Sitting suspended at 4.50 p.m. and resumed at 5.23 p.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT:
| Deputy Pearse Doherty, | Senator Sean D. Barrett, |
| Deputy Joe Higgins, | Senator Michael D’Arcy, |
| Deputy Michael McGrath, | Senator Marc MacSharry, |
| Deputy Eoghan Murphy, | Senator Susan O’Keeffe. |
| Deputy Kieran O’Donnell, | |
| Deputy John Paul Phelan, |
Central Bank-Financial Regulator – Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Mr. Con Horan, former Prudential Director, Financial Regulator.
Chairman
| Thank you again, Mr. Horan. And if I could invite you to make your opening remarks this evening please. | 1421 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Thank you for the clarification, Mr. Horan, and thank you for your opening statement. I now invite first lead questioner, Senator MacSharry. You have 15 minutes. | 1437 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So it was a timing thing, as opposed to a “Look, we’re not going there”. | 1442 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And did that go … was that a decision by your direct line director, as you say, the prudential director at that time, or did it go to the board, or Governor—- | 1444 |
Mr. Con Horan
| My understood that it went to the senior managers in the financial … the chief executive level in the Financial Regulator and the Central Bank. | 1445 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| The seventh floor we were hearing about earlier, is that where all those guys hang out? | 1446 |
Mr. Con Horan
| That would have been, yes, that would have been the seventh floor at the time. | 1447 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay … we’re not allowed use names, are we, Chairman? | 1448 |
Chairman
| Well, I always advise members to speak to legals before they get into specifics but—– | 1449 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes, well, we might go back—– | 1450 |
Chairman
| —–so I’ll ask you to err on the side of caution, if you haven’t spoken to legals. | 1451 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Can you comment on the solvency protection measures in force, and taken before and during the crisis, and the stress-testing exercises carried out with the financial institutions? | 1452 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Just to be clear, Deputy, you’re talking about the 2006 stress tests? | 1453 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes. | 1454 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Well—– | 1455 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And other solvency protection measures which were in place or in force? | 1456 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
| Well, I think the stress tests were actually conducted a little bit before there was decline. | 1459 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Were there no further ones, no? | 1460 |
Mr. Con Horan
| There may have been a further stress test in 2008, but I can’t be sure of that. | 1461 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes, well, what’s your involvement with them then? Had you have an involvement with the stress tests? | 1462 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, we would have had an involvement. They were primarily run by the Central Bank, but we would have been involved in feeding in information from the bank, from the individual banking sector. | 1463 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And is that specific to the bank supervisory department? | 1468 |
Mr. Con Horan
| No, sorry, that would have been across the board. So, I mean, I would have been—– | 1469 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| No, no, I’m interested specifically in BSD, I think ye call it? | 1470 |
Mr. Con Horan
| BSD, yes. | 1471 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1473 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And I’m anxious to know who refuses them? | 1474 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Okay—– | 1475 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| May 2008, I think, specifically we’re talking to … talking about. Thanks. | 1476 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, well, I mean, I would say, Deputy … I’ll repeat: I was very supportive of the banking supervision, and—– | 1479 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes? | 1480 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–to the extent that I could push for additional resources for that area, it would have been an area I certainly would have pushed for. | 1481 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So, is it your testimony that you did all you could to secure the staff but the budgeting committee said no? | 1482 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, there was … we didn’t get the resource … we didn’t get the full request that we looked for, yes. | 1483 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| But … and I’m not holding you responsible, or anything. I’m merely asking. | 1486 |
Mr. Con Horan
| No, no. I’m just trying to explain—– | 1487 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| You were the manager, or the head of the bank supervisory department for 2003 to 2006, and then you were the head … the prudential director. | 1488 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Right. Yes. | 1489 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Isn’t that correct? | 1490 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1491 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So, in that context. So I’m not … you’re not answering … you’re not answering for everybody here, just give me your view. Why was there no enforcement in that period? | 1492 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1495 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| As opposed to a bank transferring—– | 1496 |
Mr. Con Horan
| As opposed to capital insolvency and liquidity. | 1497 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| —–€6 billion from one to another, for example? | 1498 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1499 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Yes. Okay, okay. That’s great, thanks. | 1500 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. In the period after 2006, then, you’ve got your stuff in place. How is it that there was no enforcement in the period 2006 to 2008? | 1504 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Again I think we hadn’t set up a dedicated inspection area. | 1505 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So, though we had the rules but just not the enforcement, was that—– | 1506 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. It wasn’t an enforcement driven approach to regulation. | 1507 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
