 934 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Was it appropriate for the Irish Banking Federation to be hosting a retirement do for the chair of the board that was regulating them? | 936 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| On the basis that it was long after my retirement, I didn’t see a problem with that. | 937 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So you didn’t see an issue with it? | 938 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No. | 939 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| In hindsight—– | 940 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| For me, personally; for the executive, a different matter. | 941 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Can I just … on a small note. The issue of golf balls being provided, hosted by the Irish financial regulatory authority, were you aware of that? | 942 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I became aware of it when I listened to Pat Neary’s evidence, yes. | 943 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| You weren’t aware of it prior to that? | 944 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No. | 945 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| It didn’t come up at the board level? | 946 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No. | 947 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Can I just go back to your statement … do you think it was appropriate? | 948 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| It was about driving golf balls—- | 950 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I’m not going to try and defend it, Chairman. It’s not appropriate, I just wanted to—- | 951 |
Chairman
| I just ask you to move on actually, please, Mr. Patterson. | 952 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Can I go to page 3 of your statement—– | 953 |
Chairman
| Drive on. | 954 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| No, he won’t, that’ll be sectioned. | 958 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| And if I say, when it happened, Chairman, I’ll probably give the game away as well. | 959 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Why did you put it into your statement? | 960 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Because it’s true. | 961 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So … and what was the actual circumstances around it? | 962 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| In all of my interaction with the Ministers, other than the credit union issue, which I mentioned, I don’t recall us discussing in any depth any prudential issues. | 967 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Why not? | 968 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Because again and I’ll be very boring on this, at the time we didn’t see what was coming down the track. It’s as simple as that. We didn’t see it. | 969 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, looking back now, what would you have done differently. You were there for five years, okay—– | 970 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 971 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And yet, Mr. Patterson, there was no consumer interest on the board of IFSRA, when it was established? | 974 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, I think we all spoke for the consumer. It was a public interest board. There weren’t any specific consumer representatives, you’re right. | 975 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But you had a situation where you had no one with banking regulation experience and you had no one representing interests of consumers specifically. | 976 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, we had the consumer director. That was her job. | 977 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But that was within the bank. | 978 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, but it was her sole job to represent the consumers | 979 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So continue, we’ll say, in terms of what you would have done—— | 980 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did you—– | 984 |
Chairman
| Give him time to respond, now, Deputy. | 985 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I would include in that having one or two people with international experience, particularly the United States, and we didn’t have those. | 986 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did you not consider looking for it at the time? | 987 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Not at the time, no. Well, I mean, I told you that in 2006 I suggested that but I wasn’t getting anywhere with it. The … can … can I take the first question? | 988 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| The credit concentration limits and the—– | 989 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Was the CEO’s performance? | 992 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 993 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| What … what were the benchmarks of the targets or specific key performance indicators that would be looked at? | 995 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Okay. | 997 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| That included, incidentally, sorry, Chairman … it included the safety and soundness of the banks. | 998 |
Chairman
| Up to 2006 or that period, was there ever a senior Central Bank or regulatory position appointed that came from outside the public service? | 999 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| At a senior level, I think not. | 1000 |
Chairman
| Okay. So … and that would be … would you be fairly clear on that or that would be your assumption? | 1001 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I’m just running through my memory, Chairman, and I can’t think of an example or at a senior level, which is what we’re talking about—– | 1002 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1003 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| —–that there was an external appointment, no. | 1004 |
Chairman
| Okay. For the Financial Regulator’s position, the CEO’s position, can you recall how many people applied for that post and how many came from the public service? | 1005 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| As I said in response to the earlier question I … my memory it was about 15 or 20 in the long list. | 1006 |
Chairman
| And were they all private or public? | 1007 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, they were mostly public. | 1008 |
Chairman
| Mostly public—– | 1009 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Public sector, yes. | 1010 |
Chairman
| All right. And given what you said earlier, it was inevitable that the appointment was going to come from the public sector most likely. | 1011 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It wasn’t inevitable, Chairman, but it was heavily slanted in that direction, yes—– | 1012 |
Chairman
| But the … okay but the …. traditionally that would have been the appointment—– | 1013 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes—– | 1014 |
Chairman
