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02/09/2015: Michael Fingleton – Former Chief Executive, Irish Nationwide Building Society

AN COMHCHOISTE FIOSRÚCHÁIN I DTAOBH NA GÉARCHÉIME BAINCÉIREACHTA

JOINT COMMITTEE OF INQUIRY INTO THE BANKING CRISIS

The Committee met at 09.30 a.m.

MEMBERS PRESENT:

Deputy Pearse Doherty, Senator Sean D. Barrett,
Deputy Joe Higgins, Senator Michael D’Arcy,
Deputy Michael McGrath, Senator Marc MacSharry,
Deputy Eoghan Murphy, Senator Susan O’Keeffe.
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell,
Deputy John Paul Phelan,

DEPUTY CIARÁN LYNCH IN THE CHAIR.

 

Irish Nationwide Building Society – Mr. Michael Fingleton

Chairman

As we have a quorum, the Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis is now resuming in public session and can I ask members and those in the public Gallery to ensure that their mobile devices are switched off. 13
Our focus today is on … we begin today with session 1, public hearing with Mr. Michael Fingleton, former chief executive of the Irish Nationwide Building Society and, in doing so, I would like to welcome everyone to the public hearings of the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis. Today, the focus of the inquiry is on Irish Nationwide Building Society and at our first session this morning, we will hear from Mr. Michael Fingleton, former INBS chief executive. A qualified chartered accountant and barrister, Michael Fingleton joined the building society in 1971 and was 38 years with the society until his retirement in 2009. Mr. Fingleton, you’re very welcome before the committee this morning. 14

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Thank you. 15

Chairman

Before hearing from the witness, I wish to advise the witness that by virtue of section 17(2)(l) of the Defamation Act 2009, witnesses are protected by absolute privilege in respect to their evidence to this committee. If you’re directed by the Chairman to cease giving evidence in relation to a particular matter and you continue to do so, you are entitled thereafter only to a qualified privilege in respect of your evidence. You’re directed that only evidence connected with the subject matter of these proceedings is to be given and I would remind members and those present that there are currently criminal proceedings ongoing and further criminal proceedings are scheduled during the lifetime of the inquiry which overlap with the subject matter of the inquiry. Therefore, the utmost caution should be taken not to prejudice those proceedings. Members of the public are reminded that photography is prohibited in the committee room. To assist the smooth running of the inquiry, we will display certain documents on the screens here in the committee room. For those sitting in the Gallery, these documents will be displayed on the screens to your left and right. Members of the public and journalists are reminded that these documents are confidential and they should not publish any of the documents so displayed. 16
The witness has been directed to attend this meeting of the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis. You have been furnished with booklets of core documents. These are before the committee, will be relied upon in questioning and form part of the evidence of the inquiry. So with that said, if I can now ask the clerk to administer the oath to Mr. Fingleton, please. 17

The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:

Mr. Michael Fingleton, former Chief Executive, Irish Nationwide Building Society.

Chairman

Thank you, so if I can invite Mr. Fingleton to make his opening remarks to the committee please. Mr. Fingleton. 19

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Good morning Chairman, members of the committee. I appear before this committee on a purely voluntary basis. I will, of course, co-operate fully with the inquiry in so far as it is legally possible for me to do so given the issues that have been the subject of correspondence between my solicitors and the committee. I’ve already submitted a detailed witness statement which addresses the lines of inquiry as requested by the committee. This opening statement deals with the issues set out in that written statement. I prepared that statement on the basis of my recollection and the limited documentation available to me. My statements were prepared without access to information and documentation from the society which has not been available to me since my retirement in April 2009. I will confine my opening statement to a summary of some of the evidence given in my statement, together with some relevant comments. 20
The society’s motivation for entering the commercial property market was the shortage of housing in Ireland in the early ‘90s following the extended downturn in that market in the ‘80s. The explanatory memorandum issued with the Building Societies Act 1989 encouraged building societies to get involved in residential development and provided specifically that building societies should be a “major source of funding for housing by investing directly in residential development”. Following the entry of Bank of Scotland and the other foreign-owned banks into the market in 1999 it became increasingly difficult for the society to compete in the residential loans market. Their entry resulted in a period of intense competition, with all major lenders taking steps to protect and increase their market share, sometimes irrespective of price considerations. In addition, the brokers who controlled up to 50% of the market were predominantly aligned to the larger financial institutions. 21
It was decided by the society for good commercial reasons that it would off … not offer 100% home loans as a matter of policy. Such loans were only provided by the society in exceptional circumstances. For the same commercial reasons, the society also refused to introduce tracker mortgages. We did not engage in self-certification of income mortgages or expand into the sub-prime lending market, and for some time resisted the term extension of loans to 30 and 35 years. The society also refused to lend at margins of 1%, which at that time was a prevalent practice in the market. In this prevailing climate, it was difficult for the society to grow its residential loan book. I would note that our fellow building society, the EBS, had 90% of its loan book in residential lending and it was not saved from the effects of the economic collapse as house prices fell nationally by up to 60% following the crash. 22
In 1995 the society came to the conclusion that building societies as stand-alone institutions had no long-term future and that the best option for the society was to seek a change in section 102 of the Building Societies Act 1989 which would enable it to effect a trade sale, thus realising the full value of the society for the shareholders. The enabling legislation was finally passed in August 2006 after ten years of unnecessary and inexplicable delay. The desired sale did not materialise for reasons detailed in my opening … in my statement. Once it became apparent that we would not effect a trade sale of the society in the short term, I reviewed the society’s position in the market and decided to downsize its balance sheet, reducing its commercial loan book, and from September 2007 I began taking appropriate steps to do so. I’d every expectation that this would achieve a significant reduction in the society’s exposure based on the premise that in excess of €5 billion of the loan book was due to mature in 2008. At this time the society accepted the market consensus that in the event of a downturn in the property market, a soft landing scenario would apply. Under this scenario, it was anticipated that a fall in real property values of around 20% would occur over an extended period. The society would have, at this time, welcomed such a development on the basis that it was in the interests of a more stable market. We were influenced in our views by the forecasts and commentaries arising from successive reports by the Central Bank, the IMF, the OECD, the EU, the ECB, the Department of Finance, the EIB, the World Bank, the ESRI and the NESC. In addition, all the economists in the banks, stockbrokers and academia were of the same view. Indeed, this consensus view appears to have been prevalent in every one of the 69 countries affected by the crash. In addition, prior to the general election of May 2007, all major political parties were seeking to increase spending, and indeed some campaigned on the basis of a proposed reduction in taxation. It was clear that parties on all sides of the House expected that the revenues from the property market would continue to accrue to the Exchequer. 23
The financial crisis which preceded the property crash originated in the US on the back of the sub-prime debacle which caused the banking crisis in which the rating agencies played a major role. A range of powerful institutions which went bust or had to be rescued or nationalised, such as Washington Mutual, AIG, Merrill Lynch, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, and, in April 2008, Bear Stearns. On 26 September 2008, the bankruptcy of Lehman’s caused the collapse of the liquidity market in Europe and in the United States. As David Doyle, former secretary of Finance, said in his evidence, and I quote: “Lehman was the killer”. If Lehman’s and, to a lesser extent, Bear Stearns had not been allowed to fail in 2008, then things may have been different and the ultimate extent of the crash may have been somewhat moderated. 24
I reiterate, for the reasons outlined in my statement to the committee, that the society was not insolvent on the night of the guarantee. No individual financial institution could have prevented the property bubble in Ireland. The only entities that could have acted to prevent the property bubble were the regulator, the Central Bank, the Department of Finance or the Government. The ECB, who had the powers to compel the Central Bank to take any necessary action – sorry, the ECB also had the powers to compel the Central Bank to take any necessary action. However, none of them chose to do so. 25
The losses from property lending incurred by the banking sector in Ireland were not just confined to Irish institutions. The foreign-owned banks, namely, Ulster Bank, Bank of Scotland Ireland Limited, ACC, Danske Bank and KBC, all incurred significant losses estimated to be collectively in the region of €40 billion. The Building Societies Act 1989 states that it shall be the duty of the auditors to carry out such investigations as will enable them to form an opinion on whether the society has kept proper accounting records and maintained satisfactory systems of control of its business and records and systems of inspection. Where the auditors are of the opinion that the society has failed to keep proper accounting records or systems of control, they shall state so in their report. The committee should note that since their appointment as auditors of the society, KPMG, in each and every year have expressed satisfaction that the financial statements of the society correctly showed the financial position of the society and that proper books of accounts and records have been kept and that the directors had established and maintained reliable systems of control and, accordingly, issued full audit reports – full unqualified audit reports. 26
I do not accept that the NAMA valuations provided an accurate assessment of the value of the society loans. The extent of the losses attributable to the society on the back of the NAMA valuations of the society’s commercial book is an issue which is in dispute. It is, in my view, that NAMA exceptionally discounted the society’s loans in the absence of any, or with little credible, challenge to their valuations. 27
On 23 May 2012, in its address to the chartered certified accountants in Galway, Mr. Frank Daly, chairman of NAMA, said that having completed the due diligence of the property portfolio and having assessed the property portfolio in more detail, NAMA’s view was that the assets had more potential than they initially had reason to expect. He went on to say, “A high proportion of the property assets in Ireland … are located in or close to counties with large urban centres of population (Dublin and neighbouring counties, Cork, Limerick and Galway) and the long-term prospects for much of this property will be better after the economic situation stabilises.” It is a matter of record and fact that the society’s Irish commercial properties, including development lands, were located in precisely those locations – in Dublin, Wicklow, Meath, Kildare, Cork and Limerick. A reference to that is KPMG due diligence report, June 2007. 28
In the United Kingdom, where the society had the majority of its commercial loan book, with 60% of its lending to the London market, I have identified profits that have accrued or will accrue to NAMA in the region of €1 billion from sales relating to a relatively small number of borrowers. I am awaiting the receipt of further information and documentation in relation to many other borrowers to enable me to conduct a similar evaluation. I outline now examples relating to three properties to illustrate my point: property A – NAMA valuation £18 million, realised £200 million, excess £182 million; property B – valuation … NAMA valuation £12 million, realised £100 million, excess £88 million; and property C – NAMA valuation £165 million, realised £250 million, excess, £85 million. The total accumulated profit in relation to those three properties amounted to £355 million, equivalent to €443 million. It must also be noted that at the time when NAMA was calculating the discounts, UK property prices were already on the rise again, particularly in the London area. The London property market has clearly performed strongly since this time. 29
I believe the society was a victim of the financial crisis which originated in the sub-prime market in the US, precipitated by the bankruptcy of Lehman’s. However, I accept that the society was a contributor to the resulting property crash that followed by being unable to sufficiently reduce its exposure to the commercially property market, despite having realistic expectations to do so, while the decision of the society to downsize its commercial loan book in September 2007 and despite having diversified geographically its market exposure. 30
The financial crisis which occurred was in the … was an event, the occurrence, size and magnitude of which was unforeseen by even the most astute observers of financial markets. As a result, the collateral damage caused by the collapse was immense for everybody concerned. Almost all commentators, as already said, accept that the financial collapse was not foreseen and could not have been reasonably foreseen. In my 30 years … 38 years with the society, I had, prior to the economic collapse, gone through three recessions and downturns in the property market. I did not expect the predicted slowdown to be any worse than any of those previous recessions and none of the other market participants did either. Having built up the society in a competitive, innovative and cost-efficient manner over the years from a business with €20,000 profit and five employees with one branch office to almost €400 million profit and 455 employees with 50 full branch offices, it was an absolute shock and bitter disappointment to me that the society succumbed to such a cataclysmic financial crisis, a one-in-100-year event which caused such huge damage to every element of the nation, both corporate and personal. I regret very much … I have and I am continuing to pay the price, personally, as a result. In particular, I regret it for the society’s employees, shareholders and borrowers, who all became casualties of the crisis, and I regret it for the taxpayer and the State, who had to fund the deficit. 31
Thank you, Chairman. I am happy now to take your questions. 32

Chairman

Thank you again, Mr. Fingleton, for your co-operation with the direction by the committee to come before us here this morning. And I’ll open up questions by inviting our first questioner this morning, which is Deputy Pearse Doherty. 33

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Go raibh maith agat agus fáilte chuig an choiste, tUasal Fingleton. Can I ask you, just following on from your last comment, what is it, exactly, you regret? 34

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I just regret that the State and the taxpayer had to pick up the bill for the collapse of the whole financial market and, in particular, for the banking sector. 35

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. In your contribution you mentioned, for example, contributors or those who could stop the property bubble. You mentioned Lehman’s, Bear Stearns – as instigators of the crisis – the regulator, the Central Bank, the Department of Finance, the Government, the ECB. In your view, where does Irish Nationwide and your role as the chief of Irish Nationwide, INBS, for the last 38 years … where do you stand in relation to the fact that you regret that other people had to pick up the tab for the bank that you were in charge of that went bust? 36

