Sitting suspended at 11.47 a.m. and resumed at 12.16 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, |
EBS – Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Thank you. | 540 |
Chairman
The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Ms Ethna Tinney, former Non-Executive Director, EBS.
Chairman
| So, once again, Ms Tinney, welcome before the committee this afternoon and if I can invite you to make your opening remarks please. | 544 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| Okay, I’ll have that corrected. Thank you very much Ms Tinney. | 550 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Ms Tinney. We’ll get questioning under way, and in doing so, I now invite Deputy Joe Higgins. Deputy, you have 25 minutes. | 566 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. But it was set up in its … set up as an assistance to teachers and some other public sector companies. | 569 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I was aware of that and I think it was actually set up by a teacher. | 570 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 571 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 572 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes, okay. Thank you. Why, as a mutual building society, did EBS see it as strategically appropriate to enter the commercial lending market do you think? | 573 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay, so there would have been—– | 575 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–development lending. | 576 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
| It was exactly the same thing. AIB was looking over its shoulder at Anglo and EBS was looking over its shoulder at INBS. | 578 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. | 581 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 582 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay, now the—– | 583 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| The strategy was overlooked, I think. Yes. | 584 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Can you just reference the page? I know what you’re talking about and I have a comment to make on it. | 586 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| It’s simply that … the page is 95 in your book—– | 587 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| In Vol.1, is it? | 588 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 589 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. Okay. | 590 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. | 593 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–is used. | 594 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. If we come forward then and this is starting at page 99 in Vol.1, Ms Tinney, and this is the EBS commercial business plan from 2005-2008—– | 595 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, I have it. | 596 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–and if you go to page 101—– | 597 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I see it. | 598 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Was? | 601 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Was the “Rocket Strategy”. | 602 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes, okay. | 603 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| They weren’t prepared to say that. So once again, it was a way of, you know, “Let’s get started on this road.” Well, we were well down the road at this stage. | 604 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. | 605 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| And once the ball is rolling, it’s very, very hard to stop it. | 606 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. | 609 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| And the general attitude of the board was “This is amazing, let’s go for this.” | 610 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, absolutely. | 612 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| So am I—– | 615 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–looking back on it, it was crazy. | 616 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. That is what I am saying. | 618 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Is that the case? | 619 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, yes, by the committee that was delegated which was the board … to give it its full title – the board credit approval committee, BCAC. | 620 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Why was it a 24-hour period do you know? | 621 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I have no idea except that the rationale was that … there’s an example of this here actually from Alan Merriman. | 622 |
Chairman
| Can you cite the page and I’ll bring it up for you? | 623 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| If I can find it—– | 624 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 625 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I will find it. I think it’s at the front of … where he actually says, “It would be appreciated if we could get back within 24 hours”. | 626 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| We can take that—– | 627 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| We’ll find it. | 628 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| We can take that—– | 629 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| We’ll find it, yes. | 630 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| We can take that, Ms Tinney—– | 631 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes—– | 633 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–that, you know, basically they would say, “Well, you can keep your money because we are going to get that somewhere else.” | 634 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay, do you recall ever for asking for more time yourself? Did you complain about this process? | 635 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I think I said in my statement that “I was weary at this stage”. | 636 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| From other issues—– | 637 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| From other issues, exactly, of being contrarian yet again—– | 638 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. Okay, we will just move on. You say in your statement you ‘’were uneasy when introduced to securitisation”—– | 639 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 640 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 643 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| It goes on and on. | 644 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| And were those packages of mortgages and what we are talking about here is human beings living in homes that—– | 645 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 646 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–they were paying mortgages for. | 647 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 648 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Were they actually sold off lock, stock and barrel? | 649 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. That’s the way securitisation worked because—– | 650 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| And was there any reference to the mortgage holders? | 651 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Right. | 653 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| And then that disappeared off the horizon and we never heard any more about it … about the mortgage holders. | 654 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay, so—– | 655 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–The mortgagees being, yes—– | 656 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–a possibility is it, would be that you could have ordinary home owners bought their home in good faith with EBS—– | 657 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| That’s—– | 658 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. | 661 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| But it explains why the frustration of the mortgagees when they could see lending rates going down and this was not being reflected in what they were being expected to pay. | 662 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. | 663 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 664 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Thank you. Just moving on to a different item, Ms Tinney. You said it was a damaging and a catastrophic decision, I am paraphrasing—– | 665 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 666 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–to sell the EBS headquarters in Westmoreland Street, that the implications were not seen. Why was it damaging, catastrophic and what were the implications? | 667 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Because we couldn’t afford it and it was very, very simple. It was another thing that I found—– | 668 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Sorry, we couldn’t … you—– | 669 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 671 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No, I think my thinking on it clarified over time, to be honest with you. | 674 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| Oh I will, but drive on. | 677 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–have absolutely … absolutely no sense of guilt about what they have done. And if left unchecked, they are going to do it all over again. And the housing boom, by the way, has already started. | 678 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Finally, Ms Tinney, what would your view then be on a publicly-owned, democratically-run banking or financial system, as opposed to the present model? | 679 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Joe Higgins
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I would agree with that. | 682 |
Chairman
| Maybe a bit leading, Deputy. Maybe. | 683 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| A bit. | 684 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Anyway. | 685 |
(Interruptions).