| I think it’s probably fair to say there were actions taken against the banks but not in the administrative sanctions area. | 1509 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So can you give me an example of one without one breach and one enforcement sanction without naming the bank or the individual involved? | 1510 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| But materially, what would that have meant to the institution, just again for us lay people? | 1512 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay, thanks. | 1514 |
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
| Just to be clear again, Deputy, in particular in relation to those issues? | 1516 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1517 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Well, I think, in both those cases … so in 2005 when I made the initial proposals—– | 1518 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1519 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Chief executive is the Governor now or the regulator? | 1521 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
| Well, so that … I understood there was resistance at official level—– | 1524 |
Chairman
| Central Bank level or the regulator? | 1525 |
Mr. Con Horan
| The Central Bank level. | 1526 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1527 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| So you’re saying both … the Governor was both aware, cognisant and was in line with the measures and the position by the regulator? | 1529 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, I mean these measures, Chairman, were, you know, considered to be issues that impacted on overall financial stability—– | 1530 |
Chairman
| Yes, indeed—– | 1531 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–and, therefore, we had to get the Governor’s agreement to take those actions. | 1532 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. Deputy Murphy. | 1533 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Thank you, Chairman. Thank you, Mr. Horan, you’re very welcome. I just want to move forward to 2007, if I may. You were a member of the domestic standing group? | 1534 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1535 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. Were there any deficiencies in the DSG’s operating model? | 1536 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Why was the NTMA brought in in 2008? | 1538 |
Mr. Con Horan
| So the NTMA became involved, I think, around September 2008, at the peak of the crisis. So they would not have been involved in—– | 1539 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| It was late 2008, sorry, when they came in it was—– | 1540 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes—– | 1541 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Is that what you were saying, it was late 2008—– | 1542 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Would their absence up until that point be seen as a deficiency, do you think, in terms of the membership? | 1544 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And was there any agency missing from the DSG? | 1546 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| But prior to the establishment of the DSG, in your opinion, would have the interaction between Financial Regulator and the Department of Finance been sufficient? | 1550 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. The simulation exercise that was conducted at the end of December, or, sorry, at the end of 2007 in December … were you involved in that simulation exercise? | 1552 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I believe I was, yes. | 1553 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. I’m just wondering, how close to reality are these exercises? I mean, do the observations that are made in the simulation, do they translate to the real world? | 1554 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
| I can’t recall that specifically from those tests, no. | 1559 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. Do you recall the 2005 crisis simulation exercise? You were working in banking supervision at the time. | 1560 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, again I’m aware they were on, Deputy, but I couldn’t be sure that I recall the specifics of that in 2005. | 1561 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
| I think that … I can’t say I specifically recall it from the … but that would have been pretty consistent with the type of issues that happened in simulation exercises. | 1563 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And would they have been acted upon? | 1564 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Sure, but the observation that was made from the exercise here in Ireland in 2005 still stood when the crisis emerged in 2008? | 1568 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
| I don’t recall that I was involved in the paper. | 1571 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1574 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1575 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
| I would have been aware … yes I would have been aware that banks—– | 1577 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| At the time? | 1578 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes at the time, yes. | 1579 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And in your view was this agenda designed to support any particular institution? | 1580 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, let’s move on to … then, to July 2008. There was a domestic standing group meeting, and it’s on page 124 and 125 of the booklet. The core booklet, Vol. 2. | 1586 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Vol. 2. Sorry, Deputy, the page again, sorry? | 1587 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Page 124. So you represented the Financial Regulator at this meeting? | 1588 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1589 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
