Sitting suspended at 6.23 p.m. and resumed at 6.57 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 Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Not at all. | 1662 |
Chairman
| —–delaying you today, Ms Clarke, and we’ll get proceedings under way as quickly as we can now. | 1663 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Thank you. | 1664 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Thank you very much. | 1666 |
Chairman
The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Ms Fidelma Clarke, former Chief Risk Officer, EBS.
Chairman
| So, once again, welcome before the committee this evening, Ms Clarke, and if I can invite you to make your opening comments please. | 1670 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| Thank you, Ms Clarke, thank you. We will commence questioning and in doing so I’ll invite Senator Barrett. | 1686 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| The movement to wholesale funding away from deposits, was that regarded as a risk from what you’ve found looking at how the society was evolving? | 1695 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Forgive me, I just didn’t hear which document you’re referring to. | 1698 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes, and an item that I believe arose earlier today and also last week. | 1700 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes. | 1701 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| True. | 1712 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| On page 126 – thank you – on that volume—– | 1718 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No problem. | 1719 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No bonuses were paid from the time I was a member of the executive from 2009. | 1725 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Again, I’m sorry but I won’t be able to help you with that. I wasn’t a member of the executive of the board and I have no knowledge of it. | 1727 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you very much. Thanks, Chairman, and thanks for your assistance. | 1728 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Senator Michael D’Arcy. | 1729 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Thank you, Chairman. Ms Clarke, you’re very welcome. | 1730 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Thank you very much. | 1731 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Why, as a mutual building society, did EBS see it as strategically appropriate to enter the commercial lending market? | 1732 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| You weren’t a member of the board at the time, no? | 1734 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I have only been a member of the board of EBS since 2012 when I was appointed as a group non-executive director of EBS Limited. | 1735 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Okay. The level of profits … sorry, level of profit growth 25% per annum might seem ambitious in a mature market, could you expand upon that please? | 1736 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Was there any consideration given to the fact that during this period the other banks in the Irish market were also seeking double-digit growth? | 1738 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I’m sorry to provide the same answer. I really would like to be of more help to the committee but I wasn’t actually in the room at the time. I became a member of the executive in 2009. | 1739 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| The EBS increased commercial and development lending in the period from 2003 onwards. Did the board understand exactly what they were getting into at that stage? | 1740 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I would be speculating if I—– | 1741 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Well, you’re allowed speculate. | 1742 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And do you think they were aware of the, the dangers that were attached to competition in that sector, was very—– | 1744 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| And were the skillsets … do you think the skillsets were available within EBS? | 1746 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Were you surprised when the new CEO, Fergus Murphy, changed the direction when he joined EBS? | 1748 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Michael D’Arcy
| Okay. Thank you, Chairman. | 1750 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you very much. Deputy Eoghan Murphy. | 1751 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Thank you, Chairman, and thank you, Ms Clarke, you’re very welcome. | 1752 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Thank you. | 1753 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Now, I’d like to look at Vol. 1 please, of the evidence books, page 41. It’s a question, when exactly did you become credit risk officer? Or sorry, chief risk officer? | 1754 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I became … I became chief risk officer on 1 January 2009. | 1755 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| 1 January 2009? | 1756 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Correct. | 1757 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Not 2007? | 1758 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No. | 1759 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 1761 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And we spoke about this with Mr. Merriman at the time, and he said that the person in charge of risk at the time had access to the board and had access to management. That wasn’t you then? | 1762 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I think he was referring to me as head of risk. | 1763 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| As head of risk, okay. | 1764 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I would … I … no, I don’t believe so. I didn’t have reason to. | 1767 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1768 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I think that corporate governance standards were changing. | 1771 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1772 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So how quick was the EBS to react to these concerns then? Was it two years until your appointment that the … this separation was made? | 1774 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1776 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| But, as I’ve said in my own statement to you earlier, it was only in 2009 that we created a fully independent, dedicated, chief risk officer role in EBS. | 1777 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Was it a mistake to let Mr. Merriman go? | 1780 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And then, just that same meeting, the CEO of Haven, the subsidiary, was also invited not to stand for a second term, because essentially the business had failed? | 1782 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| That is correct. | 1783 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Can I just ask you about that then, why would the CEO of Haven take responsibility in that regard for a board decision to establish the subsidiary and it then to fail? | 1784 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I’m sorry, I don’t quite understand your question, forgive me. | 1785 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And just in relation to