Chairman
| But I can see you going out to dinner on this one. Deputy Higgins to conclude please. | 686 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Chair, if there are any pro-marketeers among the members, they can challenge that. I’m concluding, thank you. | 687 |
Chairman
| Drive on, Deputy Higgins, drive on. | 688 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| He’s finished. Are you finished? | 689 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| I’m finished. | 690 |
Chairman
| Thanks very much. Deputy Kieran O’Donnell. | 691 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
| To the setting up of Haven, are you talking about? | 693 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Yes, yes. | 694 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, absolutely, yes. Well, it was already moved before I was removed, yes. | 695 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Yes, so … so Haven—– | 696 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| So, what page are we on? Sorry … sorry, Deputy. | 697 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| I’m on … well, really, I suppose, what I want to get clarification on is page 116 initially. | 698 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| 116. | 699 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So it speaks about “ABC Mortgages”. | 700 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 701 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Is that different from Haven or is that more of the same? | 702 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, ABC became … morphed into Haven, yes. | 703 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Do you remember the deliberations at the board level on the set up of what became Haven? | 706 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I … all I recall is we were told that if we didn’t do this, you know, we would be again losing out, because, you know, 34% of the business was now being done through brokers, so—– | 707 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Was there any due diligence done at board level? Like, did ye discuss it in—– | 708 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No, no. | 709 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| —–what were the pros and cons or—– | 710 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No. | 711 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So it was just assumed it was going ahead. | 712 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| The board seemed to be in … very collegiate, you know, perhaps apart from myself and one or two others, you know. | 713 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| How did you feel about them going into the broker market? | 714 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Well, it seemed to make sense, to be honest. | 715 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I remember it very well because when I referred in my document, my statement, to my intemperate so-called outburst, it was about setting up a sub-prime business with Britannia. And—– | 717 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So Haven was going into that area as well? | 718 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. Oh yes, without a doubt. | 719 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So you had established a broker business and then it was going into the sub-prime as well subsequently? | 720 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| The … no. The two … again, it was, you know, one thing morphed into another. I think Haven was the sub-prime, yes—– | 721 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay. | 722 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–in its actuality. | 723 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So you might just elaborate on your intemperate outburst that day at the board meeting on Haven … on the sub-prime. | 724 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Okay. Well, what particularly frustrated me was that I had … this is maybe going a bit far, Chairman, I have to refer to you here because in this case I have to refer to individuals. | 725 |
Chairman
| Could you just take it in an aggregate form for the moment and if I need you to be specified. I can take a more specified—– | 726 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Can she indicate, Chairman, in terms of positions rather than individuals? | 727 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, that would—– | 728 |
Chairman
| In general aggregate terms, senior managers and so forth, like. Okay. | 729 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, yes. Well, I need to reference the then chief executive officer. | 730 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| When was this? | 731 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| This was at a board meeting in January 2007. | 732 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Fine. | 733 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And what subsequently happened about the sub-prime proposal? Did it proceed in EBS? | 735 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Oh yes. It became part of what Haven was all about. | 736 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And do you believe … what was the reason, in your view, that you were not supported—– | 737 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Not listened to. | 738 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| —–by the board to being reappointed in March ‘07? What was the real reason? | 739 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| We’ll … we’ll get to that in a moment. But why did I get no support—– | 740 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Yes. | 741 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So there was no dissenting voice bar your own? | 743 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Absolutely not. | 744 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I think the real reason was that I had really got under their skin and that they were fed up with me. | 746 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| You were a nuisance. | 747 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I was a nuisance, precisely. And, “Let’s get rid of her”. | 748 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And, did you have any support on the board? | 749 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I did, one person. | 750 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And that person, did that person … what way did they articulate that support? | 751 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, this was after that … your intemperate outburst on the subprime lending. | 753 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And do you put it down to an accumulation or do you put it down to your defiance in terms of the bank’s proceeding into the subprime market? | 755 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay. | 757 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But … and, when did you … when was the rapid escalation? Was that from ‘05 on? | 761 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’d say ‘02 to ‘07, but it went its steepest curve from ‘05 to ‘07, and so I do feel implicated in that, as a member of the