| Sorry, sorry, I’m actually struggling to find the reference. It’s Vol. 2, page 124? | 1591 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Vol. 2. | 1592 |
Mr. Con Horan
| And it’s the … the domestic standing group of 8 July? | 1593 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| That’s correct, yes, and it’s the paragraph at the bottom of the page, the large paragraph. | 1594 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Of the … of the first page, long-term investors? | 1595 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Yes. | 1596 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, sorry. | 1597 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And there’s … an international review of the—– | 1598 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Sorry—– | 1599 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| An international viewpoint is provided, sorry, at the meeting, about risks … significant capital risks facing the banks and potential for significant loan losses. | 1600 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1601 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Do you remember that discussion? | 1602 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I, I can’t say I remember it specifically, but I remember those type of discussions, yes. | 1603 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, but, you know, who might be providing the international viewpoint at that meeting? | 1604 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, yes. | 1607 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. Is it possible to identify which institution you had—– | 1608 |
Chairman
| No, I would advise not to. There’s no need to. | 1609 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, well, I mean, how did that information come to you and did you verify it? | 1610 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And, so … sorry, were you then expressing that view depending on what the rating agencies were saying? | 1612 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, but not feedback—– | 1614 |
Chairman
| Last question, Deputy Murphy. | 1615 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So, it wasn’t a decision? | 1618 |
Chairman
| Sorry, Deputy, I’m going have to bring you in … ‘cause I have stuff to come back to here. I’ll bring you back in the wrap-up. | 1619 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Thank you, Chair. | 1620 |
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Okay. And was that discussed at the domestic standing group meetings? | 1623 |
Mr. Con Horan
| It may have been. I haven’t seen reference to it in the documents that I’ve seen, but it’s the sort of thing definitely … you know, I would’ve expected would’ve been broached in that forum. | 1624 |
Chairman
| To be more specific, was it prominent … was it a prominent item of discussion at the standing group meetings? | 1625 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| When did you join the domestic standing group, Mr. Horan? | 1629 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I think the domestic standing group was established in 2006, to the best of my knowledge, so I probably was in there from the commencement of that process. | 1630 |
Chairman
| And were you bringing these concerns to the attention of the domestic standing group? | 1631 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| So who in the Central Bank was responsible then for the collection of the analysis and the analysis stress testing? | 1637 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I think it would have been the … either the financial stability or the monetary policy people. Probably the financial stability people were in the lead on those stress-testing exercises. | 1638 |
Chairman
| And who had responsibility for developing the model when it moved there? | 1639 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| And who checked the responses from the banks? | 1641 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Well, are you able to confirm this afternoon that the responses were checked? | 1643 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I’m not in a position … I’m … I mean, my assumption is that the process ran through and I’ve never heard that … that the information was not checked. | 1644 |
Chairman
| But, to your knowledge, do you know they were checked? | 1645 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I wouldn’t have been directly involved so I can’t say that they were checked. But I would say, Chairman, I mean, in 2006 the IMF were directly involved in that exercise as well. | 1646 |
Chairman
| Okay, tell us more about that. Tell us more about that. | 1647 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Okay. | 1649 |
Mr. Con Horan
| So the information available to them at that time, my recollection is that it was better than it had been on the previous exercise. | 1650 |
Chairman
| Thank you. Deputy Joe Higgins. | 1651 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Mr. Horan, in September 2008, were you involved in any discussions in the Central Bank, or regulator, in relation to the potential insolvency of any financial institutions? | 1652 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I would have been engaged in discussions in September 2008 about, yes, all the financial institutions and their solvency positions. | 1653 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Con Horan
| I don’t recall. The reference I have is 26 September meeting—– | 1655 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| No, you don’t need to refer to it—– | 1656 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Okay, so not—– | 1657 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–just take my word for it. | 1658 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. So I’m looking at DOF 028—– | 1659 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Con Horan