| —–so it would be consistent with that. Thank you. Deputy Doherty. | 1015 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Sure, and I don’t mind talking about this because it’s all on the public record anyway. | 1017 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. | 1018 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay … okay. In relation to your own experience and skills, did you have the necessary experience and skills to become the chairperson of the board from 2003 onwards? | 1020 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| So months after you retired but … which is April, but before the guarantee which is September. | 1026 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Correct, correct. It was around about, I don’t know, probably around June or something like that, July. | 1027 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Did he … did he mention that he was planning to invite the likes of David Drumm and Eugene Sheehy and Richie Boucher? Did he tell you that these—– | 1028 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t think they were all there, incidentally but—— | 1029 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| No, I think some of them didn’t turn up—– | 1030 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, some of them maybe, but some of those names I don’t think I’ve ever met some of those people. | 1031 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. | 1032 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| He didn’t, no, he didn’t. | 1033 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay, did he suggest …did you ask who would be there or? | 1034 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, I didn’t, no, I didn’t think at the time—– | 1035 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| No, just turn up on the night—– | 1036 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It was to be … it was to be a small dinner and that was it, you know, I didn’t see it was a big deal—– | 1037 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| See who was there, okay. It’s reported that you defended your … you defended your role as chairperson of … of the authority at that dinner. | 1038 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, I think we talked about fishing. | 1039 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay, so there was no speeches and—– | 1040 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No. | 1041 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| So was the light-touch regulation, or not, adopted as a result of not wanting to distort the promotion of the Irish Financial Services Centre? | 1044 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t think that was the reason, Deputy. I think … I think that principles-based regulation was around a long time before that. | 1045 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. So we have seen, as committee members, evidence, for example, of letters to and fro, to and from banks, from the Financial Regulator, that talks about the concentration levels. | 1050 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1051 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I’m searching my memory, Chairman, to see can I come up with any evidence of that, and I can’t. So, therefore, I have … in truth I have to answer your question “I don’t know”. | 1053 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| I’ve asked in relation to consumer protection and in relation to the introduction of the IFRS capital derivative and its other statutory roles also. | 1056 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, if I can, sort of, bundle that under prudential regulation? | 1057 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1058 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The prudential regulation division, on banking supervision, in particular, did not have enough staff. | 1059 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. | 1060 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I think that’s quite clear. They didn’t have enough staff even for principles-based regulation. | 1061 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Can you explain why additional staff weren’t hired? | 1062 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It was one of many factors, I’m not suggesting that that was a show-stopper. | 1065 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| But it was a factor? | 1066 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, it was a factor, yes. | 1067 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| I’m surprised at that obviously—– | 1068 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I mean … and one of the things that was … one of the things that—– | 1069 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| I’m just surprised at the information. I’m not saying it’s right or wrong or whatever, I’m just surprised it’s—– | 1070 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I want to be clear, Chairman. I’m not saying it was a show-stopper—– | 1071 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| No, it’s just it was a fact that was there for discussion. | 1072 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It was there somewhere. | 1073 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1074 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| And I’ll go one step further on that. The funds industry in the IFSC is highly sensitive to the costs of fund approval. | 1075 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1076 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Were there severe penalties ever discussed? The answer is “No”. | 1079 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I wasn’t present at those round-table meetings so I can’t really comment on what was raised or not. | 1081 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The link between wholesale … the borrowing short to lend long thing, yes? | 1083 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1084 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| At the time, no, I wasn’t sufficiently aware of it. | 1085 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Did the board ever discuss any of that … these issues? | 1086 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes but in terms of the wholesale lending—– | 1088 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| That particular bit of it—– | 1089 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Borrow short to lend long—– | 1090 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t recall that coming up, no. | 1091 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I think it was both. | 1095 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| You think it was both? | 1096 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t think it was one or the other. | 1097 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. | 1098 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| But I would bow to his economic expertise, but my impression, or my judgment, is that it was both. | 1099 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Did the board have discussions in relation to these exposures of commercial property and … both on commercial property and on residential property? | 1100 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1101 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| And how … what type of discussions did you have in relation to them? | 1102 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Did the board ever think or discuss, did they ever, kind of, say, “I think there’s a property bubble here”? | 1104 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The board of the authority I don’t think did. | 1105 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. | 1106 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The board of the Central Bank did. | 1107 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Absolutely, yes. I used frequently to go into the room where you see the cranes and on one or two occasions, I actually counted them. And, yes, of course, you couldn’t escape it. | 1109 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| But you didn’t think there was a bubble? | 1110 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I remember reading that but I can’t find it in the reference that you gave me. Page 3 of Vol. 3? | 1115 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Page … Vol. 2. | 1116 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Oh, Vol. 2, I beg your pardon. | 1117 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| It’s on the screen. It’s on the screen. | 1118 |