credit approval committee, you know, during that period, you know, yes. | 762 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And, can I direct you in that regard, Ms Tinney, to page 143, 144 and 147, Vol. 1? | 763 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Sorry, we’re starting at 143? | 764 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| At 143, yes. | 765 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| 143. | 766 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And these are, Chairman, these are two of the e-mails you, you refer to, from Alan Merriman to other members of the credit committee. | 767 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Exactly. | 768 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 770 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, the first one, were these a regular occurrence? | 771 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| They were too regular as far as I was concerned. I found them quite frightening. | 772 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, how often would you get them? The first one was on 25 January ‘06. | 773 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, and then 12 April ‘06. | 774 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Was that the biggest? | 777 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| But, those ones that you’re talking about, they really frightened me. | 778 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And was that the largest that would have come through? | 779 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I can’t remember, Kieran, to be absolutely honest with you. It’s a long time ago, you know? | 780 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay, but … and did other people on the credit committee have reservations about the way this was happening, in terms of e-mails coming out and so forth? | 781 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I don’t know, because we never talked about it. | 782 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And were you—– | 783 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| No, I saw that; I’ve seen all that. | 785 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–the discomfort, you know, for the members, you know, in not being able to discuss it. | 786 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Well, I just want to know the procedure. Did the credit committee meet to approve loans? | 787 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I only remember one meeting in my entire six … 18 months. | 788 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, all the loans were basically approved by way of e-mail? | 789 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 790 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| If you didn’t respond to the e-mail, if you didn’t respond—– | 791 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. I never didn’t respond. | 792 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| You always did? | 793 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I always responded, yes. One way or the other. | 794 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And were they always in the affirmative? | 795 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Do you believe that you had the requisite financial, technical knowledge to be on a credit review committee of a large financial institution like EBS? | 797 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No. | 798 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| So, why did you take the position? | 799 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Because I didn’t realise, when I took it on. I had done well on the BACC, which is rather different, you know. | 800 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| The which? On—– | 801 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| The board audit and compliance committee. | 802 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Okay. | 803 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I had been on that for five years with … not the chairman of the society, we had a different chairman. | 804 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| What did ye do in that first committee, the audit committee? | 805 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Oh, we … a tremendous amount of forensic, kind of, looking at accounts, internal accounts, internal audits, and so on. | 806 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did you have the technical knowledge for that post? | 807 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, I felt I did. Because, if I didn’t … if I felt I didn’t understand what was going on, I always felt free to ask questions. Some of the BACC, you know, meetings, went on for up to six hours. | 808 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| And do you believe that the board itself had the requisite composite technical knowledge to take on management in terms of proposals that were put to the board? | 809 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Sorry, I did mention this earlier on but I did it the other way round, that’s right. Oh yes, I was very conscious of that—– | 812 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did you bring it up at board level? | 813 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| What was your assessment of liquidity and solvency of the society on the night of the guarantee, on that fateful night on the 30 September 2008? | 815 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| My opinion of the liquidity or solvency? | 816 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Both – of EBS. | 817 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| All I can say is that at this stage we all knew we were heading for the rocks so I wasn’t hiving down to try and find out what—– | 818 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| When you say you all knew you were heading for the rocks, did the board know? | 819 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I think the board did know but we didn’t admit it to ourselves. | 820 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did you discuss it at the board in terms of—– | 821 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Did it come up at the board meetings that there would be a need for a Government State guarantee for the banks? | 823 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No. | 824 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| At all? | 825 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No, no, no. Whatever way the accounts were being put together and presented – no, we never thought that would happen or it would have to happen. | 826 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
| What I mean is the testimony that was given by our ex-Taoiseach, Brian Cowen, of attending dinners with Anglo, and multiply that out by a factor. That is what I mean. That is unhealthy. | 828 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Was there similar type meetings with EBS? | 829 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I was never invited to one. That’s all I can say. | 830 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| But do you know that such meetings took place? | 831 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No, I don’t. | 832 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Are you expressing an opinion without back-up evidence to the effect that it happened? | 833 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Do you know what the circumstances were of that? | 835 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I have no idea. I just thought the optics were terrible. | 836 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