| I can’t say I’m aware of the specific discussion. I am aware that some of the banks … there was more concern about some banks than there were of others, in general, at that time. | 1661 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Did you have a view on 29 September as to whether any of the banks were insolvent with the advantage of the position you had? | 1662 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| So, would you believe or not that the board of the Central Bank, therefore, retained a serious responsibility in relation to financial stability arising from what the regulator was in charge of? | 1666 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1667 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| And, are you aware that that’s a direct contradiction of what the former Governor of the Central Bank told the inquiry? | 1668 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. Was it significant that six or seven members of the financial authority board were also members, and, in fact, constituted a majority of members, of the Central Bank board? | 1670 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| That was your understanding? | 1672 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Well … I know the prudential pack in the chief executive’s reports were brought to the board of the Central Bank. | 1673 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. So—– | 1678 |
Chairman
| —–no, I … just allow Deputy Higgins to wrap up the question and then I’ll bring you in, Mr. Horan. | 1679 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. So the prudential information that was getting through to the board on a regular basis, which you said—– | 1682 |
Chairman
| I’m going to have to wrap you up here quickly now with a question—– | 1683 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes, I am—– | 1684 |
Chairman
| —–because you’re way over time. | 1685 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Notwithstanding that, we still had this type of concern on the board about people who might be raising red flags about dangers in lending, etc. | 1686 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. Yes. | 1688 |
Chairman
| Senator Barrett. | 1689 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you, Chairman, and welcome. Do you believe that there were effective instruments available to deal with excessive credit growth and sector risk concentration? | 1690 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1693 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| So we needed them—– | 1694 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Con Horan
| I think, very simply, that they were too late. | 1697 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| I see, yes. The opposition to the CRD requirements from within the industry, could you tell us something about that? | 1698 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| How much more capital did they need, double it? | 1702 |
Mr. Con Horan
| They would have at least required double, and maybe triple, yes. | 1703 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Double to triple. Thank you very much. Thank you, Chairman. | 1704 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Senator Susan O’Keefe. | 1705 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Con Horan
| I mean, depending on the time here, you know, if it was September 2008—– | 1713 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| No no, we’re talking about earlier than that, she was talking about a period before that, 2006, ‘07, ‘08. | 1714 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. I think you said earlier that when you tried to introduce those measures about increasing capital for high loan-to-value mortgages in 2005—– | 1716 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1717 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–you said you encountered the difficulty, environment of groupthink, I think was the expression that you used. | 1718 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I don’t think I used that, I think that’s maybe from the report, but I don’t think I used that expression. | 1719 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Just finally, were you disappointed in 2005 when your attempts to intervene, if you like, were turned down? | 1722 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I was—– | 1723 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Or frustrated. | 1724 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And they prevailed. | 1726 |
Mr. Con Horan
| They prevailed at that point, yes. | 1727 |
Chairman
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| And that fact that they would be shut out from ECB monetary operations and from the interbank market for a number of months, would that be more than just—– | 1731 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1732 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| —–you know, the liquidity pressures that were being felt across the financial sector at the time? | 1733 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1736 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. Was the perception of the Irish financial sector’s overexposure to commercial and residential property a correct or incorrect perception, in your view? | 1737 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I think clearly, as it has turned out, it was a correct view at the time, yes. | 1738 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1743 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–UK banks, had already collapsed. So there was a lot going on. | 1744 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1746 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| And—– | 1747 |
Chairman
| You’ll have to be careful now, Deputy. | 1748 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| I will and I’ll take direction, and if Mr. Horan doesn’t want to go down this direction—– | 1749 |
Mr. Con Horan
| No. I’m more than happy to. | 1750 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Chairman
| Sorry, Deputy I’m going to have to pull you back because—– | 1752 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. | 1753 |
Chairman
| —–we, we’re right on the edge now, right on the edge, really. So, you’re out of time. | 1754 |
Mr. Con Horan
| It’s a topic I’d like to deal with. | 1755 |
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Okay. Thank you. Deputy Phelan. | 1759 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| Thank you, Chairman. Good afternoon, Mr. Horan. | 1760 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Deputy. | 1761 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Con Horan
| In 2005 there was preparations made for the administrative sanctions regime at that time, yes. | 1763 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| And what was the format like? Was it general guidance, or—– | 1764 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| So there wasn’t really a formal document or—– | 1766 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy John Paul Phelan