Chairman
| It’s on the screen in front of you. | 1119 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Okay, I have it here, yes. That’s a … that’s a minute of the financial stability co-ordinating committee, yes? | 1120 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1121 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, of which I was not a part, so I don’t … I don’t remember that discussion. | 1122 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1123 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| So, can … sorry, can you ask the question again, please? | 1124 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay, so … okay. Were there … were you aware of the fact that – in 2004 – that there was suggestion, from the CBFSAI, that there was systemic risks in the banking sector? | 1127 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I was aware, yes. | 1128 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay, what were the systemic risks that you were aware of? | 1129 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| No, the … the question I … I wanted to, first of all, find out what you thought was the problem at the time. What did you think was not just a risk but a systemic risk. | 1131 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Okay. Okay. | 1132 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| In my view, big difference … in my view, so it’s … it’s just … so in your view the systemic risk was … was what? | 1133 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| But what do you mean by “the extent of it”? Sorry, just, what do you mean, in specific terms … what do you mean by “extent”? | 1143 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| By how close to the wind the banks were sailing. | 1144 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Sorry, again, what do you mean by “how close to the wind the banks were sailing”? | 1145 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The risks they were taking. | 1146 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| The risks in what? Like—– | 1147 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| In … in both the wholesale funding, which … which you … you’ve referred to and also in the size and the … the nature of their … their loan book. | 1148 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| But, would the size and nature of their loan book not be reported to you, as a board, for any of the years that you were chairperson of that board? | 1149 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, the prudential pack that I … I’ve mentioned had data in that but it came accompanied with very reassuring noises. | 1150 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes, but you knew the size and scale of the—- | 1151 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. Yes. | 1152 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| What … what I—– | 1154 |
Chairman
| I’ll bring you back in at the end but I’d like you to answer that as best you can, Mr. Patterson. | 1155 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, no, I’m not disputing that, Chairman. | 1158 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1159 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The … the information was there, I mean, I read the paper just as—– | 1160 |
Chairman
| Okay. Who had it? | 1161 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| In one sense, we all had it—– | 1162 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1163 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Yes, but is it not like kind of two hands of the one being, that to lift something it requires both. I will bring in Deputy Phelan after this—– | 1167 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Absolutely. | 1168 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Deputy Phelan and then we’ll break. | 1171 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| But you were the chairman or acting chairman for five and a half years? | 1184 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Correct. | 1185 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Which is a long time in corporate terms. | 1186 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| I only—– | 1192 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It was less a structure question, more of a mandate question. | 1193 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| But the taxpayer has been left with a—– | 1198 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, absolutely, I agree. | 1199 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| —–€7 billion of a bill. | 1200 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I understand. | 1201 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| That was Tom Considine. | 1203 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Would that be described as self-regulating? | 1206 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| For myself? | 1207 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1208 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, the only person who could have set objectives and goals for me probably would have been the Minister and he didn’t do that. | 1209 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I’m sorry, Chairman, could you say that to me again? | 1211 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| If you define “severe penalty” as, for example, revocation of a banking licence, or something of a really strong nature like that, no, it wasn’t. | 1213 |
Chairman
| Okay. Were they ever discussed? | 1214 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, not at that level of severity, no. | 1215 |
Chairman
| Okay, but was the issue ever discussed, that we might have sanctions? | 1216 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t recall there being … I mean, there were discussions about sanctions, of course, but I’m … I’m following the question as—– | 1217 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1218 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| —–in relation to severe sanction—– | 1219 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1220 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| —–at that level of almost nuclear option. | 1221 |
Chairman
| Okay. Well, for breach of lending policies with banks and sectoral limits, the … one could propose that the ultimate outcome was the nuclear—– | 1222 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Oh no, you could. | 1223 |
Chairman
| —–disaster. | 1224 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1225 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 4.27 p.m. and resumed at 4.48 p.m.