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, over 38 years, Deputy, I was CEO and later, in … since 1975, I became managing director of the society. And in that year, I changed the name of the society, of course, to Irish Nationwide. We were called the Irish Industrial Benefit Building Society. I changed the name to Irish Nationwide and I was instrumental in the appointment of KPMG as auditors to the society. Over the years, up to 1992, the society … I built up that society, as CEO, with the full co-operation of our board and I always insisted that the board would be fully involved in the lending process, which was unique – and is unique – among financial institutions. And during the ‘80s, we expanded, slowly and conservatively, the development of the society, particularly in the home loans market. But in addition, we also did small ticket commercial loans for shops and individual offices, for farms and even for small developments and building construction. I think we have … we had about 10% of our book in that area of the market. And in 1992, following the change in legislation, we took advantage, if you like, of the encouragement, as I’ve explained earlier, of the legislation which enabled the societies to engage in development and construction of housing. And we were encouraged, as I said, to do it and I quote, “[that] building societies should be a major source of funding for housing … by investing directly in residential development”. That was the purpose of the Act and the genesis of the Act in relation to that area. So, we decided at that time to get involved and we acquired, I think, 70 acres of land in Lucan. 37

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Mr. Fingleton, we won’t have time … and I’m sure other members will have time to go through the whole history of Nationwide, but in terms of the specific question of the regret that you’ve expressed, what role did you play yourself in relation to where Irish Nationwide found itself basically lumped on the Irish taxpayer—– 38

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I … I—– 39

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–and do you regret any decisions that you took or the way that you managed the bank in … in … to bring it to a point where it ultimately went bust? 40

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t regret any decisions I took. What I do regret is that, at the time, the society had a commercial loan book that was, at the time, too large and, as a consequence of the crash, was deemed to have significant losses within that book. 41

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Whose fault was it that the society had a commercial loan book that was too large? 42

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It was … I was part of the strategy. I was part of the operation and I was part of the decision to increase … to engage in commercial development—– 43

Deputy Pearse Doherty

But you don’t regret that decision, as you’ve told us—– 44

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, I regret it now, of course, but at the time—– 45

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay, so you do regret—– 46

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–at the time, certainly, I didn’t. It was a normal commercial decision and it was based on demographics and all the rest of it that availed in the environment and the market at the time. 47

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay, we’ll come back to the commercial property. Is there any other decisions, bar allowing your commercial property exposure to increase to significant levels, that you regret? 48

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I regret that when we took the decision to downsize the balance sheet and, in particular, downsize the commercial book, that we didn’t get the time to do it because we were turning over our commercial book every three years. I think that’s borne out in the due diligence report by KPMG in 19 …. in 2007. And we had matched our wholesale funding, which was between three and five years, to the maturity of those loans. Funny enough … and that was a comfort to us at the time and it was a big plus. So, therefore, if we had got another year of normal lending or normal markets compared to 2007, Senator, there was the maturity of €5 billion … there was a book of €5 billion of our loans due to mature in that year, 2008. Therefore, we would have reduced I’d say by, realistically, maybe €3 billion. So, we’d have our book down from €8.5 billion down to €5 billion. 49

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Mr. Fingleton, you were in charge of Irish Nationwide Building Society for 38 years. During that period, the bank made a series of business decisions that led to it eventually going bust and to be bailed out by billions of euro of taxpayer’s money. In the annual accounts of Irish Nationwide Building Society, it was reported that a pension fund of €27.6 million had been set up and subsequent newspaper reports revealed that that separate pension fund that was set up at that time was for your exclusive benefit. Can you explain to the committee why a pension fund of €27.6 million was set up in the year 2007? 50

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’ll try, Deputy. In the early ‘90s, I think it was ‘91 or ‘92, I looked at my pension fund and the value that accrued on that fund. It was managed by an outside insurance company – an outside fund – and I discovered that if I had invested all the contributions in the lowest deposit account or the lowest paying deposit account operated by the society at that time, that would have produced more than what was produced by the insurance company in the fund. So I agreed with the society at that time that I would manage my own fund and I would invest the contributions that were provided by the society in that fund. So I made the decisions from that time on what to invest in and the fund was, of course, administered by the trustees of that particular fund. So that’s the genesis of where it started and originated. And over the years the fund built up to almost €30 million based on my decisions on what to invest in. And when the fund matured and when the retirement came, as I said, there was €30 million in it, €30 million in it. Now the net cost of that, Deputy, to the society – booked it in a public document that doesn’t appear to have got great circulation – was in my view almost nearer to €3 million than what the experts said was nearer to €4 million. So in that period, I increased that fund by almost ten times, tenfold. So you can appreciate, because pensions and the pension pots and funds are very much discussed within your environment, and you can appreciate what €3 million, what sort of a fund €3 million would buy you today, or even €4 million would buy you today. So the cost to the society was €3 million, or if you believe the … some of the experts who have examined the account, and I will come to that in a minute, nearer €4 million. 51

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Was there a bonus culture in Irish Nationwide? 52

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, Senator. 53

Deputy Pearse Doherty

No. 54

Mr. Michael Fingleton

There was no bonus culture in the Irish Nationwide. 55

Deputy Pearse Doherty

So there was no bonuses paid in—– 56

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh there was, sorry. There was no bonus … there was bonuses paid on the basis of results on an annual basis. There was no bonuses culture from the point of view that if, to promote the business, in other words, to, you have to get so much lending done and you’ll get so much if you achieve targets. There was no target-related bonuses paid in Irish Nationwide, except to the branch managers to incentivise them to get more home loans or attract more home loans for the society because that’s where we were weakest for reasons I have outlined in my statement, that we didn’t do tracker mortgages or we didn’t do 100 per cents or we didn’t do self-certification. We didn’t take on loans at a 1% margin—– 57

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Is your view today, with hindsight, in relation to the bonuses that were paid out, as you mentioned, to individuals and the large pension pots that were set aside in the annual accounts that we’ve referred to – your own one that had a value of €27.6 million – is your view … what is your view? Is your view that people were entitled to those bonuses and pensions funds even though that there has been, as you mentioned, victims of the crisis which don’t have any pensions out there and have suffered immensely as a result of the financial crisis? 58

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, I’m fairly conscious of that, Deputy. I certainly would say in hindsight they were excessive. That’s all I’ll say really. 59

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. 60

Mr. Michael Fingleton

If it was today, they just wouldn’t be paid, but at that time in the market – and we were, the society was extremely successful at the time – and I think that … you see, I did not determine my bonuses. They were done by the remuneration committee, which comprised the three, or all the non-executive directors, and they decided what my bonus was. 61

Deputy Pearse Doherty

If you go to the core booklets on Vol. 1, page 43 and 44, in a letter dated in February 2008, it regards the inspection of commercial property lending exposures—– 62

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What are you, sorry—– 63

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Page 43 and 44 of Vol. 1, and I will quote it anyway—– 64

Chairman

It’ll come up on the screen in front of you as well, Mr. Fingleton. 65

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 66

Chairman

It will come on the screen for you there in a few moments. Oh sorry, it won’t. 67

Deputy Pearse Doherty

It won’t. 68

Chairman

It won’t, no. 69

Deputy Pearse Doherty

I will quote. It says the Financial Regulator “calls into question the adequacy [and] controls and risk management in place in INBS for large commercial property loans and suggest[s] that a significant degree of approval authority rests with a single individual, Mr. Fingleton, who also appears to be the only source of information on some of these large clients”. What is your views of the Financial Regulator’s statement that he made at that time? 70

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t agree with it, Deputy. 71

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Why do you not agree with it? 72

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Because it’s not true. 73

Deputy Pearse Doherty

What part of it is not true? 74

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It’s all not true. 75

Deputy Pearse Doherty

All of it is not true. 76

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Except that I did have, it was my job to have knowledge of the different exposures of the society. So I would have knowledge but I didn’t have exclusive knowledge Chairman, or Deputy, of any those loans. 77

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay, and the “significant degree of approval authority rests with a single individual”, you’d … do you disagree? 78

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That’s a nonsense. 79

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Nonsense? 80

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 81

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Did you challenge the Financial Regulator in relation to his … to this—– 82

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Chairman, even at the ultimate end of the process the board approved all the loans over €1 million, not Michael Fingleton. 83

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Why would the Financial Regulator say to the chairperson of INBS that a “significant degree of approval authority” lay with yourself? 84

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know, you’ll have to ask … I know who … I know who said it, you’d have to ask her because I don’t think … I think there was always this perception, and I emphasise perception Deputy, that I, sort of, controlled the whole operation of the society. But I took steps to ensure that I didn’t control it or couldn’t control it. I maintained and kept and ensured that the board always had the final say and that was … no other institution had the board involved in the lending process. 85

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Did you ever provide a name—– 86

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And that was … and I can maintain that right from the time I became CEO of Irish Nationwide. Secondly … it’s gone out of my head now … anyway, that’s—– 87

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Did you ever provide a name and an amount to—– 88

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, I’ve, I’ve—– 89

Deputy Pearse Doherty

If I can finish this question, did you ever provide a name and an amount to one of your staff members in INBS to provide a loan to an individual, for example, on a Post-it note? 90

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No. 91

Deputy Pearse Doherty

No, never? 92

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No. 93

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Did you ever provide it in any type of form? 94

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No. 95

Deputy Pearse Doherty

No, okay. 96

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I … loans, loans … I might introduce loans, people might come to me and the process was people came to me, I would meet them, I would always have a lender with a notebook, taking notes, or an underwriter in the case of a home loan and then I would pass them over to them to deal with the detail. 97

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. 98

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And that was my—– 99

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Mr. Fingleton, in the core documents of Vol. 1, again on page 5, it states that over the period 2001 to 2003, Nationwide increased its level of commercial lending by over 60%. This was a source of concern for the regulator, that the society did not have the appropriate skill sets or controls in place to effectively manage this exposure. On page 47 of the core booklet that you have in Vol. 1, we see that by September 2008, 80% of INBS’s loan book was in commercial property and 81% in land and development exposure was in speculative property activities. Do you think that this was an appropriate lending strategy for Nationwide, as a building society, in which to engage? 100

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t Deputy. It was a normal expansion of the business. The reason we had more … or more … volume in commercial loans is that we couldn’t increase our home loan book for reasons I’ve already stated. And we developed—– 101

Deputy Pearse Doherty

To clarify, you say you don’t, so you … is it you don’t believe it was appropriate but it was also a normal expansion, so which—– 102

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It was normal expansion as I’ve said—– 103

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Inappropriate normal expansion is that what you’re saying? 104

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, no I’m not saying it was … an … an inappropriate—– 105

Deputy Pearse Doherty

So it was appropriate? 106

Mr. Michael Fingleton

So it was within … it was in the parameters of our liquidity, our capital availability and the share-to-deposit ratio. All the parameters and requirements of the regulator was complied with. It was also within the capacity of the society because it was normal lending at the time within the strategy and within the objectives of the society to engage and expand our loan book in that area. 107

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Were you aware of the risks? 108

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And remember Deputy we were, we … we got out of commercial … or got out of a construction, more or less, and we did more development and, indeed, more income generating investments, particularly in the UK, because we were turning over our book every three years. 109

Deputy Pearse Doherty

But were you aware of the risks that existed with the fact that you put 81, 80% of your loan book in commercial property and 81% of land and development were in speculative—– 110

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The risks … the risk was diminished in that you’re talking about land development and a lot of our lending was in that area and the risk to that was that we wouldn’t get the planning or that our customers wouldn’t get the planning, because that was the criteria. Our customers … the loans were based on the premises … on the premise that the borrower would get the planning. Once the planning was received, our risk would be transferred to another lender for the construction phase and we would get our money back. And we would get our money back in all our books between … I think the timeframe was between six months and three years of when the planning accrued. That was the purpose of it. So the lower … the shorter the period, Deputy, the lower the risk and that’s how we dealt with our lending in that—– 111

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Can I go to maybe – just in relation to the risk – again the core booklets, Vol. 2? It’s on page 45 and this is Project Harmony, the report in June 2007, and it notes: 112
The overall approach to risk assessment would not be described as highly developed given that the Group continues to rely heavily on the Managing Director, does not have sophisticated IT systems and operates across a limited range of products. This modus operandi would be described by the management as fit for purpose, particularly given the degree of Board oversight of the lending approval process. 113
End of quote from the Project Harmony report. 114

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sure. 115

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Can you explain why you considered such amodus operandi to be fit for purpose for a financial institution with a balance sheet of €16 billion at the end of 2007? 116

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I didn’t … did I decide? It was fit for purpose within the parameters and the criteria in operation within the society. 117

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Did you have a sophisticated … do you dispute what the Project Harmony? For example, did you have a sophisticated IT system? It’s reported that you never even had a computer yourself. I’m not sure if that’s accurate or not. But was there a sophisticated IT system? Do you dispute what Project Harmony says in the report in June 2007? 118

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We had a system. Remember, Deputy, we were operating in a very narrow and simple, straightforward market in property and being funded by deposits on the wholesale market. We were just in a narrow banking function. Therefore, it didn’t take great sophisticated systems that would normally operate in the larger banks—– 119