| Thank you. Chairman. | 839 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Can I just deal with a few questions myself, Ms Tinney? | 840 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 841 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| Was there a sense of inevitability or could this have been an alternative approach, or maybe a clever idea could be put on the table or was it not being looked at? | 844 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| As part of that process, Ms Tinney, were retention bonuses paid to EBS staff as part of it? | 846 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I have no idea. | 847 |
Chairman
| You have no idea. Okay. Did you receive one? | 848 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No. | 849 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Is that in one of the volumes? | 851 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 852 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Is it Vol. 3, because that’s where Alan Merriman’s main statement is. | 853 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| So it is late 2008. | 855 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’ve lost … sorry. | 858 |
Chairman
| Have you got it? It’s in book Vol. 2, page 107 if you’re struggling with your monitor. | 859 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, Vol. 2, 107. | 860 |
Chairman
| 107. | 861 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| All right. | 862 |
Chairman
| Okay. You’re better at the books, it would seem, Ms Tinney, than the screen. That’s good. | 863 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’m a bit short-sighted. | 864 |
Chairman
| I suffer from that myself. | 865 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’m good with screens and technology but I’m short-sighted. So, this is from Gerry Murray, yes. | 866 |
Chairman
| Yes. Are you familiar with that? Were you … was that e-mail or correspondence brought to your attention, was it? | 867 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’m sure it would have been. | 868 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 869 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| I’m sure it does. | 871 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. So is there any particular thing that I can—– | 872 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| All right. I have it. | 874 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’m actually surprised at this because, by 2008 and long before, early in 2008 … wasn’t it 2008 that the Anglo share collapsed, Patrick’s Day? | 878 |
Chairman
| St. Patrick’s Day. | 879 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| Yes. | 881 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| Okay. | 883 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–putting any funds at risk in either of these institutions at all, at all, at all. Or maybe it was a question of them putting in funds in to us, which would have been a different thing. | 884 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 886 |
Chairman
| —–signed by a Minister to do so, which … and that was way back in 2007 those concerns were there. | 887 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 888 |
Chairman
| Were you familiar or was the board familiar, with that the NTMA had concerns with regard to these institutions? | 889 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| If they were published, yes, because I read with great and avid interest, even when I was off the board, what was going on. | 890 |
Chairman
| Sure. | 891 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| So, I would have noticed anything like that, yes. | 892 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Just—– | 894 |
Chairman
| During that period—– | 895 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 896 |
Chairman
| —–of the post-guarantee period—– | 897 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 898 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I can’t recall them but, as I say, you know, I’m amazed that we would still have been talking to them, yes. | 900 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 902 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
Chairman
| Okay, thank you very much. Senator Sean Barrett. | 905 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you, Chairman, and welcome to Ms Tinney. On page 47 in Vol. 1, there is the … their attempt to assess you—– | 906 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Oh yes, oh yes. | 907 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| —–as a member of the board. What on earth was that process? Can you enlighten us? | 908 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’m just about to tell you. | 909 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Good. | 910 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| They didn’t have a management guru of some type? | 913 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No, no. No, we all marked each other. It was sent off to Jim Bruce and the results came back. | 914 |
Chairman
| All right, Deputy—– | 915 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. | 916 |
Chairman
| —–be measured now. | 917 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you. Now, could I go to Vol. 2, page 139, the bonuses that were paid. Were they passed by the board? | 918 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| These extraordinary bonuses. So it’s … we’re not in Vol. 1—– | 919 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| I think its Vol. 2, page 139. | 920 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Well, they were paid based on the previous year’s performance. Was there any discussion in 2008 not to pay them because you had gone into the red at that stage, in 2008? | 922 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Well, Ted McGovern had gone by 2008. | 923 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| I see. Well, no, other people, though, were paid. There was €464,000 in bonuses paid in 2008 in a year in which the society had gone into the red. | 924 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| In … and are you talking about the chief executive, Ted McGovern – 2004, €448,000? | 925 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Ethna Tinney
| In which? Sorry, Senator—– | 927 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| By a society which was loss making at … in that year. | 928 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| In which year now are we talking about? | 929 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| They were paid in 2008. | 930 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Paid in 2008, yes, indeed. Yes, indeed. Right, okay. Yes, yes. | 931 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Was there any discussion about holding them back, as the society had gone into the red? | 932 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No. | 933 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Ethna Tinney