Chairman
| We’ll go back into public session. Is that agreed? In doing so, can I invite Senator Michael D’Arcy. | 1229 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Thank you, Chairman. Mr. Patterson, you are welcome. I’m glad to see you’re healthy and well. | 1230 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Thank you. | 1231 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Of the ten … I’m just looking here … four would have had regulatory or financial services experience … sorry, five. | 1233 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| So, half the board did and half the board wouldn’t have had any. | 1234 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1235 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And, with hindsight, was that a wise selection of the board? | 1236 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Absolutely not. | 1239 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Where do you think Mr. Nyberg came up with that analysis? | 1240 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| The FSRs that came in the name of IFSRA, the Financial Regulator—– | 1246 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The financial stability report? | 1247 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Yes. | 1248 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| They came in the name of the Central Bank. | 1249 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Or the Central Bank, sorry. | 1250 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1251 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| But it was IFSRA who would have collated them along with the Central Bank? | 1252 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, the Central Bank took the lead. | 1253 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Yes. | 1254 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It was predominantly a Central Bank output. | 1255 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Notper se. No. | 1257 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Did you notice it? | 1258 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Did I notice it? There was … I don’t, I don’t notice the particular figures, but—– | 1259 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Were you aware that the citizens of this country—– | 1260 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1261 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| —–went from being low debt-to-GDP ratio—– | 1262 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1263 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| —–to the highest in Europe? | 1264 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I think I was aware of that at the time, yes. | 1265 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And should action have been taken to prevent that? | 1266 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, action should have been taken to correct that, absolutely. | 1267 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And what brought down our banking sector? What was the primary reason? | 1270 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Senator. Now I’ll invite Senator Marc MacSharry. Senator, you’ve ten minutes. | 1274 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1276 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| —–the original proposal for these initiatives? | 1277 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I’ll have to deal with them one by one. | 1278 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes. | 1279 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Let’s take directors’ compliance statements – what would be in a directors’ compliance statement? | 1282 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And what were IBEC saying? | 1284 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The same thing. | 1285 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| You had mentioned them. | 1286 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| They were saying that this shouldn’t be done, that it was—– | 1287 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Did you feel these were bogus or valid concerns? | 1290 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| At the time, I thought they were valid. With hindsight, we should have pressed ahead and done it anyway. | 1291 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. | 1292 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| And if the Government had growled at us and said “No, you can’t do it”, I mean, we should have taken that on. | 1293 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. Did you ask that your own authority members would have a compliance statement themselves? | 1294 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| They regularly signed declarations and stuff under the ethics in public office but that’s a slightly different issue. No, is the answer. No. | 1295 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Do you ever recall any interactions where he was a dissenting voice for the policy or direction? | 1298 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, I don’t. I saw some of his evidence yesterday and I don’t recall any of that. | 1299 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. And you wouldn’t be aware or are you aware of any attempts by him to get stuff before the board of the authority overall? | 1300 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Could it have been suppressed before it came to the board, is that your question? | 1305 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes, I mean is it … do you think that that’s—– | 1306 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I think it’s likely, yes. | 1307 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| It’s likely. | 1308 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I certainly didn’t at the time. | 1311 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| But with the benefit of hindsight now, are you saying that? | 1312 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, if Tom O’Connell came before this committee and under oath said he was prevented from giving information to the board then I accept that that must have happened. | 1313 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Were your colleagues political appointments? | 1316 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, well, all members of the authority were appointed by the Government. | 1317 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Did you have a sense that they were appointed on merit or do you feel it was in any way because of a particular affiliation, politically or—– | 1318 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Marc MacSharry