Deputy Pearse Doherty

You had €16 billion of a loan book, with respect, at the end of 2007. 120

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We hadn’t the €16 billion. 121

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Sorry, €16 billion was—– 122

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Our assets. 123

Deputy Pearse Doherty

At the … yes, here, the balance sheet was €16 billion. 124

Mr. Michael Fingleton

At what date? 125

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Did that not require a computer, for example, for the managing director? 126

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh we had, of course. We had a very good system that catered for the needs of the society. 127

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. So … okay, I’ll leave it at that. 128
Can I ask you, in the letter from INBS, and again this is in core booklet, Vol. 3, page 41? This is a letter from INBS to the Financial Regulator’s office in April 2008 and it’s in response to the Regulator’s query of February 2008 – its report on commercial property lending. The letter from INBS states: 129
Mr. Fingleton is closely involved with the U.K. and Ireland commercial lending managers in assessing large commercial loan applications and in ongoing reviews and discussions with large borrowers. The Chief Executive is ultimately responsible for all lending and it is essential that he is involved in all material loans being approved by the Society. 130
That’s coming from your own institution to the Financial Regulator. So, is it reasonable, or not, to say that with regard to commercial loan applications, that you were ultimately responsible for the lending? 131

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, as CEO or managing director … listen, you are always ultimately responsible for whatever takes place within the organisation, and lending was our prime activity within that organisation. So, I would have to familiarise myself very thoroughly with all the loans that were being proposed, all the loans that were there for approval and all the loans that ultimately went on to the society’s loan book. 132

Chairman

We going to start moving to wrapping up, Deputy. 133

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Yes. Mr. Fingleton, in the core booklet – again Vol. 1, page 71 to 73 – this is a review by Deloitte in the second quarter of 2008 into your bank, Irish Nationwide, commercial and residential lending. It had the following to say with regard to critical issues. On page 71 of these documents it quotes: 134
No Credit Committee approval was present on a number of reviewed files, mostly relating to loans originating in Belfast. 135
In many cases the Commercial Loan Application was approved by only one member of the Credit Committee, while at least two members are required under the terms of reference to approve these loans. 136
It goes on then to say in page 73: 137
Until December 2007, board approval was required for all loans in excess of €1 million. In a number of incidences, no board approval could be located in either the loan file or the board minutes for loans which, according to the lending policy in operation at the time, would have required board approval. 138
You have told this committee that at all times – and you’re very proud of it – that the board was involved in all of these decisions; that you didn’t, despite what the Financial Regulator says, have ultimate responsibility in terms of these decisions, or the authority lay with you. How come is it that Deloitte is pointing out, again and again, that the board didn’t approve these … that the credit committee didn’t approve some of these loans? 139

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Chairman, or Deputy, I just have to say on that one that this is an issue or an allegation or allegations that are in dispute and they’re a matter for another jurisdiction. And I would dispute those and the chairman of the credit committee would dispute those allegations and that remains for another day. I cannot comment for legal reasons. 140

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay, that’s fine. Just for clarity, you are disputing the Deloitte report, the Financial Regulator’s report, Project Harmony’s report in relation to—– 141

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, excuse me. 142

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–Deloitte’s report, the Financial Regulator’s letters in relation to your authority and the Project Harmony report? It’s that just for accuracy purposes. 143

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’ve made my … I’ve stated in my answers the responses to your questions—– 144

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Can I finally ask you … in relation to … INBS’s overarching driver was demutualisation and sale and this is talked about in the Nyberg report. In your opinion, did the desire on the part of management, and on your part also as part of that management, to maximise the value of INBS result in the adoption of poor lending practice and an increased level of risk in the loan portfolio? 145

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We certainly would have wished to maximise the value of the society. That would be normal for any institution who wishes to sell its organisation to a third party. Sorry, the second part of your question—– 146

Deputy Pearse Doherty

The question is: did the fact that you wanted to sell … the demutualisation and sale, did that result in your view, as part of the management to maximise the value of INBS … did that result in the adoption of poor lending practices and an increase in the level of risk in the loan portfolio? 147

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t accept there were poor lending practices and it was not a motive at all in relation to the demutualisation of Irish Nationwide and the subsequent sale of the society, which was a normal … we engaged in normal business … ongoing development of the society. 148

Chairman

I will invite you back in at the end, Deputy, when we are wrapping up. Deputy Kieran O’Donnell. 149

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Thanks, Chairman. Welcome, Mr. Fingleton. In relation to the loans acquired to the society by NAMA – you made reference to them earlier – the discount overall was 61% and you spoke about where you feel the discounts were too high. Now, they were the highest discounts of any of the financial institutions and, Chairman, I am referring here to Vol. 1, page 125. Can you explain how you got into a situation where you became partners with developers in terms of profit-sharing, where you gave 100% loans to developers, you took up to 50% of the profit on the development, you charged them a rate of interest? And were they non-recourse loans? So can you give a background in that area? 150

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Okay. Chairman, yes, I refer back to 1992. We were coming out of the recession of the ‘80s, where there was little or no increase in the real value of house prices, there was little or no construction going on. I think there was about 15,000 or 20,000 houses being built annually – and we had, of course, the 1989 Act just passed and, as I said to the Deputy … that building societies … it encourages us, it stated that, “Building societies should be a major source of funding for housing by investing directly in residential—–“ 151

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fingleton – and I don’t wish to interrupt you – I’m aware of that. What I really want to ask is—– 152

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, I thought the Deputy was asking me a question. 153

Chairman

Yes. 154

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

No, I was asking you a question. 155

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, was it you? 156

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

It was, Chairman, yes. 157

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I beg your pardon. I’m sorry. 158

Chairman

I haven’t started yet, Mr. Fingleton. 159

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

The question is, at the time of, we’ll say, the bank guarantee was brought in, of the development loans, which were of the order – commercial loans – they were €9 billion of the €12 billion of loans in Irish Nationwide at the time, what percentage of them—– 160

Mr. Michael Fingleton

€8.5 billion. 161

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

€8.5 billion. Right, we’ll round it up. But what percentage of those were … involved joint ventures where there was profit-sharing with the developer for Irish Nationwide? 162

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I think there was around – I am only guessing, Senator – maybe 30%. 163

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Now, I’ve seen and we’ve seen figures where it’s been reported … the Central Bank have said it was around 65% by value. 164

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Are you talking about land development now or are you talking about income-generating investments—– 165

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

I’m talking about—– 166

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Just the loan book? 167

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

—–the loan book. 168

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’d be surprised if there was 60. I would certainly think it may be 50. 169

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And of the lands that were yet to be developed, what percentage of those would have been profit-sharing? 170

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know. I haven’t got that figure, Deputy, yes. 171

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Of those loans, the 50% – let’s assume that it was of the order of about … over €4 billion – what percentage of those were non-recourse loans where the only security given was the asset? 172

Mr. Michael Fingleton

There were certainly … in the UK, they would be mostly non-recourse in relation to the joint ventures. In Ireland, there would be some non-recourse but the majority of them would be recourse. 173

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Why were so many of the loans non-recourse? They appeared to be very high-risk. 174

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Because non-recourse was not available in the UK from our customers in relation to the joint ventures. Because they were contributing 50% – up to 50% – of their profits to the society, they would not give personal guarantees. 175

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

But did you not … in terms of the interest, was that not, Mr. Fingleton, reckless of a form for you, as CEO of the society, to put the members’ interests at such risk, or not? 176

Chairman

Don’t make a judgment there now, Deputy. 177

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Well, put it this way, that … you’re saying that the developer was dictating that they would not give any form of security bar … other than the asset itself. 178

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It wasn’t available. But, Deputy—– 179

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Ye could’ve demanded it. 180

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We would … when you … we would be going on our experience with those particular developers or borrowers. From 1992, the vast majority of them were customers of ours, right up to 1997. That is 15 years. And we had little or no losses incurred in that period. And we had … we had ring-fenced our area of activity and diminished the risk element by ensuring that all those loans would be redeemed within a three-year period. And effectively they were. So—– 181

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

But is it not—– 182

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We had to … we were basing all our decisions based on other considerations but principally on the basis of our experience in that market which we had built an expertise in in the intervening period of 15 years. So you have to take into consideration that element of risk in the lending. 183

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

But, in September 2008, is it not fair to say, Mr. Fingleton, that you had a development loan book too much of which was tied up in joint ventures with non-recourse loans? 184

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, if there was too much of it tied up in joint ventures, I don’t think the recourse would have made much difference, Deputy, in the final analysis, the way things turned out. 185

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

But you don’t—– 186

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It certainly didn’t make any difference to the recourse loans we had here in Ireland or the few … or the number … we had a number, quite a number … we had all our recourse loans in the UK in relation to that—– 187

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And you don’t see that—– 188

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—-big interest-bearing investment properties. 189

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

You don’t see that as a contributory factor to the high discount with NAMA? 190

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It was a contributory but it wasn’t the major issue in relation to the discounts applied by NAMA to our loans, I can assure you of that. 191

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

On 7 September, Mr. Purcell, your secretary of the board and financial officer, and two other colleagues arranged a meeting with the Central Bank on behalf of Irish Nationwide, with representatives … together with representatives from AIB and Bank of Ireland. Were you aware that this meeting had been arranged? 192

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I was. 193

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay, and who requested the meeting? 194

Mr. Michael Fingleton

As … my understanding … well, you have Mr. Purcell here this afternoon, he’ll fill in more detail, but my understanding was that it was the regulator. 195

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And was a decision reached at the meeting? 196

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, there was no decision reached at the meeting, as I understand. 197

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Why didn’t you … why did you not attend the meeting, Mr. Fingleton, as CEO? 198

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I was … I had other engagements that required my attention. You do recall, Deputy, the false Reuters report and it might be interesting to know the background to that in that the night the Reuters report was issued, on the lines, we contacted the regulator’s office and we informed them that the report was totally erroneous. And the … I think our head of supervision said that they would get on to the media and that they would make a statement saying … confirming that that was erroneous. 199

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

That’s … Mr. Fingleton, that’s in the public domain. I suppose, I want to get … the meeting—– 200

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, I don’t think that’s in the public domain. 201

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Well, it’s … it’s—– 202

Chairman

Can I ask you, Deputy, just to get to … to ask Mr. Fingleton to clarify the purpose of that meeting? 203

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

The purpose … that’s really … the purpose of that meeting on 7 September? 204

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The purpose of that meeting … from the regulator’s point of view, they felt and believed that, following the Reuters report, there might be a run on the society or that there would be a run on the society the following Monday or whenever it was … the following day – maybe the following Monday, I think it was – and that they wished to establish whether a major bank would supply, if the society needed it, some liquidity. Now, Deputy, it is clear from evidence given to this committee that the society didn’t need any liquidity to absorb any run or withdrawals caused by the false Reuters report. 205

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Is it … if I can just refer you to page 96 of Vol. 1, where it’s a letter from the Financial Regulator to Mr. Walsh and on page 96, he says—– 206

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Let me see now. 207

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

It’s “”. 208

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Let me get it … let me get it. Let me see, “” … 96. Okay. 209

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Paragraph 3, top of the page. 210

Mr. Michael Fingleton

96, “”, is it? Okay. 211

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Yes. 212

Chairman

Yes, it’s the fourth page of an overall letter from the Financial Regulator. 213

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

I want to direct you—– 214

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Okay. 215

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

—–to three sentences down: 216
Currently [Irish Nationwide Building Society] has no access to ECB monetary operations, [it] has not been accessing the wholesale markets for [lending] in recent months and is relying on retail and corporate deposit initiatives. 217
So, clearly, at the time, the Financial Regulator had concerns about your overall liquidity position. Ye were heavily reliant on deposits. And, following on from that, just to give it context, there was a meeting on 7 September where Mr. Richie Boucher stated that the Financial Regulator sought a meeting with him for the purpose of … to discuss potential liquidities both for Irish Nationwide Building Society. So, you weren’t able to access ECB funding, so—– 218

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Deputy … sorry, Deputy, in relation to the wholesale funding, we didn’t need to access wholesale funds at that time. We had €4 billion of cash or near cash on deposit with counterparty banks. 219

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So you’d no liquidity—– 220

Mr. Michael Fingleton

To over 25% of liquidity and a multiple of the requirements laid down by the regulator in the new requirements he introduced in 2007. We had no need … and, in fact, I think … I haven’t got it confirmed yet but I think we might have paid back €750 million to our funders in February or March in that year. 221

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Which you were required to do. 222

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Which we were required to do. So we had no need even to roll it over. 223

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I just follow on from that question? You had a meeting subsequently with David Doyle on 18 September, the then General Secretary of the Department of Finance. 224

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 225

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

What was discussed at that meeting? 226

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What was discussed at that meeting was that we … were suggested … we looked for a meeting, first of all, with the Minister and the Minister wasn’t available. And that’s … the chairman and myself. 227