the joint venture that was meant to be happening, with Britannia Building Society, when did that cease to be a possibility? | 1788 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I’m not 100% sure of the time. But I think, from memory, it probably was the end of 2007 or in and around there. | 1789 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So why did the EBS decide to continue with that venture? They decided to go into the idea that it would be split 50-50 with Britannia. Britannia pulls out because of the worries that they have—– | 1790 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Of course. | 1791 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–with the Irish market, yet the EBS continues with it. | 1792 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And what happened to Haven then? | 1794 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Right. And was there ever a cost put on the society for setting up Haven? | 1796 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I know there was a mention of a cost earlier on, there certainly was, but forgive me I won’t be able to quote the number to you now. | 1797 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, that’s fine, we can find it ourselves. | 1798 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Apologies. | 1799 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Thank you. Thank you, Chair. | 1800 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Deputy Michael McGrath. | 1801 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes, thank you, Chair, good evening, Ms Clarke. Can I just start by asking you to clarify your role before you became chief risk officer in January 2009. | 1802 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. That was head of risk since when? | 1804 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I think that title came some time in 2004 or 2005. | 1805 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Can we just stick with the structure for a moment? So you have the board of the building society. Beneath that, you had, was it group management board or executive team? Which is it? | 1808 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| It was an executive team. | 1809 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Executive team. | 1810 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| It was called the management board. | 1811 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Management board, yes. | 1812 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| It was called that but that’s what it was … it was the executives. | 1813 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| That was what you would regard as the executive team. | 1814 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Exactly. | 1815 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Correct. Some of whom are—– | 1817 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And you only joined that in January 2009? | 1818 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| That’s right. | 1819 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. So then, in 2007, you’re described as “Credit and Risk”. So when did you get a role in terms of credit and what was that role? | 1820 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. So can you just be specific and tell us what role you did have? You said a credit approval team reported to you from 2006? | 1822 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| From a management perspective, exactly. | 1823 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| From a management perspective? | 1824 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Correct. | 1825 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. But that role for you didn’t involve any input into lending decisions? | 1826 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| None whatsoever. | 1827 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And did you become head of credit then at any stage? | 1828 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I never was involved in any credit decision in the society, no. | 1829 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| But did you have a title of “Head of Credit”? | 1830 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| The title “Head of Credit and Risk” stemmed from the fact that the management reporting line for the underwriting team was changed to me in 2006. | 1831 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No. | 1833 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| No? | 1834 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. So the underwriting team reported to me from a management perspective … so performance reviews and discussions and things like that; purely management. | 1837 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Who did you report to? | 1838 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I reported throughout 2005 through to 2009 to Alan Merriman. | 1839 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| To the finance director. | 1840 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Who had multiple other responsibilities, absolutely, including risk. | 1841 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 1844 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| —–structure. | 1845 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| It’s incredibly convoluted. | 1846 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| It is very difficult to explain to people, absolutely. | 1847 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes, and I am sorry for trying to tease it out. | 1848 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No, no, I—– | 1849 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| I am trying to get it clear in my own mind, exactly what your role was and how credit decisions were made and how the chain of accountability—– | 1850 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Sure. | 1851 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–worked its way up to the executive team and then to the board, so—– | 1852 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| It might be easiest to think of it as two separate lines. | 1853 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes. | 1854 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Right. | 1856 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And was there any one person in charge of credit? | 1858 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No. | 1859 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| No, okay. So you had the various layers—– | 1860 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Exactly. | 1861 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–there with committees, and ultimately that fed up to Mr. Merriman from the finance … as finance director. | 1862 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| And others. There were other members of the executive who were part of the loan advances committee—– | 1863 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 1864 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| —–so it didn’t run along organisational structural lines. It ran along a management, senior management, board line, but it was wasn’t reflected in the organisation’s structure. | 1865 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. So your involvement in risk in 2005 and 2006, that didn’t involve any input into the risk assessment of the credit strategy or of