| What would define a link is all that I, yes that’s all—– | 1322 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, there was one former Minister. | 1323 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes. | 1324 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| —–lobbying … on being lobbied on particular issues. | 1326 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I was never lobbied, no. I have no recollection of any time when I was lobbied on behalf of Government or a political party or anything like that. | 1327 |
Chairman
| Okay thank you. Senator Sean Barrett. Senator, ten minutes. | 1328 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And in Vol. 3, Mr. Chairman, in relation to … on page 22, we have the meetings on supervision, pages 22 and 23. Did you attend those meetings, Mr. Patterson? | 1339 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| These are … the financial stability committee? | 1340 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. | 1341 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, I did not. | 1342 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And, were those minutes supplied to you? | 1343 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| They … no, I don’t believe so, no. I don’t think so. | 1344 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I did. | 1346 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I was gone by then, Senator, but … but nevertheless, I mean, you … you look at that and you wonder, I agree. | 1350 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you very much. Thank you, Chairman. | 1353 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Senator. Deputy Michael McGrath. Deputy, ten minutes. | 1354 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
| So ten to 20 hours a week maybe? | 1359 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, something like that, yes. | 1360 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Something like that. And, was there a fee attaching then to … to the position? | 1361 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, yes. | 1362 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And how much was that say, for 2006 or ‘7? | 1363 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I am, to a degree, yes. | 1368 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 1369 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| What year was this report, Mr. Patterson? | 1377 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| This probably would have been 2006 or ‘07. And I remember voices in the board saying “No, we can’t say that because, if we do, we will bring about the very thing we’re trying to avoid”. | 1378 |
Chairman
| This was the 2006 to 2007 report not the—– | 1379 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It could be … it would be one or either. | 1380 |
Chairman
| Okay. Sorry, Deputy. | 1381 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I can’t remember which, but certainly later in the period. | 1382 |
Chairman
| Deputy McGrath? | 1383 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| But would it have been better to not publish a report at all, rather than publish a report that didn’t reflect the concerns of board members? | 1384 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
| But I would put it to you, Mr. Patterson, that people don’t expect the Central Bank to be engaging in spin. | 1386 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, but it didn’t lie. I mean, I’m not suggesting that the financial stability report—– | 1387 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| I didn’t say—– | 1388 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| —–contained lies. | 1389 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Of all board members. | 1391 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Of all board—– | 1392 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Michael McGrath
| But there was an overriding requirement or a feeling of necessity to, in a sense, dilute, water down any major concerns—– | 1394 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1395 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–that you might have had—– | 1396 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1397 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–that the board might have had. | 1398 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1399 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I was out of action from early October to December of that year so I’m afraid I can’t answer your question, Deputy. I don’t know. | 1401 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| You can’t recall when the issue first—– | 1402 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, I can’t. | 1403 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–came to the board. | 1404 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I have no … I have no memory of that meeting and that issue around the contracts for difference ever being discussed in the authority. | 1405 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Ever? | 1406 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Not in my time, no. | 1407 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay, thank you. | 1408 |
Chairman
| Thank you, Deputy. Deputy Joe Higgins. | 1409 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Joe Higgins
| And this found its way to the board then? | 1412 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1413 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| The boards. | 1414 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, yes. | 1415 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. And can I therefore take you again to Vol. 2, page 3? Deputy Doherty already referred to this and from a meeting in 2004, April—– | 1416 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1417 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| I’m allowed to quote, aren’t I? | 1418 |
Chairman
| Well, this isn’t actually an—– | 1419 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes, its—– | 1420 |
Chairman
| You can certainly refer to the document in front of you, Deputy. | 1421 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. So, let me just rehearse it again that: “X reported under Financial Stability Matters on recent discussions at the boards of the [Central Bank] and [the regulator]”. | 1422 |
Chairman