| The go for broke strategy was to try and emulate Irish Nationwide Building Society and turn in profits of €250 million per annum – paper profits, of course; they weren’t true profits. | 935 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And a certain sense of irony, presumably, in the title of the strategy? | 936 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Well, that’s just my way of putting things. | 937 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. Well, I think they used that term also. | 938 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Do they actually? Yes. | 939 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. The auditors: did they express any disquiet at the way the society was going over the years in which you were director? | 940 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No, and that was a big surprise. | 941 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Was there ever any meetings of the non-executive directors held in the absence of management? | 942 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, there were. That was not that unusual, yes. | 943 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Because in your presentation you were hinting there was a very strong managerial dominance of the board. When the board escaped from that, could you tell us about those meetings? | 944 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Is there a way around that? Should there be a troika? | 946 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Ethna Tinney
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Absolutely. Yes. | 951 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. But … and, could you tell us about that? Because that was trying to get back to its roots almost in the society and I suppose the corollary is: was it too little too late at that stage? | 952 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And you didn’t agree with that? | 954 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I did not agree with it, no. | 955 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Could you tell us why? | 956 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I … as far as the second named is concerned, I felt he was very bright, I felt that he knew the innards of the society extremely well, and I felt we needed his abilities. | 957 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Finally, the 2007 offer from AIB – can you remember what price they put on that? | 958 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I don’t, and … but what I do remember—– | 959 |
Chairman
| Your last question, Senator, please. | 960 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| That is my last one, thank you, Chairman. | 961 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, I can’t remember the figure—– | 962 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. | 963 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| But I remember thinking it was inadequate. | 964 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. But it was greater than €1, which was what they eventually got it for. | 965 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| But maybe at the time I thought we were worth more. | 966 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes, thank you. | 967 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you very much. Deputy Pearse Doherty. Deputy, ten minutes. | 968 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Five per cent to 60%. | 970 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| —–in July 2005 up to 60% three years later in 2008. | 971 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| But the minutes of the meeting in 2005 go on to say, “This will push mortgage margins down.” by increasing your tracker business from 5% to 60% of mortgages. Given that it’s—– | 973 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| So that—– | 974 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| —–acknowledged at that time, what was the discussion? Is that—– | 975 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’d need to just read that page carefully because, you know, I mentioned the whole thing about minutes before—– | 978 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 979 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 981 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–I have to say, “I want that minuted.” | 982 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 983 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. I don’t have a recollection, I really don’t, but what I can say was there was nobody jumping up and down—– | 986 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. | 987 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| —–because I would have remembered that. | 988 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. Ms Tinney, you say in your statement on page 1, you say, “Mortgage applicants’ declared incomes were sometimes well in excess of reality”. | 989 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 990 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Can you explain to the committee … what do you mean by this? | 991 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| But was it known to EBS that the declared incomes at the time were well in … as you say, well in excess of reality? | 993 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| And when the same institution is now looking for recoupment of arrears or repossession of the homes—– | 995 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 996 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| —–or voluntary surrender—– | 997 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 998 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| —–by somebody who may have provided documentation that, as you say, the institution was aware that it was in excess of reality, how do you feel about that? | 999 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 1003 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| What do you mean by that? Just if you can … what was the … the agenda, I presume, is that they wanted money. | 1006 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. | 1008 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| And that was coming from? | 1010 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Senior management all the way down. It’s always … the buck stops always with the boss. | 1011 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. What was the guiding reason with regard to your own role in the credit committee? What were the factors that led you to decide to green light some of these developer loan applications? | 1012 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| You mention in your statement in relation to these … these loans as well that—– | 1014 |
Chairman
| Be wrapping up this now, Deputy. | 1015 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes, just two questions on this here … that the developers backed up their claim with a personal guarantee. | 1016 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 1017 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay, thank you. | 1020 |