loan applications, for example. | 1866 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| None whatsoever in relation to loan applications. | 1867 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| So what risks were you responsible for assessing? | 1868 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Right. | 1870 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 1872 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| What was the role of the credit risk committee? | 1874 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| So the role of the credit risk committee was to monitor risk trends and to evaluate proposals for changes to policy within the strategy that the bank had agreed. | 1875 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Right. And did the credit risk committee have an input into lending decisions? | 1876 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No, it was completely independent, so there was a credit approval process which was independent of risk. | 1877 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. I suppose what I am trying to understand is, you know, when a bank is assessing risk and you have a risk function—– | 1878 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 1879 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. Senator Barrett already asked you about the tracker mortgage interest rate risk—– | 1882 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 1883 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 1885 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| So you experienced EBS as a traditional mortgage lender—– | 1886 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Absolutely. | 1887 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Sure. | 1889 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| So I’d say two, in summary. | 1891 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 1892 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| So the first was the availability of credit and wholesale funding. That just pumped money into the economy. And the second one is excessive competition. And probably—– | 1893 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Led by the Irish banks or led by the foreign banks who came in? | 1894 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I think foreign banks entering made Irish banks respond, which in turn put pressure on other Irish players, which led to everyone moving down a certain road. | 1895 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And the fear was then “We’ll be left behind, we have to join the game”. | 1896 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Thank you. | 1898 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Thank you. | 1899 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much, Deputy McGrath. I’m going to wrap things up with just a few questions myself, Ms Clarke. | 1900 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Of course. | 1901 |
Chairman
| And I’ll invite just some final questions from leads and so forth. Ms Clarke, Haven, the broker market business of EBS, was a significant change for EBS. | 1902 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 1903 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I’m sorry, I just didn’t hear the end of your question. | 1905 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I can’t speak for the board and I wasn’t in the board room. | 1907 |
Chairman
| Sure. | 1908 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| The … I think the driver, based on what I’ve read and what you have too, was that, I think, by 2005-2006, 40% of all mortgage lending was being done through brokers. | 1909 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1910 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| So the question was did you want to operate in 60% of a market or 100% of a market. And I think that was the primary driver behind the board’s decision to … to progress with a broker channel. | 1911 |
Chairman
| Okay. So Haven … the Haven model obviously gave you more high street … high street outlets, a greater footprint across the country. Is that what you’re saying, yes? | 1912 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| But a street presence, I’d assume. | 1914 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Certainly a street presence—– | 1915 |
Chairman
| Sure. | 1916 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| —–or an office presence anyway. So it certainly … but, at its heart, it gave … it gave the society access to 100% of a mortgage market where they, at that time, only had access to 60%. | 1917 |
Chairman
| And on the general … so it became 40% of the … of your new residential market. | 1918 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| Okay. That’s on the aggregate actual figure. | 1920 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| In the aggregate. So if you weren’t involved in the broker business, you were only operating in 60% of the market. | 1921 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| Okay. So when the indemnity came through the broker model, did the broker deal with the mortgage insurance indemnities themselves? | 1924 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I don’t believe brokers put any insurance in place. They wouldn’t have needed to. It was the society itself that was putting the insurance in place for everyone who took out a mortgage with it. | 1925 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| If it was the 1990s, that would have been the case. In the 2000s that was not the case. | 1927 |
Chairman
| I didn’t need to get insurance from you. | 1928 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| You wouldn’t have even known that we were insuring your loan necessarily because we did not ask you to pay for the insurance; we paid for the insurance. | 1929 |
Chairman
| As part of the product. | 1930 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| As part of the society’s risk-mitigation plan. | 1931 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| So there was a difference in the loan to value between what the broker was able to offer and what you were able to offer directly. | 1934 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Correct. | 1935 |
Chairman
| Okay. So on no occasion did the loan to value equalled what you were giving that brokers were actually presenting. | 1936 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No, to the best of my knowledge, no. | 1937 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| When you say “problem”, it’s … I think that reference is that Genworth had a price for its product and there was no reason for it to want to reduce it. | 1944 |
Chairman
| Were Genworth your indemnity company? Were they? | 1945 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| They were, yes. | 1946 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| No, they weren’t. I think this is a reference to them … would they have reduced the price for an existing product that they had? | 1948 |
Chairman
| Sure. | 1949 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| And the answer to that was it’s unlikely. | 1950 |
Chairman
| And did they? | 1951 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| But in terms of providing insurance for 100% mortgages, they did provide insurance for 100% mortgages—– | 1952 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1953 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| —–and the society, certainly the risk function, wouldn’t have supported a 100% mortgage offering without insurance in place. | 1954 |