| That’s showing on the screen at the moment now. | 1423 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 1424 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I’ve got it here, yes. | 1425 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I would. | 1427 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1431 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| I’d leave the questioning now, Deputy, to allow the witness to respond and I’ll bring you back in again. | 1433 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes, but I want to put two or three quotes—– | 1434 |
Chairman
| Okay, okay. | 1435 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| Mr. Patterson? | 1437 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. The problem there, Mr. Patterson, is – we’ve said it to the previous witness – the evidence from the banks is that some of them had engaged in huge cheating at the taxpayers’ expense. | 1439 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I think—– | 1440 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Why should you assume that they would be paragons of virtue? | 1441 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 1443 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Did the IDA say that? | 1446 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| In aShip of Fools, which is a book by Fintan O’Toole, the IDA is quoted verbatim as saying, in attracting in these enterprises, that “The Regulator has disapplied its powers of supervision.” | 1447 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Right. I hadn’t … I wasn’t aware of that. | 1448 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. Can I ask you then, lastly … or maybe second lastly. | 1449 |
Chairman
| No, you’re just allowed these. Drive on. | 1450 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I wasn’t suggesting that. | 1452 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| No. | 1453 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| This, I think, is the same speech that was referred to in Kilkenny. | 1454 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| It is in Kilkenny, yes. | 1455 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I think there should be severe penalties for people who defy the law. | 1458 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Should they go to jail? | 1459 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| If necessary, yes. | 1460 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Deputy. Deputy Murphy. | 1461 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Was this discussed within the Financial Regulator? | 1464 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Was it discussed as a policy that either we should or should not have this? | 1465 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Yes. | 1466 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, I think it was more assumed. | 1467 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Assumed, okay. So no conversations with the CEO about whether or not he should be spending time attending certain meetings or presentations. | 1468 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t recall any of those conversations, no. | 1469 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Levers through the banks, in terms of? | 1472 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Was any of this discussed at the time, on the board or with the CEO? | 1474 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, not to my knowledge. | 1475 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Was any level of attention given to this introduction of this new product, 100% mortgages—– | 1476 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
| At the time, yes. | 1479 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And did you ever think to recommend to customers that they should not take on these mortgages? | 1480 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, but it was never, you know, a move authorised by the board to say go out and say to people, “Do not take these mortgages”? | 1482 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, Mary O’Dea would have discussed this at the board, I believe, and the board would have supported that, yes. | 1483 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| She didn’t meet opposition at the board? | 1484 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Sorry? | 1485 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| She didn’t meet opposition at the board? | 1486 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No. | 1487 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1490 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Because otherwise I’ll end up naming names. | 1491 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay … but the inadequacy then impacted upon the regulator’s ability to conduct on-site inspections? | 1492 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1493 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And so what was the result of that then in terms of getting in more adequate systems or fixing the problems that you were encountering? | 1494 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And did this ultimately then lead to a lack of information as to the bank’s individual levels of lending, credit quality, exposures, when we come into the crisis period? | 1496 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It certainly impaired the banking supervision unit’s ability to keep pace with that, yes. | 1497 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. Thank you. | 1498 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| And at the same time, I mean, the data requirements for Basel II were just enormous—– | 1499 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1500 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| —–and all that was going on at the same time. | 1501 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
| We certainly didn’t need Government resistance. | 1503 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Can you elaborate on that? | 1504 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Is that … thank you. Is that appropriate that they do that? | 1506 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1508 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| So they were reminding us that “we still own the ball”, you know. | 1509 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| This is the five by five? | 1512 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Hang on a minute now, Deputy. | 1514 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1516 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So it wasn’t … was there a knowledge gap as well, in terms of understanding the asset quality? | 1517 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I wasn’t around for that particular bit of it, I had gone by then, but, yes, I think the answer to your question is yes, there must’ve been a knowledge gap. | 1518 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1519 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| But I am surmising because I wasn’t there. | 1520 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1522 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Brian Patterson