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

For what purpose? 228

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The purpose was to ask or suggest to the Government that they would increase the guarantee on deposits from €20,000 to €100,000. That was the purpose of that meeting. And that was on the 18th of—– 229

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

September. 230

Mr. Michael Fingleton

September and—– 231

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fingleton, did you—– 232

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–deposits were increased on 20 September from €20,000 to €100,000. 233

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Fine. Did ye discuss solvency of Irish Nationwide on that . . . at that meeting? 234

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I think … I’m not too sure, Chairman. I can’t remember that. I don’t think we did but I’m not too sure. No, I can’t … I can’t remember. But certainly we did … the purpose of going to meet the Minister and we met instead the—– 235

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Do you accept, Mr. Fingleton, that, in terms of scale – size – that Irish Nationwide’s cost to the Irish taxpayer, €5.4 billion, has been the biggest single banking failure in size in the history of the Irish State? And, in that context, that it cost €5.4 billion, do you still believe Irish Nationwide Building Society was solvent on the night of the guarantee? 236

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I certainly do believe we were solvent on the night of the guarantee, Deputy, and there’s been no evidence produced, as far as I am aware, to this committee by all the participants to date to suggest otherwise. 237

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And do you accept that the €5.4 billion of taxpayers’ money that’s ended up going into Irish Nationwide Building Society, which they will never see a red cent of—– 238

Mr. Michael Fingleton

If you accept—– 239

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Is it the biggest single failure? 240

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Deputy, if you accept the discounts applied by NAMA, yes. But I don’t accept the discounts applied by NAMA and I have evidence – and will produce evidence at a future date – to really substantially disavow those discounts. 241

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So you’re disagreeing fundamentally with an independent organisation like NAMA? 242

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, Deputy, can I just finish? Therefore, I’m not saying there wasn’t … there would have been a … certainly cost to the taxpayer. It may not have been €5.4 billion. Even if it was €4 billion, it still would be too much. 243

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Well, do you want to—– 244

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And it would have been too much for the taxpayer and the State to bear. 245

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fingleton, do you want to take this opportunity to apologise to the Irish taxpayer and the members of Irish Nationwide Building Society for your stewardship of the institution? 246

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I have already extended my … I regret the thing fully and … very, very much and I’ve already stated that and if there was a—– 247

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

What would you have done differently? 248

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 249

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

What would you have done differently, Mr. Fingleton? 250

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, if I’d done differently I don’t know what I . . . in hindsight, we all have … would have done things differently in our lives and in our business lives as well. I would’ve not lent in 2006 or 2007. If we had stopped lending in 2006 instead of 2007 – when we ceased in September 2007 – we would have eliminated totally our commercial book. 251

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I ask you, Mr. Fingleton, what was the set-up remuneration-wise within Irish Nationwide for executives like yourself? What was the … how was your remuneration arrived at? Like, you were on €2.3 million of a salary in 2007, which was in excess of what the CEO of AIB at the time was on. How did you arrive at that level of a salary? 252

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I didn’t arrive at it, Deputy. 253

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

How was it arrived at? 254

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The remuneration committee arrived at it and it was made up of a basic salary and a bonus. 255

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

How was the bonus arrived at, Mr. Fingleton? 256

Mr. Michael Fingleton

On the basis of the performance of the society in that given year. 257

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And what was the bonus that you would’ve agreed, we’ll say, for ’07 and ’08 at the time? 258

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I didn’t agree anything. I didn’t agree anything. It was done in retrospect, it wasn’t done in prospect in relation to delivering any profits or any elements of lending or anything else. 259

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Well, do you believe—– 260

Chairman

This is your last question. 261

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

No, I’ll ask a very simple question. Do you believe, Mr. Fingleton, in light of the fact of the performance of Irish Nationwide, that the bonuses in ’07-’08 were warranted? 262

Chairman

I need to be mindful there—- 263

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, not at all. 264

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

They weren’t warranted? 265

Mr. Michael Fingleton

They wouldn’t be … in hindsight—– 266

Chairman

Sorry, I’m going to have to pull you back in that area because that relates to other matters that are part of a civil action—– 267

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

But the … can—– 268

Chairman

—–and it doesn’t matter if the witness wants to co-operate or not. I have to be mind … and that’s—– 269

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

I’d only one final question on that, Chairman. 270

Chairman

Sure, go on. 271

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I ask Mr. Fingleton that … it’s reported that, we’ll say, on your ceasing as CEO, that you were presented with a watch of—– 272

Chairman

Ah, tut, tut. 273

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Out of bounds. 274

Chairman

Please, if we can return to the evidence books, please. 275

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I … Mr. Fingleton, the Financial Regulator in December ’04 noting the ongoing concerns with the level of resources at senior and executive management Irish Nationwide. 276

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What page was that? 277

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

That was . . . that’s Vol. 1, page 3 and 2. That letter was dated 9 December 2004. And it was repeated in March 2008. 278

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What page is it at, Deputy? 279

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

That’s page . . . it should come up on the screen. It’s Vol. 1, page 3 to 12, letter, Financial Regulator, and Vol. 2, page 35. I’d say you’re probably reasonably familiar, Mr. Fingleton, with the overall tenant of what’s being put forward. 280

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, there’s a lot of documentation, Deputy, and I can’t remember it all specifically. So, I’ll see can I deal with … what page—– 281

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

It’s page 3 to 12 on Vol. 1, which is the initial letter, Financial Regulator and—– 282

Mr. Michael Fingleton

In November 2004, is it? 283

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Correct. December 2004. 284

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Or December 2004, yes, I have it now. I have it, Deputy, yes. 285

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Chairman, can you give time for the witness to locate—– 286

Chairman

It’s a Central Bank document so I don’t think it will come up on screen, Deputy. 287

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Time-wise, Chairman, it’s very important. 288

Chairman

Yes, yes, I can give you a small bit of flexibility. 289

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Vol. 2, page 35 to 38, is a letter from the Financial Regulator to Mr. Walsh that’s dated 7 March and really the tenant of it is that it would appear the regulator continually repeated that there was lack of strength at the board or senior management level over a six-year period. In view of these concerns over resources that was in senior management, why did the building society expand its loan book and, in particular, to commercial lending throughout this period? They’re basically saying that the … that you did not have the strength at either board or management level to deal with dealing with that level of loan expansion, particularly in the commercial area. 290

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I … we didn’t … you will … I refer to the full reply and detailed reply of the Chairman, Dr. Walsh, to that letter, in December 2004, where he pointed out clearly that we had increased the level of management substantially in the organisation, which, clearly, the regulator wasn’t aware of. And, secondly, we also pointed out that while we needed some further strengthening of the management for normal administrative reasons, we were finding it difficult to get the calibre of employee because we were being sold … the perception was out there that we were being sold and nobody was prepared to join us on a contract and all we could offer in anticipation of the sale was a contract. 291

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Well, if you—– 292

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And that is the position. So, we weren’t deficient in management … in adequate management, but we could do with more. That’s all. 293

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fingleton, why didn’t you demutualise earlier? You had the opportunity. Irish Life and Permanent demutualised much quicker and … Permanent TSB, rather, demutualised much quicker. You could have done it over a five-six year period. Why didn’t you do that? Why did you push so hard so that you could actually, once you demutualised it, you could sell straight away? Why weren’t you willing to wait the five-year period? 294

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Because, at the time, when we made the decision in 1995 we looked at our position as a stand-alone building society. And our advice was, at the time, that we hadn’t the critical mass to convert to a company and launch the society in … to the public. So, therefore, we decided then that we had two options. One was to merge with another building society. Secondly was to effect a trade sale and the second one we chose to do. At that time, we sought to get the change in the legislation. There was absolutely no commercial reason for that change in legislation not to have been implemented at that time. Even the Central Bank, without … without the Government or the Department of the Environment bringing in new legislation, the Central Bank could have made the decision in the interests of the shareholders or depositors, but they chose not to. So we lobbied for years for the change in that legislation and we were obstructed from time to time. If you want the whole history—– 295

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

I don’t. 296

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–chapter and verse—– 297

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Not today. 298

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–we’ll give it to you. 299

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Not today. 300

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And it was unnecessary for the delay, and it was not caused by the society; it was caused elsewhere. 301

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I ask—– 302

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’ve … as already set out in my statement—– 303

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr.—– 304

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–written statement. 305

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fingleton, why didn’t you increase the size of the board in your tenure to bring in, like many other institutions, where they would have had eight or nine, ten people on the board? Why did you maintain it at five, where you had only three non-executive directors? Two of them were executive directors. Why did you maintain the board and more or less the same people over that ten … whatever … year period? 306

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That was the decision of the board, Deputy. It wasn’t my personal decision. That was a decision of the board, that they felt that the board was adequate in size to deal with the level of business being generated and conducted by the society. 307

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And was there ever an occasion … And, finally Chairman, if I could direct the witness to Vol. 1, page 83. It’s the Deloitte and Touche report and it deals with the—– 308

Chairman

What page, Deputy? 309

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Page 83. Sorry, well I don’t know if it’s 83 or 63, Chairman. It’s the … it’s 63, I believe. 310

Chairman

The Deloitte report, is it? 311

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Deloitte. Deloitte and Touche report. 312

Chairman

83. It’s actually page 83. 313

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Is it 83? Page 83, at the end, Mr. Fingleton, right. And I just want to get an idea of the day-to-day activity around commercial lending and in terms of approval of commercial lending. And this particular report speaks about … and I’ve a few quick questions that—– 314

Chairman

You’re running out of time, Deputy—– 315

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Yes. 316

Chairman

—–so you’ll have to be moving on. 317

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Were there ever occasions, Mr. Fingleton, where you approved a loan prior to it being approved by the board … or, sorry, you approved and granted and extended a loan prior to it being approved by the board? 318

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I never approved a loan outside the procedures and policy of the society. 319

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

That’s not my question, Mr. Fingleton. My question is … is there any occasion where … prior … up to December 2007, any loan above €1 million had to be approved by the board. 320

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Correct. 321

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Were there ever occasions where you, as CEO, approved and extended a loan of over €1 million to a developer or anyone else … a commercial loan, without … or any loan … without the prior approval of the board of directors? 322

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Deputy, you’re … I could, in certain circumstances, in conjunction with two members of the committee, approve a loan without the approval of the board. 323

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And could you extend the funding? 324

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I could extend the funding, again, on the same basis. 325

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And what were those … how would that situation arise? 326

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It would arise … it was an urgency or a commercial circumstances that was needed to be addressed. 327

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So it’s not … so, is it fair … you … you made reference earlier, Mr. Fingleton, that you were unique—– 328

Chairman

That’s a supplementary now, Deputy. You’re over time. 329

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

—–you’re unique amongst institutions. Any loan of above €1 million had to go to the board. That is not the case, Mr. Fingleton. There was … you had the discretion to grant a loan above the €1 million level without prior approval of the board. 330

Mr. Michael Fingleton

But the board had to be notified of it at earliest opportunity. 331

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

But not prior to making it. 332

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, Chairman, the board was required … or, the requirement of the board was to approve all loans over €1 million, and there was an exception. There had to be some exceptions within an organisation to deal with the commercial realities of the day. 333

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And in hindsight—– 334

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And that was—– 335

Chairman

Last point. 336

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

In hindsight, why did you change the rules that after December 2007, loans above €1 million no longer had to be approved by the board? They could be approved by the credit committee without being approved by the board. Why did that change come in? 337

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I wasn’t party to that change. It was changed by the board and, maybe, you have the chairman in this afternoon and you will ask him why. But that was the decision of the board and not me. 338

Chairman

Now, Mr. Fingleton, I just want to deal with a couple of matters myself and, time permitting, I will invite Senator O’Keeffe, after which then I’ll propose that we take a break. Just to stay on that matter with regard to the management of loans at board level. Can I just specifically ask—– 339

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’m sorry, Chairman. 340

Chairman

I want to deal with the issue of the management of loans that Deputy O’Donnell is relating to you, just to—– 341

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Okay. 342

Chairman

—–deal specifically with it. Did you authorise loans before they were approved by the board and were the loan amounts … were the loan amounts required board approval? Did that happen? 343

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No. I … outside I could approve loans in conjunction … in certain circumstances, with … in conjunction with two members of the committee. My signature would be required. 344

Chairman

Okay. And in any situation, would there … was there subsequently seeking of retrospective approval? 345

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I will point you to, again … not again but, as an aside, Chairman, it might help. There’s been an investigation, and I’ll just mention it once, by Ernst and Young into the affairs of the society post-2010. And it states in that report, which has been circulated and misinterpreted by outside interests and inside interests … in that it states that they found no evidence to suggest that I had approved solely any loan. 346

Chairman

Okay. Mr. Fingleton, earlier this morning when you were speaking in your opening statement, you said about being here as a voluntary witness. You are here as a directed witness, like every other witness that has been here before the banking inquiry. I do appreciate your co-operation, but you are not here in a voluntary capacity, just to clarify that. And—– 347

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, I accept that, Chairman, and I—– 348