Chairman
| Yes, okay. Did Genworth’s costs go up, down or remain the same? | 1955 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| … very substantially. | 1956 |
Chairman
| They went up substantially, did they? | 1957 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 1958 |
Chairman
| How much? | 1959 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I’m sorry I won’t be able to give you a number for that. | 1960 |
Chairman
| 10%, 20%? I’m not looking at the sum. | 1961 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Well, you see it would depend on what the take-up of the additional—– | 1962 |
Chairman
| On 100% mortgages where did Genworth go? | 1963 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I’m … I would be … I couldn’t give you a number. | 1964 |
Chairman
| Okay, I won’t pin you to a figure but you will say substantially, yes? | 1965 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Oh, absolutely. | 1966 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1967 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| Indeed. | 1969 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| —–so, absolutely, the cost was higher. | 1970 |
Chairman
| And given that Genworth were the tendered or the option of insurer that you actually had, they were the only company—– | 1971 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| They were our insurer. | 1972 |
Chairman
| —–you were dealing with. They were your partner in this regard. | 1973 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 1974 |
Chairman
| Did Genworth at any time express concerns with what was coming in through Haven and other brokers in regard to the overall institution? | 1975 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| They … well, they would have had no exposure to that because they weren’t providing any insurance for that part of the business. | 1976 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| It was just the name of a company. | 1978 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| It was, I believe, taken, absolutely. | 1980 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I’m sorry, you’re asking me, in general, for the period? | 1982 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| So it’s a question that I’m afraid my response will be speculation rather than witness—– | 1984 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1985 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| —–because I wasn’t—– | 1986 |
Chairman
| Sure. | 1987 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| —–at the board meetings where it was discussed. I wasn’t a member of the board—– | 1988 |
Chairman
| All right, okay. | 1989 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| —–and nor was I a member of the executive making any recommendations. | 1990 |
Chairman
| Were you familiar with any concerns at board level? | 1991 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Not at that time, no. | 1992 |
Chairman
| At what time? Was there a concern you were aware of, if any? | 1993 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Oh, I think from the end of 2007 and the beginning of 2008, of course. | 1994 |
Chairman
| You were familiar with board concerns at that time. | 1995 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I would have been more familiar with it because, as deputy company secretary from 2007, I would have been in the boardroom. | 1996 |
Chairman
| And was that reflected in the overall EBS book or was it inclusive of the subsidiaries in the brokers and all the rest that you were including? | 1997 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| Sure, yes. | 2001 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Those were reflected in decisions to cease land and development lending early—– | 2002 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 2003 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| And coming back then to 2003, these are the difficulties in 2007 that arose—– | 2005 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 2006 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| Okay, and very, very finally, just with regard to the whole process itself, how aware were you of any skill problems with EBS, who had little previous exposure to commercial lending? | 2009 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Chairman
| The skillset was gone. | 2011 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| The skillset, exactly, had been gone. | 2012 |
Chairman
| Thank you. I, just, Senator O’Keeffe has just indicated once to me. Just briefly, Senator, and then I am going to bring in the wrap-up. | 2013 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I wasn’t involved in it at all, no. | 2015 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Absolutely. | 2017 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| How would you, how would you describe that? Do you think that that’s a fair description of what was going on? | 2018 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Would you have had an inspection once a year or once every two years or—– | 2022 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| It … I believe once every two or three years. | 2023 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Once every—– | 2024 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Two or three years. | 2025 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Thank you. | 2026 |
Chairman
| Senator Barrett, conclusion? | 2027 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you very much. What was the fee for a non-executive director, say, in a recent year? | 2028 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I know it will have been reported in the annual report and accounts so that’s probably the best place to go for it but it was modest. | 2029 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Yes, and how much were the … what was the audit fee then by comparison? | 2030 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I’m … I wouldn’t like to … I wouldn’t like to quote a number because I’m afraid I don’t know but we could certainly provide it to you if … of help. | 2031 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Because I’d contrast … I mean, did the auditors report anything of what we’ve been discussing in these number of days about the EBS? | 2032 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| And yet we saw a company, you know, be sold for a … €1—– | 2034 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Yes. | 2035 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| —–after all these audits. I’m surprised, as a non-auditor, that they weren’t better informed about what was happening to the company when they were auditing the books. | 2036 |
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| I can’t answer for the board of the society. I’m sorry. I don’t think it would be appropriate. | 2041 |
Senator Sean D. Barrett
| Thank you very much. Thank you, Chair. | 2042 |
Chairman
Ms Fidelma Clarke
| Given the lateness of the hour, I won’t beg your indulgence except to say that I do believe the work of this committee is extremely important and I wish you every success. | 2044 |
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 8.30 p.m. The joint committee resumed in private session at 8.41 p.m. and adjourned at 9.11 p.m. until 9.30 a.m. on Thursday, 30 July 2015.