| All right, thank you. | 1772 |
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
| On administrative sanctions? | 1774 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1775 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1776 |
Chairman
| Okay. Did you not also say that there was one in place when you left in 2008? That there was similar type of—– | 1777 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Procedures? | 1778 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1779 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Well, to the best of my knowledge, the same procedures applied across the board. I don’t think there was a change that I can recall. | 1780 |
Chairman
| Okay, all right. Thank you. Next questioner, Deputy Michael McGrath. | 1781 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Thank you, Chair. You’re very welcome, Mr. Horan. | 1782 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Thank you, Deputy. | 1783 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Con Horan
| Certainly, from my experience of looking … when I went into banking supervision in 2003, that had been the way, I’d say, for the previous decade. | 1787 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay and the origin of it … the ultimate origin of it? | 1788 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I—– | 1789 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Legislation, European guidance? | 1790 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I think it was probably practice in a lot of jurisdictions at that time. I mean—- | 1791 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Established practice? | 1792 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Established practice, not only in Ireland but elsewhere. I don’t think we would have been out of sync with the rest of Europe, etc., at that point in time. | 1793 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. I mean … maybe they’re not my words but they’re a media interpretation of it and, again, I can’t tell you the exact origins of that but—– | 1795 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Sure. | 1796 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And just to clarify, you felt that it was the most important issue and that issue being higher capital charges for high loan-to-value mortgages? | 1798 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 1800 |
Mr. Con Horan
| So it was a general approach and a desire to, kind of, intervene in the market and start taking action. | 1801 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, I didn’t … I mean, I certainly would have considered it—– | 1805 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 1806 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–and I would have considered it as an option of what were my options in 2006? Quite frankly, the whole European thing had moved away from sectoral concentrations. | 1807 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Sure. | 1808 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay—– | 1810 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–but I didn’t consider it feasible. But the capital was the better way—– | 1811 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Con Horan
| If I recall on it I—– | 1813 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes—– | 1814 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–I can’t be … I shouldn’t be held to this but—– | 1815 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| She said she had your support—– | 1816 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, I mean, I had a … I had … because I had worked there, I had a particular sympathy for—– | 1817 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes—– | 1818 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 1820 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–but we were sent back to look at kind of, areas for savings, etc., so there was some push back at that particular point of time. | 1821 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Who … who was on that committee at that time? You were … were you a member? | 1822 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I would have … I would have appeared before the budget and remuneration committee but I couldn’t tell you the membership. | 1823 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Or the chairperson? | 1824 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I … I can’t remember exactly who it was. I can certainly find out and … more than happy to give it to you. | 1825 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| I think that would be helpful. | 1826 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Mr. Horan. Deputy O’Donnell. | 1827 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Thanks, Chairman. Welcome, Mr. Horan. Do you feel that the level of European macroeconomic and prudential supervision was adequate in the years between ‘03 and ‘07? | 1828 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Just on a quick note – on the night of the guarantee were you in any way consulted by your superiors? | 1830 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So you weren’t consulted as such—– | 1832 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I certainly wasn’t consulted on the decision. No. | 1833 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Con Horan
| I disagree a little bit Deputy in terms of … my recollection is the Central Bank was always in the lead on the stress-testing front because it was a matter of macroeconomic modelling, etc. | 1835 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But wasn’t there a changeover in 2006? | 1836 |
Mr. Con Horan
| No, I mean I think they still would have worked together, there would have been less involvement from the prudential side around that time—– | 1837 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| Could you just ask the question to afford some time for a response? | 1839 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Sorry, just for clarity, I think there’s two forms of stress testing that we’re talking about here—– | 1840 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| I’m talking about … the main one I want is prudential stress testing of the balance sheets of the banks. | 1841 |
Mr. Con Horan