Chairman

—–and you are here under oath. So, I just want to get it on the record. Are you saying, as a matter of fact, that you never authorised loans before they were approved by the board? 349

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, that’s what I’m saying. Yes. 350

Chairman

Okay. Were loans given out without proper legal paperwork being in place? 351

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I can’t say, Chairman, that in every instance all the paperwork would be on the file, but whatever was necessary and essential was always there and there was no security ever compromised, either legally or physically, in relation to any loan. 352

Chairman

Okay. I’d just ask a question—– 353

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And we … also I would point out that we employed outside solicitors to examine the legal title of every loan and we employed the best, both in the UK and in Ireland. And I went out of my way to identify in Ireland … I remember well … identify the best commercial solicitor in Dublin. And the partner of that firm was my adversary when we set up our own legal department against the wishes of the Law Society here, in the early ‘80s, to do our own mortgage work. 354

Chairman

Okay. 355

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And yet I gave that firm the business because of the calibre of the person who would deal with our business. 356

Chairman

Okay. I want to just briefly also deal with the lending strategy of your institution, Mr. Fingleton. Did anyone on the board ever challenge the overall lending strategy? In particular, did anyone on the board ever challenge the practice of taking equity stakes in developments in exchange for 100% funding? 357

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, not to my knowledge—– 358

Chairman

Okay, there was a—— 359

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–or my recollection or knowledge, Chairman. That’s the straight answer. 360

Chairman

You, earlier, spoke about the composition of the board and you said, and you explain, as to how decisions were taken on the board. Did any members of the board ever propose an increase or new members … that the board size should be increased, or that other members should be brought on board to it, and was that ever proposed, and was there ever a vote taken on such a proposal? 361

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We did seek to increase the board level in 2005 and 2006 and I approached a number of people. But because of the fact that we were being sold, the individuals concerned felt that this was a short-term thing and they weren’t interested in taking up the position. And we were looking for a particular calibre at the time of … at a very high level. Some of them weren’t interested because of the imminent sale of the society and others weren’t because they were just too busy in their own businesses. That is fact, and also the chairman, I think, asked a former director general of the Central Bank to become a director and that did not materialise either. 362

Chairman

Did those proposals ever come to a vote, Mr. Fingleton? 363

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 364

Chairman

Did those proposals ever result in a vote on the board? 365

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No. 366

Chairman

Okay. Just finally, Mr. Brendan McDonagh from the NTMA, when he was before this inquiry, spoke about the INBS business model. In one comment he said, “I think we might, and I speak again personally here Deputy, I think a few of my colleagues and myself would have been sceptical about the business model of INBS and Anglo Irish Bank.” That is in regard to the NTMA’s perception of your institution. Mr. McDonagh then also went on to say: 367
Yes, that we had concerns about placing the deposits, particularly in INBS and Anglo. We stopped placing deposits. 368
Do you have any observations or comments that you would like to say with regard to Mr. McDonagh’s comments about your institution? 369

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I have, Chairman. The reason they did not deposit with the society was simply that our ratings weren’t high enough. It is as simple as that. 370

Chairman

Senator Susan O’Keeffe. 371

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Thank you, Chair. Mr. Fingleton, in KPMG’s corporate governance review in 2008 it said that board packs … it’s a very specific question about … “board pacts are very detailed and at times lack clarity and structure”. For example, there is little market and operational overview and salient financial commentary provided. What would your observation be in relation to that … to their observations? 372

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Senator, you either give too much or you give too little. There is always a happy medium. We wouldn’t … I wouldn’t agree. We gave all the information that we thought as an executive, to the board who enabled them to reach their decisions and to deliberate on whatever was before them in relation to the agenda. The interpretation by KPMG in their report, I think, was … is that the one you are referring to? 373

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. 374

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–would be that it would be better if we had fewer detailed documents and more focused and shorter and more to the point documents presented to the board. I would agree with that. It would lead to more efficient conduct of the board and its time. 375

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Can I bring you, please, to Vol. 2 of the evidence books, on page 24? Again, this is the Financial Regulator … a very detailed letter that was sent to you … sent to the INBS … dated 20 November 2006 which means, obviously, this work had gone on for quite a considerable time. 376

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What page is that on? 377

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Page 24, Vol. 2. 378

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Vol. 2. 379

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And it specifically—– 380

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Hold on a second. 381

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

I beg your pardon, I thought it was coming up. I am sorry. 382

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Wait until I get it. I see. What date was that letter? 383

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

The date of the letter is 20 November 2006. There is obviously a lot of detail in the letter so the work had gone on over a long period of time prior to the writing of the letter. 384

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That was following an inspection—– 385

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

That’s correct. 386

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–Senator. You are okay. Go on now. I have it now. 387

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Page 24, M21, you will see, this is relating to credit risk and, it says: 388
The inspectors are concerned at the following: 389
1. The Managing Director, who is a member of the committee, did not attend any of the 27 meetings reviewed by the inspectors, covering the period 8 May 2005 to 11 May 2006 [so that would be a year]. 390
It then goes on to say: 391
2. [Mr.] Darragh Daly, Homeloans Manager, who is a member of the committee, attended only 2 of 27 meetings. 392
3. The quorum of three members was only achieved for 2 of the 27 meetings. 393
4. For the four meetings of the committee in July 2005, only one member […] was present. 394
And so on, so I just draw—— 395

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Can I, yes sorry—– 396

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

I am asking, just as an example, Mr. Fingleton, of some of the things that the Financial Regulator was drawing attention to about the way in which the society ran its business and you have said here that, in answer to my colleagues, that pretty much things were done well and you employed good people, and so on. I am saying, well, that is one very specific—– 397

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I am not saying, Senator, they were done perfectly, you know, but they were done as well—– 398

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Mr. Fingleton, the managing director did not attend any of the 27 meetings. 399

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The managing director—– 400

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Who was the managing director? 401

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The managing director never attended any—– 402

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

A member of the committee. 403

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–never attended. 404

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Why not, Mr. Fingleton? 405

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I will tell you … I will explain to you the background. I was authorisedex officio to attend all credit committee meetings. But I excused myself permanently from 2002 to the time the committee was set up to 1 December 2007 when the board decided to allocate the credit committee with the full powers to approve loans. And I did that, Senator, to ensure there was no conflicts of interest and that I would not have undue influence on the credit committee and that it would remain fully independent. 406

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And were you aware that the quorum of three members was only achieved for two of the 27 meetings? 407

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That is seriously in dispute by the chairman of the credit committee. I will just leave it at that. 408

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay. Do you accept in relation to the detail of this particular inspection there are many other matters raised here … are those just for the record, are those also in dispute, Mr. Fingleton, or do you accept any of them? 409

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, there are some of them that are valid, of course they are, but I will point out to you, Senator, just in case I will forget it, that the regulator’s system of prioritising complaints … he had a high priority, he had a medium priority and a low priority, and you will notice that any of those 30 items referred to … some of them are not extremely serious, they are just observations by the regulator … that there was not one single high priority in that … in any of those 30 observations. 410

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

In fairness, Mr.—– 411

Mr. Michael Fingleton

If they were considered to be serious by the regulator, he would have ensured that high priority would be up there in lights. 412

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Well, it does say actually on page 30 of that same document, “High Priority – Absence of or unsatisfactory operation of critical risk management and critical internal control systems, inadequate Board/management oversight/control over the operations of the institutions.” It is there on page 30. 413

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That’s a high priority. 414

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes, and you have just said there weren’t any. I am sorry, I am just—– 415

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Is that the description of them, Senator? Is that the description of them? 416

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

It does say, “Absence of or unsatisfactory operation of critical risk management—– 417

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That is the description of them. 418

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

It seems to me to be a grading of the finding. 419

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 420

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

It is described as a grading of the finding. 421

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That is the grading; it is not the content. 422

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay. 423

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It doesn’t relate to the content, Senator. 424

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

However, there are quite a number of findings here, you would agree. 425

Mr. Michael Fingleton

There always is. 426

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

There always is. 427

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I can recall, Senator, through the Chair, that you had another building society in here. And I think the regulator had identified 76—– 428

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. 429

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–if I’m not mistaken—– 430

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Mr. Fingleton, it is not a competition about how many things were wrong with your’s or with somebody else’s. We’re here talking about the INBS. 431

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I’m only saying that it was a normal practice of the regulator to identify things and incorporate them here and we would deal with them, and they were all dealt with. 432

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Can I ask about—– 433

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Have you got replies to those, Senator? I don’t, I did not get them in my documentation. 434

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

I think … I’m not entirely clear. There are replies to some of them but I just wanted to draw your attention to that. 435

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Is there a reply? Is there a letter of a reply by the society, because I can only consider it and respond to you if the copy of the letter of reply is in my possession? Because that will then indicate how significant or otherwise was the nature of any or all of those particular—- 436

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay, I would like if I may—– 437

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–observations by the regulator. 438

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

I would like if I may to ask about the appropriateness of the €1 million bonus that in September, in 2008—– 439

Chairman

We had legal briefings yesterday afternoon, Senator, on this matter—– 440

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay, that is fine, thank you. 441

Chairman

—–so I just want to pull you back a bit now. 442

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

In evidence to this committee, Mr. Boucher from Bank of Ireland talked about the meeting that was held in September 2008, in early September 2008. This was in relation to INBS, and he said, “I would say that weekend was a weekend when, on a personal basis, I realised the extent of the issues in the system were very, very serious”, and he goes on to talk … it was a lengthy meeting. Were you at the meeting, Mr. Fingleton? 443

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I was not, Senator. 444

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Were you aware of the meeting? 445

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I was, Senator. 446

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay, and he, Mr. Boucher, said, “Eventually, we were asked to look at, from memory, I think a quantum of around about €4 billion and we fed back to the regulator that we weren’t comfortable, [that] that wasn’t an accurate picture of what was needed, but even if it was, that we wouldn’t be in a position to provide that – we were very uncomfortable taking on an exposure to that entity.” And he talks about wishing to have, you know, I actually felt we should have left the meeting. So I just wonder, Mr. Fingleton, what—– 447

Chairman

There will be no time for a reply now, Senator, as you’re out of time. 448

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I wasn’t there. 449

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

What is your response to Mr. Boucher in relation to that … his observation of that—– 450

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, the regulator called the meeting. He was in attendance, and I think he gave evidence, and you asked him that question I think, or somebody asked him the question – through the Chair I just mention this – and he says that he … there was no … he gave no information to the meeting. There wasn’t that much information given because we weren’t aware of what the purpose of the meeting was at the time or what the significance of it was and what information was required. And you will have Mr. Purcell here this afternoon, who will tell you precisely what transpired at that particular meeting. 451

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

But was INBS not asked—– 452

Chairman

Start wrapping up, Senator. 453

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes, thank you. Was INBS asked to provide documentation or detail for that meeting? 454

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I think there was some documentation brought but what was disclosed … I mean…you have to understand, Senator, that these were competitors of ours, you know, and the documentation … we wanted to see and establish the ground rules as to what was required and what was not required, and what we will disclose and what we will not disclose, because at that time, Senator—– 455

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Were looking potentially to rescue you. 456

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–we were not insolvent and we had no threat. We were … there was a threat of a run following the false Reuters report and …. but that we had more than adequate liquidity. It was the regulator, as part of this green jersey thing that was mentioned by the—– 457

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

The Central Bank. 458

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–by the Central Bank CEO—– 459

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

That is right, John Hurley. 460

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–arising from some discussions he had with people in the EU and elsewhere, and this was part of bringing that together, which was … that was the purpose of it, I think, so we weren’t quite clear at that time but the bottom line is, irrespective of what, as the regulator pointed out to you in his evidence, these people from the two banks were looking after their own interests. 461

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

But the bottom line is, did you need to be rescued at that time? 462

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I have said, Senator – twice at this committee – that we did not. 463

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

You did not need to be rescued. 464

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No. 465

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Thank you. 466

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We had adequate liquidity. We had €4 billion, almost €4 billion liquidity. I would say, in cash, I would say that our liquidity position would out-match in ratio terms any other institution—– 467

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So the meeting was unnecessary. 468

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–on that day. 469

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

The meeting was unnecessary. 470

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, it mightn’t have … I don’t know was it unnecessary … it depends on the regulator. He called it. He thought it was necessary. We didn’t think it was necessary afterwards. 471

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Thank you. 472

Chairman

Thank you, Mr. Fingleton. I now propose that we break for 15 minutes to 11.30 a.m. In doing so, I’d remind the witness that once he begins giving evidence he should not confer with any person other than his legal team in relation to his evidence on matters that are being discussed before this committee. With that in mind I now suspend the meeting until 11.30 a.m. and I remind the witness that he is still under oath until we resume. 473

Sitting suspended at 11.15 a.m. and resumed at 11.40 a.m.