Chairman
| Thank you, Ms Tinney. Deputy Michael McGrath. | 1021 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Sorry, could you just give me the page number again? | 1023 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Sure, yes. Page 105—– | 1024 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| 105. | 1025 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–of Vol. 2. | 1026 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Is this the one we discussed before? | 1027 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Ethna Tinney
| €1.2 million. Yes, it was €1.2 million. | 1031 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay, and can you just explain what happened? What do you mean by “illicitly engaged in proprietary trading”? Can you just tell us what that is? | 1032 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And did it go to board level then? | 1034 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Oh, well, of course, there was consternation. There was absolute consternation. | 1035 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. And the loss to the society was €1.2 million? | 1036 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, it was either €2.1 million or €1.2 million but I believe it was €1.2 million. | 1037 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And what were the repercussions from that episode? What happened? | 1038 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Nothing. | 1039 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Nothing? | 1040 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Nothing. | 1041 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| €1.2 million lost by—– | 1042 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. Let’s just say—– | 1043 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–illicit trading against the rules of the society and nothing happened? | 1044 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And was the individual sanctioned? | 1046 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No. | 1047 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And how was that acceptable to the board? | 1048 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. And just to clarify the nature of what happened, it was trading, essentially, the deposit book or part of the deposit book was traded on, on some financial instruments? | 1050 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| The funds of the society, exactly, yes. I don’t even know—– | 1051 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| You don’t know the detail? | 1052 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| We weren’t told precisely what he did, we were just told—– | 1053 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. And was it a breach of regulatory rules as well as a breach of the building society rules? | 1054 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Probably not. I mean, banks engage in all kinds of gambling, you know, within the law. But it is strictly prohibited, for obvious reasons, in building societies. | 1055 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay, and are you saying that … prohibited by internal rules? Or was it ever enshrined in regulations? | 1056 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| By building society legislations, actually legislation, yes, going back a long time. | 1057 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Of course. | 1061 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| It was. | 1062 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| There’s 420,000 of them so it was a very expensive exercise really, yes. | 1063 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| So how did you do it? It was by post? | 1064 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Oh, EBS had to do it, I just … Yes, they did it by post. Yes. | 1065 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And they paid for it? | 1066 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Well, I forced them to. | 1067 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Right. And, okay, given that, you know, that was such a—– | 1068 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Sorry, could I just say—– | 1069 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Please. | 1070 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. So you raised three specific issues in your letter to the members about the 2003-04 efforts to pursue a deal with Rabobank, that’s who you were referring to—– | 1072 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 1073 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And do you regret now not bringing to the attention of members your views, your concerns, about the strategy of the building society? | 1076 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
| But sure what was the point in being on the board then? You know, if it was afait accompli and you couldn’t influence the direction? | 1080 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| But I was trying. I was trying all the time, what more could I do? | 1081 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| So did you dissent, for example, on that commercial strategy? | 1082 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. Very finally, you spoke about the credit committee. You were on that from mid-2005 to April ‘07? | 1084 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes. | 1085 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| So almost two years. And did you say earlier on that your recollection is it met once in about 18 months? | 1086 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
Deputy Michael McGrath
| But sure surely you couldn’t have a situation were a member of the committee wasn’t even told the committee was meeting. | 1088 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| I’m not saying that there was; I’m just saying that I don’t know. But I only recall one meeting. | 1089 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. So were there other meetings that you were notified of – but … but you didn’t attend – of the credit committee? | 1090 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No, absolutely not. | 1091 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. So you were informed of one credit committee meeting in a period of 22 months—– | 1092 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, that’s my recollection. | 1093 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–at a time when the society was lending millions of euro—– | 1094 |
Ms Ethna Tinney
| Yes, tens and tens and tens of millions of euro. | 1095 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–in commercial property land development? Absolutely. Thank you. | 1096 |
Chairman
| Thank you, Deputy McGrath. I’m going to move please to a wrap-up. Do you have anything else to offer, Deputy Higgins? | 1097 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| No further questions, thank you. Thank you. | 1098 |
Chairman
Ms Ethna Tinney
| No. I’ll say that my whole experience with EBS, takenin toto, was in some ways very bruising but it was certainly very educational. And I don’t regret a minute of it. | 1100 |
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 2.03 p.m. and resumed at 3.18 p.m.