| That’s what I’m saying, yes. | 1524 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. Do you think that’s perhaps a perverse way to approach sector lending limits? That in order, you know, to change the rules for one so they must then be weakened for everyone else. | 1525 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I didn’t say that the rules were changed, because the sector limits were still there and they were still subject to reporting—– | 1526 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| It’s been relaxed. | 1527 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| But if the standards were then relaxed for everyone else—– | 1529 |
Chairman
| This is your last question, because I have to move on. | 1530 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–doesn’t that imply that there’s something … there’s a problem there? And it implies it not in hindsight, but at the time—– | 1531 |
Chairman
| Sorry, Deputy, I’m going to have push you. You’re out of time, and you’re out of questions. Make your comment and I’m moving on. | 1532 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Sorry, I couldn’t get the questions. | 1533 |
Chairman
| Sure I’ll give it to you briefly there. | 1534 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| If you’re relaxing the sectoral limits? | 1535 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. For one bank. | 1536 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| For one bank, and then as a result have to relax them for everyone else, doesn’t that imply that … I mean, doesn’t that imply that you’re approaching this the wrong way in terms of regulation? | 1537 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The tail wagging the dog, in other words? | 1538 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Excuse me? | 1539 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The tail wagging the dog? | 1540 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Yes. | 1541 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, yes it does. I mean, with the benefit of hindsight, that was a crazy thing to do. | 1542 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| At the time, though. At the time shouldn’t that have been very obvious that the tail was wagging the dog? | 1543 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t know, because I wasn’t there then. | 1544 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| There may have been within the executive, Chairman, and my guess is there would be, but I don’t remember seeing that at the level of the authority. | 1546 |
Chairman
| Okay, so who would be in possession of such a manual, or where would it be located? | 1547 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I guess the prudential director but I’m guessing. I don’t know. | 1548 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Okay. I just want to … this is the team for the regulator’s office, and have you just said that what was missing there was an expertise in financial regulation? | 1551 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Amongst the non-executives. | 1552 |
Chairman
| Amongst the non-executives. | 1553 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Amongst the non-executives, yes. | 1554 |
Chairman
| Okay, all right, thank you. Senator O’Keeffe. | 1555 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Well, I—– | 1559 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| The very fact that you weren’t doing it externally? | 1560 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So, so if the banks were left, if you like, to do the number crunching, as you put it, then, in a way, there was no way of knowing, really, how close and verified—– | 1564 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. To my knowledge, their wasn’t, but I … I could be wrong on that. | 1565 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1567 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And wasn’t, perhaps, allowing things to be heard either. It would have been—– | 1572 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Absolutely, yes, I agree, I agree. | 1573 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But the secretive aspect, perhaps, also, is that something you’d like to dwell on? | 1574 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I would tend to downplay that. | 1575 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Well you’ve used the word yourself. | 1576 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1581 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, no, no, I accept that. The document you’re referring to—– | 1583 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| It’s the—– | 1584 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| —–was it a draft, was it a draft or—– | 1585 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| It’s called the Interim Financial Stability Report to the Board of the Central Bank in the First Half of 2006. | 1586 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. | 1588 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And, again, the public might expect the Central Bank in all its guises to be more urgent and to act more quickly. That’s a reasonable thing to accept. | 1593 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| They would, yes. Absolutely, yes—– | 1594 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Again going back and I raised this morning the idea of the financial institutions funding the Financial Regulator. What is your view of that relationship? | 1595 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And was regulatory capture avoided in your view by that system or would you say? | 1597 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Not entirely. | 1598 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Would you just like to clarify before I finish? | 1599 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Was that deference apparent to you when you were the chair? | 1601 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Not as much as it is with hindsight. | 1602 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Do you think maybe you were deferential to the banks then also? | 1603 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t believe so, no. I don’t … I mean that robust meeting that I referred to when the keys were thrown across the desk, that wasn’t being deferential. | 1604 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay, thank you. | 1605 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I’m sorry, Chairman, I don’t have the question. | 1607 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| What period are you talking about? | 1609 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t recall any discussion on that, Chairman. | 1611 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| That it was embedded by then or it was too late by then? | 1614 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I think by 2007 it was getting too late. | 1615 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| The relationship between the regulator, Central Bank and senior bankers, is that it? | 1617 |