Chairman

We are back in full quorum and Mr. Fingleton is almost present. I now propose that we go back into public session and in doing so I just remind members about their mobile devices and so forth, and invite Deputy John Paul Phelan. Deputy, you have ten minutes. 474

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Thank you Chairman. Good morning, Mr. Fingleton. Firstly, can I ask you in relation to the Irish Nationwide annual report from 2007? It shows that in the period 2002 to 2007, profit before tax increased by 303% and total assets by 190%. It is document B02, IBRC00678-002. I don’t think you are allowed to show. It is the annual report from 2007 of Nationwide, showing that tax … profit before tax increased by 303%—– 475

Chairman

Vol. 1, page 3. 476

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Yes, and assets by 190%. This was at a time where you said in your opening statement that there was increased competition in the Irish lending market. Do you think … the question really is: do you think that level of increase was sustainable in the context of that increasing level of competition in the Irish market at that period of time? 477

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, in relation to the society, obviously, that level of lending probably couldn’t be sustained because you come up against regulatory ratios and all that, which would diminish the lending going forward. That would be the criteria there. 478

Deputy John Paul Phelan

And why wasn’t there any action taken to ensure a more sustainable level of growth? 479

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, we were operating within the parameters and the guidelines set down by the regulator in relation to all regulatory ratios and we were comfortable within that in relation to our lending, and within the strategy and the risk appetite of the society. And also, as I said before, we were turning over our book every three years. So it was within that context, Senator, sorry, Deputy, that we were engaged in our lending programme. 480

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay. Can I ask, in your opinion did those levels of growth indicate that the pursuit of growth was affecting credit quality and lending standards within the institution in those years, 2002 to 2007? 481

Mr. Michael Fingleton

They weren’t really, because we were dealing with tried and tested customers for the last, what, 15 years, who had delivered, who had performed, who had done what they said they’d do. They were professionals and they knew their business. So, from in that context, Deputy, no. 482

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Can I ask you, then, in relation to an article that was published in The Sunday Business Post, 23 June 2013? 483

Mr. Michael Fingleton

TheBusiness Post? 484

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Yes, 23 June 2013. It cited a report compiled by KPMG into Irish Nationwide where it said that 15% of all residential mortgages issued in 2006, which amounted to €111 million, were to just 39 clients who borrowed on average €2.8 million each for the 39 of them. How was that situation allowed to happen? Was that not an over-concentration of the risk from the point of view of the building society? 485

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, it depends on the underlying security and the proposal and the quality of the borrower and the evaluation of the risk and the asset. And while we might have a fairly large exposure to a single borrower, there’d be a number of stratification of loans within that exposure, which you already referred to, in the average loan. All these things would be taken into consideration in relation to the decision to lend that money. 486

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Can I ask—– 487

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And it was within the context of what we were doing and within the policy at the time. 488

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Would many of those 39, from your recollection, those 39 loans of an average of €2.9 million each, have been initiated through you personally, do you have any recollection? 489

Mr. Michael Fingleton

This is one of the myths that are still around, you know, that I brought in everybody and I approved every loan. No, Senator. UK loans would be introduced by the manager of the UK office almost exclusively. I think we had one or two that were Irish. The Irish loans from customers that were there since the ‘90s, I would have introduced them to the society, but they’d have started off as customers in the Irish market and became customers in the UK market. I would say, if you look at the top 30, maybe five might have come through me. I don’t know, I’m just guessing now, but they’d be the Irish, they’d be the Irish … some of the Irish borrowers. 490

Deputy John Paul Phelan

You refer to it as a myth yourself, Mr. Fingleton, but it was a widely held view. I used to work in financial services before I became a public representative and a view did exist that you were Irish Nationwide Building Society and that you, more than perhaps any other financial institution operating in the Irish market, had, and I think you indicated this in your opening comments to Deputy Doherty—– 491

Chairman

Try and pose a question now, Deputy, rather than presenting an argument. 492

Deputy John Paul Phelan

—–a particular knowledge of individual loans and exposures that existed. Is that not the case? Is it not borne out by several of the letters from the regulator, in particular, which showed a concentration of power, if you like, in your office? 493

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The regulator misunderstood totally the powers that I had. I had defined powers given me by the board and approved by the regulator’s office, and they were the normal powers to manage the society and promote the business and develop the business. And, therefore, it would be my duty as CEO to be fully familiar with all the loans, not least as they moved through the process but also as a member of the board where the final decision was being made, so it wasn’t unusual. I was suffering from the perception that was out there that it was me and me alone, because I was seen as the face of the society that I came into in the ‘70s and ‘80s, and I did promote myself and the society through PR, because we couldn’t afford to buy advertising space at the time. So it evolved from that time because I was … my picture was appearing in the paper day in, day out in relation to some sponsorship we were doing, or some statement I would make, or some conflict I would have with some of the banks or whatever, and that’s how that evolved. 494

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay, but did that not also stem then from the fact – Deputy O’Donnell asked earlier about the fact – that your board was smaller that virtually every other institution? 495

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, every other institution was larger than our institution and as I said, I think, in my statement, we had a maximum of seven directors and a minimum of five, and the requirement was three. And I said, also, that the maximum the society had even after the new board came in and took over in whatever it is, 2008 or 2009, and even that board, with two extra directors, the Government directors, only had seven. 496

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Can I ask, then, in relation to the document I referenced earlier, Vol. 1, page 3, the letter from the regulator from 9 December 2004, first paragraph, “High-level concerns”? You spoke earlier on that there weren’t many high-level concerns but this was one on the issue of corporate governance, where it says: “As you are aware”, it was addressed to you: “Dear Michael”, the Financial Regulator—– 497

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It wasn’t addressed to me, Deputy. 498

Deputy John Paul Phelan

And it would have been addressed to—– 499

Chairman

Michael Walsh. 500

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Yes, Michael Walsh actually.: 501
As you are aware [I’m sure you were aware of the document] has on many occasions expressed its concerns with regard to the level of resources at senior [executive level] … management level within INBS. In particular, the regulator stressed the need for increase in size of the board, a strengthening of the executive management team. The latter point was to address concerns such as an over-reliance on the managing director, succession planning for the managing director, and the absence of a senior executive to oversee the commercial lending function 502
Were there any actions taken following that letter from 9 December 2004 to address—– 503

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, yes. Yes, there were. We did try to increase the level of the board but we were being sold. That was the perception outside and it was difficult to get the … a director of the calibre which we were seeking. And the regulator was … emphasised that we needed to get the top-notch people with a lot of specific experience maybe, you know, that would assist the board in … and provide the advice and the contributions and all the rest of it that they would ultimately make. 504

Deputy John Paul Phelan

On an issue … on the issue of—– 505

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And in relation—– 506

Deputy John Paul Phelan

—–over-reliance on you and—– 507

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, but … what this again—– 508

Deputy John Paul Phelan

—–on succession planning—– 509

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Again, this—– 510

Deputy John Paul Phelan

—–for your position. 511

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Again, this was the perception, but also they were … had concern about succession and we had dealt with that—– 512

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Was it dealt with? 513

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 514

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Was it dealt with? 515

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, it was, yes. 516

Deputy John Paul Phelan

How? 517

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We … they were anxious that we recruit and we had already put it in train ahead of commercial lending. We already had a commercial … head of commercial lending. I think there’s confusion here with the regulator but he was, I believe … we believed he was going to retire and we were trying to recruit then a top-notch guy from another institution. We were coming up against this perception of being sold and we could only offer contracts. Now, we did succeed in getting one head of lending from another institution but, at the end, he changed his mind and didn’t come, principally because we were being sold. 518

Deputy John Paul Phelan

So, in other words – this is my final point, Chairman – this “high-level concern” in relation to over-reliance on you and succession planning for your position, you didn’t … you … because of the fact that you were being sold, you feel that that’s the reason why it wasn’t addressed. 519

Mr. Michael Fingleton

There was … I think the chairman … I think you’ve a letter from the chairman there. He responded fully and totally to each point raised by the … that particular letter and I believe, as far as I recollect, he dealt fully with the paragraph you’re referring to. 520

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay. Thank you. 521

Chairman

Senator Marc MacSharry. Senator, ten minutes. 522

Senator Marc MacSharry

Thanks, Chairman, and welcome, Mr. Fingleton, and thanks very much for the time. This question may have been somewhat covered already by some colleagues but during the period 2003-2006 with commercial lending being the driver for the reasons that you outlined earlier on, the society trebled its book from about €3.5 billion to just under €11 billion. Considering the risk assessment capabilities of the society at that time and, indeed, the management of information, the MIS systems that were available to the society at that time, was that growth prudent or sustainable in your view? 523

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It certainly was within the parameters of the policy … the lending policy of the society and our capacity to deal with it, because there was, as was pointed out by the Deputy here, there was a higher concentration in relation to customers than would probably normally be the case, although from the evidence produced to this committee from other institutions, it appears we weren’t alone in the high concentration with particular individual borrowers. So it was within our capacity in volume terms, in number terms, to deal with all those—– 524

Senator Marc MacSharry

So you’re happy that you did have the capacity; it was prudent at the time—– 525

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Our IT system was adequate for the needs. As I said, we were in a simple business – just money in and money out, fixed on a property and secured on an asset. And also, Senator, the growth reflected that our book was being turned over and redeemed every three years. 526

Senator Marc MacSharry

Did the demutualisation—– 527

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, which was unique in relation to any institution and, therefore, our risk and exposure was limited and—– 528

Senator Marc MacSharry

Sorry, go on. 529

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, yes. 530

Senator Marc MacSharry

Yes, okay. Around the same time in the early 90s, Irish Permanent, then building society, demutualised and made changes and so on and they had very much laid the foundations for their ultimate flotation. Did this add pressures to your own outlook from a corporate perspective to say, “Look, this is where the society needs to go or should … or ought to be going”? 531

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, as I said in my statement, Senator, that my opinion was at the time, that I formed, and the advice the board had and the advice I gave the board, was that all societies had no future as an independent stand-alone institutions. And that was all societies, not just Nationwide, but, in particular, us because of our size and our lack of critical mass, we … it would be not feasible for us to go the incorporation route, the plc route and go public. It just wouldn’t … we just wouldn’t get the support for it, and that was the advice we got independently as well as my own feelings on the matter. 532

Senator Marc MacSharry

So the core business of home loans, is it fair to say or not that there was an abandonment of core business in favour of growth using the commercial market that was out there, as you said, because of a deficit in the 1980s for housing? 533

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, not a hope. We tried … we made all the effort to expand our home loan book and, as you may be aware and as I’ve already mentioned it in my statement, when Bank of Scotland came into the market in 1999, all things changed in that marked irrevocably. They undercut everybody, competition intensified, our book was attacked and we, effectively, couldn’t compete, because, principally, we did not … we refused to adopt as a policy 100% loans, we refused to adopt as a policy tracker mortgages, we refused certification, we refused to lend at uneconomic rates such as 1%. Nobody could lend risk … or buy risk at that level. And that is why we failed to grow our book in the analysis. We were evaluating the risk compared to what the market was dictating. And we weren’t into market share; we hadn’t the capacity. And you also had the brokers who controlled 50% eventually of the market and they were aligned, almost totally, to the bigger institutions, and they all fought for their market share and we were left behind. 534

Senator Marc MacSharry

Did—– 535

Mr. Michael Fingleton

So it was as simple as that. 536

Senator Marc MacSharry

Did—– 537

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And we also, as I just … it came up in the remuneration … somebody asked me about remuneration, you know, about promoting lending through incentives and bonuses and all the rest of it. The only element of our lending that was incentivised was the promotion of our home loans and we set targets for managers and incentivised them by bonuses to achieve volume. 538

Senator Marc MacSharry

But surely you would have had commercial loan targets as well? 539

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, they’re … we didn’t utilise our branches for commercials. There was only, I think, one or two branches that would deal with that commercial … that were a source of commercials for us. 540

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay, so—– 541

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Except in maybe a small ticket like a pub or shop or whatever it is, farmer—– 542

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. 543

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–that sort of thing. 544

Senator Marc MacSharry

You mentioned Bank of Scotland coming in. When they did, and you said your book was attacked and they were very much pursuing your business, did that lead to a looser underwriting strategy—– 545

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, absolutely, yes. 546

Senator Marc MacSharry

—–or policy in the society? 547

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, no. That’s why we didn’t make progress. That’s why we didn’t make progress. We’d a very … as I pointed out, what we didn’t engage in, and which caused problems for other institutions following the crash … we all know about the tracker mortgages, we didn’t do any of those. So that wasn’t implying, Senator, a loosening of requirements. In fact, we increased them. And at the end of 2006, only 17% – this sticks in my mind – of our home loans was in excess of 90% when 92% was the norm, and that’s of our—– 548

Senator Marc MacSharry

Some months ago at this stage we had the various auditing firms in as witnesses and in questioning I had asked one – I had asked them all in fact – had they ever had a company firm that they were auditing ask them to remove an auditor or a person from the audit team for overzealous or invasiveness or … and so on. One particular firm admitted that that happened on three occasions and in one instance it was a financial institution. Can you tell the committee of inquiry did Irish Nationwide ever request the removal of the member of an audit team from their auditors? 549