| That was run by the … the Central Bank would have been the driver of that stress testing in 2004-2006, in conjunction with the Financial Regulator. | 1842 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And prior to 2004? | 1843 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay. Can I … did you in your role as director of prudential, were you on the seventh floor of the building in Dame Street at that time? | 1845 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I was, from 2006, yes. | 1846 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
| Could you clarify the point you’re making? | 1848 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Well, I’m trying to be in the time limit. | 1851 |
Chairman
| I know that but quoting can be difficult if you don’t have the exact words in front of you. I can give you a bit of flexibility in that area, Deputy. | 1852 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And when you were previous head of the department, did you look for additional resources yourself? | 1854 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, we would have had our annual requests for resources. | 1855 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Do you believe you were understaffed? | 1856 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Well, I suppose, to finish with, do you believe—– | 1858 |
Chairman
| Last question, Deputy. | 1859 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Senator Michael D’Arcy. Senator. | 1862 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Con Horan
| So, in terms of the DSG, around 2007—– | 1864 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Yes. | 1865 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Chairman
| Yes, just be general in the institutions, okay? | 1868 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1872 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Con Horan
| It is very difficult for me to answer in terms of what the international investors’ perspective was at that time. | 1874 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| You were the banking supervisor. | 1875 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| But it was available, liquidity was available. | 1879 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Were they more exposed than anybody else? | 1881 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Last question, Senator. | 1883 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Con Horan
| I think that for me, the liquidity crisis was an international crisis from August 2007. | 1885 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Was ours worse than anywhere else? | 1886 |
Mr. Con Horan
| It is difficult for me to say but I know other jurisdictions we were talking to were under severe pressure at that point in time as well. I mean, the US market clearly had had—– | 1887 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Just to finish—– | 1888 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–a horrendous time at that stage. | 1889 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| —–was ours worse than anywhere else? | 1890 |
Mr. Con Horan
| In terms of liquidity? | 1891 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| In terms of liquidity. | 1892 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Ours wasn’t? | 1894 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. | 1895 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Okay. | 1896 |
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| I’m trying to establish were there guidelines actually sent out by you and your sector that provided clear definitions and different definitions by banking supervisors? | 1899 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Yes. | 1903 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–investment property, etc. … so, I’d make the point that, even under the current international practice—– | 1904 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1905 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
| So the last line of—– | 1910 |
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1914 |
Chairman
| And I’m assuming that the … was the crash … well, I won’t assume I’ll ask … I’ll ask you the question, was the collapse of every bank in the Irish State in one way or another a surprise to you? | 1915 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. Yes. Certainly in September 2008 I didn’t imagine that we were facing that. | 1916 |
Chairman
| So can you explain why that is the case? | 1917 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Yes. Yes. | 1919 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Senator MacSharry, wrap up please. | 1923 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Great, yes thanks. Just two quick ones. In October 2008, did you watch Mr. Neary on “Prime Time”? That was the one where he extolled—— | 1924 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Actually, I don’t think I did I think we were in … in the office at that stage. | 1925 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. So you never saw it back or—– | 1926 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I may have seen it. I may have seen parts of it in various programmes but I don’t think I ever looked at the whole thing. | 1927 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Around the time like or—– | 1928 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I honestly don’t know. I mean—– | 1929 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| You were aware … were you aware or not of his—– | 1930 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Oh no, certainly no. I was aware … I was in the office when—– | 1931 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| —–extolling the solidity of the capitalisation of the banks? | 1932 |
Mr. Con Horan
| No. I was aware before he went so I’m not saying I wasn’t aware that he was heading to do the interview. | 1933 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
| I was aware of the general … the general—– | 1935 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| October 2008. | 1936 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–message that was there. Yes. | 1937 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And what would have been your view at the time? | 1938 |
Mr. Con Horan