Chairman
| And banking institutions, yes. | 1618 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Yes, for instance, one of the earlier witnesses here, I think it was Ms Burke—– | 1620 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I know what you are referring to. | 1621 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
| Right. | 1624 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| And I think Pat Neary and others may have said that after Mary Burke. | 1625 |
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| To the … to the banking institutions? | 1627 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1628 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, yes. I’m sure there would have been informal contact. I’ll say we are a very social country. But was that done with evil intent? I don’t believe so. | 1631 |
Chairman
| Okay. All right, thank you very much. So we are back to finishing matters off. So I can invite Deputy O’Donnell in to wrap up, please and then Deputy Doherty. | 1632 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Should the stress tests have been carried out by the Financial Regulator rather than the Central Bank? | 1633 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| No, I understand what you are saying, Deputy. I, I think it probably didn’t matter who actually did it. What’s more important is—– | 1636 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Of course it matters. Sure they … the regulator had the, had the knowledge of what was happening, so the question I am asking, based on the knowledge base—– | 1637 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1638 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
| My answer is that it’s more about what the framework was, whether it was correct and whether the supervision of the work done in the banks was at the level it should be. That’s the—– | 1640 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So what would you say? | 1643 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But in essence, the Financial Regulator was not doing anything to assess the risks the banks were taking in respect of loans? | 1645 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It wasn’t doing enough. | 1646 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay, thank you. | 1647 |
Chairman
| Thank you, Deputy Doherty. | 1648 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| By talking to the individual himself, is that what you mean? | 1650 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I don’t have any memory of that, no. | 1652 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Around about the mid-2000s you’re saying? | 1654 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| No, well … the time where you were most busiest on boards if you had—– | 1655 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Most busy … of other boards, I was the chairman of two others. | 1656 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Two others, okay. And in relation to … was the board aware of the concerns and the problems around IAS 39 in terms of auditing? | 1657 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Can you expand a little? | 1658 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| IAS 39 is—– | 1659 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Which one is that? | 1660 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| There’s been a lot of discussion in relation to it, it’s in relation to the fact that the auditors aren’t allowed to account for future losses. | 1661 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes, I know the one, yes. | 1662 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Was the board aware of the shortcomings of this issue? | 1663 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Not at the time, no. | 1664 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Not at the time, in your tenure, is that what you’re saying? | 1665 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1666 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Brian Patterson
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| I appreciate all of that, and with all of that bearing in mind, in your view, was the financial stability reports that were issued misleading? Or could they be viewed as misleading? | 1669 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| I wouldn’t like to say a straight “Yes” to that because I would imagine that there could be all kinds of hostages to fortune if I did say that. | 1670 |
Chairman
| Can I maybe rephrase it and ask you, were the financial stability reports an accurate reflection of what was happening at that time and what needed to be conveyed? | 1671 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| They didn’t properly outline the risks and the potential consequences of what was happening in the banking system. | 1672 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. | 1673 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Thank you … sorry, but, that youse were aware of, is the key point. We all know that they didn’t highlight the risk, but the … the risk that the boards were aware of, is that correct? | 1674 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
| Yes. | 1675 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay, thank you. | 1676 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you very much. With that—– | 1677 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Chairman—– | 1678 |
Chairman
| Yes, sure. | 1679 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Brian Patterson
| It didn’t … I’ll say what I said before. It didn’t sufficiently explain the risk to the banking system as a whole. | 1681 |
Chairman
| Okay. Thank you very much, Mr. Patterson. Is there anything else you would wish to add before we bring matters to a conclusion? | 1682 |
Mr. Brian Patterson
Chairman