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Not to my knowledge. 550

Senator Marc MacSharry

So not to your knowledge, so therefore you know nothing. 551

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t … not to my knowledge. 552

Senator Marc MacSharry

In terms of the top 25 exposures, were there any employees who had a stake in those self-same top 25 investments? 553

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, say that again. 554

Senator Marc MacSharry

In terms of the top 25 borrowers, were there ever any employees or board members or yourself or whoever party to those 25 exposures – the top 25? 555

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Absolutely not. 556

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. 557
How many of your own clients, who the society would have lent to, did you in any other capacity go into business with? 558

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, I had a relationship with one; that’s all. 559

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. Was that a politician? 560

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Outside of the society. 561

Senator Marc MacSharry

Was that a politician? 562

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 563

Senator Marc MacSharry

Would you like to tell the committee who it is? 564

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t want to discuss it. 565

Senator Marc MacSharry

That’s fine. 566
When you ever invested, yourself, in anything, did you ever borrow from the society yourself? 567

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. I had some buy-to-let properties over the years but I will say, Senator, that I always had a deposit account in the society that was at least as much as the exposure on the loans and sometimes double. 568

Senator Marc MacSharry

Understood. Can I ask, in the event of you wishing to borrow on that, what way would it have been managed in terms of credit committees and underwriting? 569

Chairman

Can I make an intervention here Senator? The witness is free to answer if he wishes, but if they’re nature of financial confidentiality, you can be more discretionary in your responses, Mr. Fingleton, if you so wish. 570

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Thank you, Chairman. They would go through the normal process and be approved by the board and I would get no concessions. 571

Senator Marc MacSharry

Would you step out? 572

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, I wasn’t involved. I wasn’t involved. I wasn’t involved in it at all. They’d be done in the normal way on the normal terms. That’s it, no concessions. 573

Senator Marc MacSharry

Throughout your period of—– 574

Chairman

Final question, Senator. 575

Senator Marc MacSharry

—–tenure, your relationship to Government or, you know, was the Minister for Finance of the day accessible to you as the head of a mutual or was there contact there? In particular, you had mentioned about appropriate representations being made to Government at the time to amend the section 102 of the Building Societies Act of ‘89. So, you know, what shape did that take? I mean, did you contact Ministers directly? Did a PR firm do it on your behalf? What—– 576

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I … in the ‘90s, I contacted the shadow Minister for Finance in relation to getting a change in the legislation. At that time I was seeking a change in the Central Bank Act because, as I said earlier, the Central Bank had the powers, themselves, to effect a change to allow us to effect a trade sale. They didn’t need the Government to bring in new legislation to do so and there was a Central Bank Act going through in 1995, I think. And the Opposition – I think the Minister – put in a proposal to change the legislation and it was defeated by the Government on the day. 577

Senator Marc MacSharry

Just very last question. In your tenure did the society lend to mezzanine or shelf companies abroad for the purposes of buying property here? 578

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No. 579

Senator Marc MacSharry

That’s all. Thanks very much. Thank you. 580

Chairman

Senator Michael D’Arcy, you’ve ten minutes. 581

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Thank you, Chairman. Mr. Fingleton, you’re welcome. 582

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Thank you. 583

Senator Michael D’Arcy

The document, Chairman, if you could bring it up please, is Vol. 1 INBS page 68 and 69. Mr. Fingleton, it is the Deloitte report in relation to the commercial and residential lending review, completed in May 2008. The reports states: 584
the Society reviewed and revised its commercial and residential lending policies … in December [‘07]. Of particular note for commercial lending was the extension of the power of the Credit Committee from the approval of loan applications up to €1 million … to the approval of all commercial loan applications [post 2007. As a result the] Board [was] no longer directly involved in the approval of loans; prior to [‘07] the Board approved commercial loan applications in excess of €1 million. 585
Can you explain why the board made this decision? 586

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know, Chairman. Personally, I don’t know, but you’ll have an opportunity to ask the chairman in the afternoon, but there was a board decision to do it and that was it. I would not have been in favour. 587

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You were against it. 588

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, I wasn’t specifically against it; it was a board decision. And I can’t recall the meeting in which it was made and whether I was present or not I don’t know; I can’t remember, but I would have been personally opposed to it because I had maintained for the previous 37 years it was essential from my point of view that the board would be involved in the lending process. 589

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Okay. It was a small—– 590

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That was part of our structure, part of the—– 591

Senator Michael D’Arcy

It was a small—– 592

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—– evaluation of control within the society. 593

Senator Michael D’Arcy

It was a small board, Mr. Fingleton. Do you know who was personally in favour of it? 594

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know. It is obvious the board made the decision, but I presume it was unanimous, you know. 595

Senator Michael D’Arcy

In your opinion was the relaxation in lending criteria appropriate, given the Financial Regulator’s ongoing concerns regarding commercial property lending control and the risk management within the society? 596

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, there was never … sorry, what did you say in the first … sorry I missed your first sentence. 597

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Was the relaxation in lending criteria—– 598

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, there was no relaxation in the lending criteria. The lending criteria was the same, going forward, going through and all the rest of it, and essential to the lending criteria was that each and every loan would be examined on its merits and conditioned accordingly. 599

Senator Michael D’Arcy

But Mr. Fingleton, the board had sight of every loan over €1 million prior to December ‘07 and after December ‘07 it didn’t. That must be a—– 600

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I would say the reason why the decision was made, Chairman, or Senator, on reflection was that we had stopped … effectively stopped lending, stopped new lending. In … from about September, October on, we were reducing our exposure to the property market and that would be reflected in the board decision. So we weren’t doing very much lending whatsoever except to the commitments we had and to protect the security of the assets we already had on our books. So there was little or no business anticipated by the board at that time. So that could explain why it was given solely then to the credit committee. 601

Senator Michael D’Arcy

If I could move on—– 602

Mr. Michael Fingleton

But again, having said that, the board had to be notified, Senator, of any approval of loans, of the loans. 603

Senator Michael D’Arcy

They had to be notified. 604

Mr. Michael Fingleton

They had to be notified. 605

Senator Michael D’Arcy

But they didn’t have consent over the loans. 606

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Correct. 607

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Can I move on, Mr. Fingleton, please? You said on page 16 of your written opening statement, “no single bank could have prevented a property bubble”. Could one or two banks create a property bubble? 608

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It depends on the competition. I mean, the reason for my statement, there Senator, in relation that no single society … If Irish Nationwide, for example, Senator, decided in 2003, for example, or 2002 or wherever, we’re not going to do any more lending … with the competition in the market, the lending we did not do would be absorbed by the other providers of funds in the market. You’d have to have everybody prevented from or … or to make the decision not to lend. Do you understand what point I’m making? 609

Senator Michael D’Arcy

I do, but you didn’t answer the question. 610

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry—– 611

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Could one or two banks create a property bubble? 612

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t think so. 613

Senator Michael D’Arcy

They couldn’t have. 614

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t think so. Not at all. When you consider that €64 billion was the figure that was put into the banks, Irish banks, isn’t that right? And, secondly, the non-Irish banks, I think their … it is believed that their exposure cost them in the region of €40 billion, so you’re talking about €100 billion and that’s in relation to eight banks, nine banks, so I don’t think two banks would have made any difference. Now, it depends on the banks. If it was some of the big banks, the biggest supplier of funds, then it would have got out into the market and then it would become an issue for the Central Bank and it would become an issue for Government and the Central Bank and maybe through that avenue there may be a pause—– 615

Senator Michael D’Arcy

But, Mr. Fingleton, you quoted—– 616

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–and the market would get the message that—– 617

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You’ve quoted Bank of Scotland Ireland as coming in and chasing business—– 618

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 619

Senator Michael D’Arcy

—–reducing the margin—– 620

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Correct. 621

Senator Michael D’Arcy

—–and you quoted 1% on a number of occasions. 622

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 623

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And the perception I took from what you were saying was other banks went chasing them because they were chasing their business. 624

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, market share, yes. 625

Senator Michael D’Arcy

So again, the question I’ve asked you is: could one or two or a small number of institutions create a property bubble in a small jurisdiction like ours? 626

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It would take a lot more than that, unless the regulatory authorities and the Central Bank interfered. And if they did, then the market would fundamentally change, as I’ve said. It would change and there’d be a new—– 627

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Can I—– 628

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–there’d be a new dynamic then within the market once it became public. 629

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Okay. Can I put it to you, Mr. Fingleton, that the expectation is the two institutions that the State will get no money back from are Anglo Irish Bank and INBS? 630

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t agree, Senator. I’ve already outlined my evaluation of NAMA and what they’re going to get back. 631

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Okay, and you don’t agree. You don’t agree with NAMA discounts? 632

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I don’t. 633

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Okay. You … again, I took the impression you didn’t agree with Project Harmony, KPMG. 634

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 635

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Project Harmony? 636

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I didn’t say that. I didn’t say, that, Senator, I didn’t agree with it. 637

Senator Michael D’Arcy

The Nyberg report was critical of INBS. The Nyberg report—– 638

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, well, the Nyberg report … if you look at the terms of reference of the Nyberg report, Senator, you will find that it focused exclusively almost on two institutions, Anglo and Irish Nationwide, and they dealt with those two institutions separately in the report. And they amalgamated in their commentary all the other institutions, which, I believe, was totally unfair. 639

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You don’t agree with the terms of reference of the Nyberg report? 640

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I don’t. They should have dealt with all the institutions separately and individually. 641

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Fingleton, you seem to be swimming against the tide against a lot of reports and positions that have been accepted for a long period of time now. Are you saying they’re all wrong and your interpretation is correct? 642

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’m only giving you my views, Senator. I mean, reports that have been made and commentaries in the media and elsewhere, you know, they’re not always accurate and they’re not always right. Perceptions are perceptions, and, normally, perceptions become facts in the … in certain climates and in certain circumstances. I’m only giving you my views, which may be not in the public domain up to now, and I haven’t had the opportunity of doing it for many reasons. 643

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Were you interviewed by Mr. Nyberg? 644

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, I was, yes, certainly. 645

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And why then do you think if he interviewed you, why would he not put the facts? I assume you gave him the same information you’re giving us. 646

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I can’t remember what I gave but I would have given him the same … more or less the same information. I think I’ve given you a lot more than I gave Nyberg. Nyberg was an hour or something of an interview. 647

Senator Michael D’Arcy

But you’re saying the Nyberg report in relation to INBS is incorrect. 648

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, no, I’m not saying anything. I’m saying, I’m saying that it dealt with the society based on the information it … that was made available to it by the new management, and it was based primarily on a report done by a firm of accountants that I referred to earlier which, in my view … I describe it as a flawed document. 649

Chairman

A supplementary, Senator, to wrap up. 650

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Okay, just very quickly, in terms of lending policy, Mr. Fingleton, please, were the board aware of all types of lending that would have been made? 651

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Absolutely. 652

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Okay. In terms of warehousing of loans, were the board … did the board sanction the warehousing—— 653

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What do you mean “warehousing”? 654

Chairman

We won’t be going there. No, no, no. 655

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Chairman, that question, I think, is relevant. 656

Chairman

Yes, I know. We had a legal briefing yesterday afternoon on this stuff, Senator. Members will be familiar of that. I won’t go back into the briefing yesterday afternoon so—– 657

Senator Michael D’Arcy

The question I’m asking is: was the board aware of warehousing of loans? 658

Chairman

Okay, no. 659

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What do you mean “warehousing”? What do you mean? 660

Chairman

Sorry Mr. Fingleton, I’m going to have to move on. Next question, Senator, please. 661

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Thank you, Chairman. 662

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Sorry? 663

Chairman

Next question. 664

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Okay. You quoted properties in the UK in your—– 665

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 666

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You quoted properties in the United Kingdom of—– 667

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I what? Sorry? 668

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You quoted properties? 669

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Quoted? 670

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Yes. 671

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh sorry, yes. 672

Senator Michael D’Arcy

—–that the discounts in NAMA were incorrect by multiples. 673

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That’s my opinion. 674

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Your opinion. Why did you not quote properties that would be of little or no value from your time in INBS to balance the conversation? 675

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I just haven’t any information. I haven’t got any information on them at this point in time. 676

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Thank you, Chairman. 677

Chairman

Deputy Michael McGrath. Ten minutes, Deputy. 678

Deputy Michael McGrath

Thank you very much, Chair. You’re very welcome, Mr. Fingleton. Can I just start by asking you to clarify what you said about the credit committee and your relationship with it? Did you say that you were anex officio member but you didn’t attend to keep yourself at arm’s length? 679

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Correct. 680

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 681

Mr. Michael Fingleton

From 2002 when it was formed to 1 December 2007 when the … when it was … when the powers given to the committee changed. Then I felt obliged to sit on that committee. 682

Deputy Michael McGrath

And then you did attend from 2008 onwards—– 683

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Correct. 684

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–during the remainder—– 685

Mr. Michael Fingleton

When there was little—– 686

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–of your term. 687

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–or no lending—– 688

Deputy Michael McGrath

Sure. 689

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–except a bit on residential. 690