| My view was that we were in an extremely difficult situation. | 1939 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Did you agree with it? | 1940 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| But you wouldn’t use “The best in Europe” as … in your own words? | 1942 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I don’t believe at that stage that we were the best in Europe. | 1943 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. | 1944 |
Mr. Con Horan
| My recollection … I … I … I—– | 1945 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And just—— | 1946 |
Mr. Con Horan
| We … we … we probably would have been perceived, though, as having high capital ratios at that stage. | 1947 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Was Mr. Neary your line manager from 2003 on? Did you report directly to him? | 1948 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1949 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So he was the director of prudential when you were manager or head—– | 1950 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Correct. | 1951 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| —–of bank supervision and then he became CEO and, presumably, you reported to him then. | 1952 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Correct. | 1953 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. Did he rebuke your advances in terms of the regulatory improvements that you sought to make? | 1954 |
Mr. Con Horan
| No. I mean, in 2006 … when the measures were introduced in 2006—– | 1955 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| But before that, as head of banking supervision. | 1956 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
| So to the extent that you can judge, he was supportive but he came back with the message that, “Look, this isn’t working.” | 1958 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. And—– | 1959 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. | 1960 |
Mr. Con Horan
| —–you know, in 2006 when we went, he was supportive of those measures at that time. | 1961 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| And then in his new role and your new role, he was supportive of what you sought to introduce. | 1962 |
Mr. Con Horan
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes, he would have been involved in those discussions. | 1965 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. | 1966 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. He would have led the side from dealing with the directors, yes. | 1967 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
| Okay. Thanks, Chairman. | 1968 |
Chairman
| Okay. Deputy Murphy. | 1969 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Thank you, Chairman. And thank you, Mr. Horan. I just … to conclude, I want to look at one document, if I may, and it’s in Vol. 2 of your booklet, page 127. | 1970 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1971 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 1973 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Is this the domestic standing group meeting? | 1974 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| This meeting continued on the Sunday, the day before the night of the guarantee. Were you at the meeting on the Sunday? | 1976 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I was, yes. | 1977 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And when that discussion continued, the possibility of a five-bank or a four-bank guarantee, was that discussion held, given what was stated there at that meeting on a blanket guarantee? | 1980 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I don’t recall … I don’t recall that issue being discussed. I can’t be clear but I would not have thought so. | 1981 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. You would not have thought so. | 1982 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Do you remember then if Merrill Lynch, at that follow-up meeting, was sticking to the warnings against a blanket guarantee? | 1984 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I don’t … I genuinely couldn’t say that to you. I don’t remember the meeting well enough, I just have a recollection of the meeting. | 1985 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| With a recommendation … would you brief with the recommendation as to a view? | 1988 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I’d say … I mean, I suspect, my view is I would have given an outline of what was discussed in the meeting at that point in time. | 1989 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, and you didn’t keep a minute yourself of this … of these meetings? | 1990 |
Mr. Con Horan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, thank you very much. | 1992 |
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| I just want to take you … this won’t be displayed, but it’s Vol. 1, page 93. | 1995 |
Mr. Con Horan
| That’s core documents Con Horan? | 1996 |
Chairman
| Yes, indeed. And it’s a letter from the regulator’s office to a financial institution. And in that correspondence … are you familiar with it? | 1997 |
Mr. Con Horan
| 92 or 93? | 1998 |
Chairman
| It’s page … it’s actually 97 and 98 in my document here … it’s the … sorry, I’ll just put it up for you there now. Page 97 in the core document. | 1999 |
Mr. Con Horan
| Yes. | 2000 |
Chairman
| 93, so I might’ve mis-referenced that there. Are you familiar with that correspondence, are you? | 2001 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I’ve seen it as part of the correspondence, yes. | 2002 |
Chairman
| Were you familiar with that correspondence at the time of its issuance or there … or some time afterwards? | 2003 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I don’t recall it, no, no. | 2004 |
Chairman
| When would you have seen this correspondence for the first time? | 2005 |
Mr. Con Horan
| I think, when I saw the core documents. | 2006 |
Chairman
| Okay, was the contents of that correspondence at any time discussed at any meeting that you were in attendance to? | 2007 |
Mr. Con Horan
| It didn’t ring a bell to me when I saw it. I thought it was an example … of what … so, the specific letter, I’m not sure that I saw it. It certainly didn’t ring any bells for me at all. | 2008 |
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
| So, just that I’m right, this is the letter 28 September 2007? | 2010 |
Chairman
| Yes, yes. | 2011 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
| Are you describing this as a teething problem? | 2013 |
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman
Mr. Con Horan
Chairman