Deputy Michael McGrath

And, to your knowledge, was the initial approval of any individual loan given by one person? 691

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Not at all. 692

Deputy Michael McGrath

Not at all. 693

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I mean, even my chairman … or not my … the acting chairman at the time, he came on … he became chairman of the audit committee later on in 2008 and I remember him saying to me that he was very impressed by the discussion of the contribution of the people who attended, and our policy was not just to confine it to the members of the committee. We also brought in, for the sake of efficiency and knowledge and contribution, all the staff that were involved in the lending process in relation to each or that particular loan that was being considered. 694

Deputy Michael McGrath

So you are disputing the finding in the Deloitte report—– 695

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The, the—– 696

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–that in many cases the commercial loan application was approved by only one—– 697

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The commercial—– 698

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–member of the committee. 699

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t think it would be possible knowing the structure within the organisation. All the members of the committee were in the same building within a phone call to come to a meeting and to access it. I can’t understand those comments and I’ve … I spoke to the chairman of that committee and he just is—– 700

Deputy Michael McGrath

And, equally, page 27 of the Nyberg report references an inspection by the Financial Regulator in 2006 which looked at a 12-month period from May 2005 to May 2006. It looked at the operation of the credit committee. A quorum of three members was only achieved for two of the 27 meetings, and for four of the meetings, only one member was present. 701

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That’s in dispute. I don’t think that’s accurate, Chairman. That’s my view. 702

Deputy Michael McGrath

Is that not a matter of fact which can be established—– 703

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It can be—– 704

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–by examining the minutes of the relevant meetings? 705

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–but it’s… it was hotly disputed by the chairman of the credit committee at that time. That’s all I’ll say. I can’t go any further than that. 706

Deputy Michael McGrath

So, at no stage—– 707

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And it’d be … it’d be a surprise to me if that was any … if that was correct. It would be a great surprise to me because there was absolutely no necessity whatsoever for it to happen – none – knowing the availability of the people who were members of that committee within the organisation and within the same office. 708

Deputy Michael McGrath

But is it not the case, Mr. Fingleton, that an examination of the documentation which was available to Deloitte, for example, which was available to the Financial Regulator supports the conclusion that on many occasions the credit committee met with one person in attendance? 709

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t think … I don’t think that’s true. I really don’t. That’s my opinion now and I can’t … I can’t say otherwise. It’s there, it’s said and I think, in deference to the chairman of the credit committee, I have to defer on that one. 710

Deputy Michael McGrath

And, Mr. Fingleton, what about the conclusion of the Central Bank’s investigation into INBS in July 2015? I assume you’re familiar with that. 711

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, I am. I’m very familiar with it, Deputy. 712

Deputy Michael McGrath

Can I put it to you, Mr. Fingleton, that the Central Bank stated at the conclusion of that process “INBS has admitted to having committed multiple breaches of financial services law and regulation, including persistent failure to comply with its own internal policies and procedures during the [period 2004 to 2008]”. This was a five-year investigation commenced in 2010, concluded in the summer of 2015. Do you accept that? 713

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I don’t. 714

Deputy Michael McGrath

You don’t. 715

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t, Deputy, whatsoever and I would love to know who comprised … who was the board that made that admission to the credit team. However, it’s hotly in dispute and will be dealt with in the normal process in time. And I can’t … I, obviously, can’t discuss it further—– 716

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, can I put it to you, Mr. Fingleton, that—– 717

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–but I disagree fundamentally with those allegations. 718

Deputy Michael McGrath

Right. Well, the Central Bank—– 719

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The motivation for them. 720

Deputy Michael McGrath

The Central Bank identified a series of breaches, which were admitted by INBS subsequently, underpinned by evidence of more than a thousand alleged instances of INBS breaching its own policies and procedures relating to commercial lending and credit risk management – more than a thousand alleged breaches, supported by documentation, Mr. Fingleton. 721

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Deputy, I’m not going to get involved in this. I’ve already said we dispute them … strongly would dispute that. And, because of the impending inquiry, I can’t get involved in the detail of any allegations that are being made or have been made or will be made in relation to that inquiry, for, obviously, legal purposes. 722

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes, well I put it to you that they are findings of a Central Bank report which includes instances—– 723

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That doesn’t … that doesn’t mean, Senator, they can’t be disputed and that they’re correct. 724

Deputy Michael McGrath

No. I just want to put them on the record – where no commercial loan application was prepared for certain loans or situations where applications were only prepared after funds had been drawn down by borrowers. They refer to instances where loans were not approved by the board of directors, not recommended or approved by the credit committee, not approved in accordance with Nationwide’s urgent credit decision approval procedures and you dispute all of this. 725

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We’ll deal with it at the time, Senator, I’m not going to make any further comment on it. 726

Deputy Michael McGrath

The personal pension pot of €27.6 million, was that transferred out of Nationwide in early 2007? Are those reports accurate, Mr. Fingleton? 727

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That’s correct, yes. It matured at that time and the board decided to terminate the scheme. A very wise decision. 728

Deputy Michael McGrath

The pension scheme matured, so the … as in the investments in it matured? 729

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The board decided to terminate it and to deal with it … the trustees—– 730

Deputy Michael McGrath

And what happened to it then? 731

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–and it was then … under the different structures available to me, I was entitled to take it out of the society and put it into another vehicle. 732

Deputy Michael McGrath

Another vehicle entirely within your own personal control. 733

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, which was normal and legitimate at the time. 734

Deputy Michael McGrath

And what is the annual pension deriving from that pot? 735

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, I’m not going to discuss it, Deputy, whatsoever. I’ve made my comments in relation to the pension. I’ve explained it and I’m not going to deal with it any further. 736

Deputy Michael McGrath

And would it be normal for a pension scheme of a building society or a bank, which was for the sole benefit of one individual, to then be transferred entirely into the control and ownership of that individual while they remained an employee? 737

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It was an option … after that was done I became … my employment had terminated on reaching the age of 70 years and I was re-employed by the society, under contract, for a further one year. And the option was open to me to leave it with the society or to take it. Under the legislation introduced by the Government, the option to me was to take it into my own ownership so I choose to take it into my own ownership. 738

Deputy Michael McGrath

Do you feel that you have been wronged, Mr. Fingleton? 739

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I feel, Deputy, that I’ve been misrepresented, seriously. 740

Deputy Michael McGrath

In what way? 741

Mr. Michael Fingleton

In all the comments. I’d say 80% of what has been written about me by certain individuals is totally wrong. 10% might be disputed but 10% might be … are … would be totally correct. And that’s where I’ll leave it. I certainly, most certainly, do. 742

Deputy Michael McGrath

Feel that you have been wronged? 743

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 744

Deputy Michael McGrath

And the central allegation, Mr. Fingleton, which has been put to you is that you operated Irish Nationwide as a personal fiefdom, that it was your project, you were in control, any decision of any significance was made by you, you called all the shots. 745

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Totally untrue, and it’s evidenced by my continued insistence that the board would be fully involved, since I joined that society, in the approval of loans within the society. No other institution … no board of any other institution was involved in the approval of loans and—– 746

Deputy Michael McGrath

And is it your evidence—– 747

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–I believe some individuals in institutions had lending power far in excess than anything I’m alleged to have. 748

Deputy Michael McGrath

And is it your evidence to the inquiry that not a single loan was extended by Irish Nationwide without either the prior approval of the board or the subsequent noting by the board of that loan? 749

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I have no—– 750

Chairman

Generally, as a general question. 751

Deputy Michael McGrath

My question is very specific, Chairman. 752

Chairman

With regard to a specific loan, I’d just be mindful that Mr. Fingleton doesn’t go into a specific loan but anything in a general capacity, yes. 753

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I have no recollection, Chairman … Deputy, of any loan not complying with whatever the policy of the board was. 754

Deputy Michael McGrath

And finally, in many instances would the board have rejected the recommendation of the credit committee to provide a loan to a borrower? 755

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It would happen on occasions but not very often. 756

Deputy Michael McGrath

But it did happen. 757

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I recall it happening. It’s in the … I think we came across one in the minutes. I was looking through some recent minutes there recently and I saw one. 758

Chairman

Thank you very much, Deputy. Deputy Joe Higgins. Deputy, ten minutes. 759

Deputy Joe Higgins

Mr. Fingleton, your auditors, KPMG, did a due diligence report, which came to be known as Project Harmony, in 2007. And it found a number of issues regarding the concentration of loans in the higher-risk development sector – or what the report calls the “speculative property investment” – namely: that 41% of total commercial lending was, in this sector, €3.2 billion; that there was a concentration of loans in the higher loan-to-value bands; that 30% of commercial loans had loan-to-value of over 100%; and that there was a concentration in your customer base where 30 commercial customers accounted for 53% of total commercial loan book. This was at the end of 2006. Did your board ever consider or were they concerned that these levels of high concentration and the correlation between them posed a risk to the business model that the society was based on? 760

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, I can’t speak for individual members of the board but it was never discussed, as far as I recall, at any board meeting. And they would have been reassured by the fact that since 1992 to the end of 2007, that there was little or no bad loans within that book. And, furthermore, you’ve mentioned … they would also be comforted by the fact that our book was being turned over by …. every three years, and it was relatively low risk in the sense that even their land development loans embraced just planning, mainly – getting the planning and then refinancing it with another institution to take on the big risk, which was the construction risk. 761

Deputy Joe Higgins

And you yourself had no concern that this very high concentration in speculative development could come crashing down in the event of, you know, property prices falling? 762

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, all that … we were guided and probably influenced and reassured by all the commentaries of all the institutions that I have mentioned earlier: the Central Bank, the OECD, the IMF, all the economists, from the bank economists and the academics and also the broker economists, and also the demographics that existed both in the UK and Ireland, which were all very positive. 763

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay. Mr. Fingleton, the chief executive of NAMA, Mr. McDonagh, said as a comment on the covered banks generally, including Irish Nationwide, “the banks consider[ed] property lending to be almost a one-way bet, notwithstanding the well-established cyclical behaviour of property markets”. And the chairman of NAMA, Mr. Daly, on the same lines, said, “the banks were taking the type of risk normally the preserve of private equity … hedge fund providers without demanding the same level of rigorous analysis”. And if I can put to you then the … in some detail what the Nyberg report, which I am sure you have read in detail, and I quote in relation to INBS, “Loan contracts tended to include profit share agreements, with INBS receiving … between 25% and 50% of the profit when [the] project was concluded successfully.” Nyberg continues: 764
This business model was, in principle and in practice, risky because of the planning permission risks involved and because of the reliance on the refinancing of borrowers by other banks. These risks were seen by INBS as significantly mitigated by accepting, as borrowers, only developers who had a long and successful history of doing such projects. 765
And my quote concludes: “The model was in some ways closer to that of a venture capital financier than that of typical banks.” 766
Now if you take those three observations, Mr. Fingleton, essentially amounting to a claim that INBS was more a venture capitalist organisation than a building society, and then if we add further observations about only 30 individuals or entities being responsible for 41% of your total loan book, and these individuals, as you said yourself, had a long relationship with, with you and the society … I mean, would it be fair to say that it wasn’t just a venture capitalist project but a crony capitalist one as well in the methods which you used? 767

Chairman

Mr. Fingleton, I’ll just allow a bit of time for response as well as it was a long question. Mr. Fingleton. 768

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, what’s the question? 769

Deputy Joe Higgins

The question is, Mr. Fingleton—– 770

Mr. Michael Fingleton

There seemed to be about ten questions there, Deputy. Sorry—– 771

Deputy Joe Higgins

—–to sum it up briefly, that certain—– 772

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–I just lost track. 773

Deputy Joe Higgins

Many observers, including Nyberg, said that the methods of banks, and including the INBS, resembled more venture … hedge funds, essentially—– 774

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, okay. 775

Deputy Joe Higgins

—–rather than a building society. 776

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’m with you. 777

Deputy Joe Higgins

And the second part of the question was the close relationships, and yourself being very central to that with people you were giving huge amounts of money to, would it be fair to say that it was crony capitalism as well as venture capitalism? 778

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I would disagree. That’s a short answer. And I would also disagree, Deputy, with the observations of Nyberg in the saying that lending on land development under the criteria employed by the society in relation to planning … planning wasn’t a risk at all. Planning was well-defined in the UK and here. You knew what planning you would get in relation to loans. You knew, it was established by precedent and all the rest of it. And that was the easy part. The big risk was the construction, and we had disengaged from that almost totally, I think, in the early 2000s. There was little or no risk in land development and that’s proven by the fact that we would get our money back in six months or 12 months, whenever the planning came through. We would get our money back and we would have a free run on the construction side financed with another institution, who were very … I know the institutions involved and they were very anxious to take all the business from us, not just the construction lending. 779

Deputy Joe Higgins

Mr. Fingleton, isn’t it true that you had seen in your long career as well many property busts in many different countries and bank bursts as well? Surely, would you not have been aware of the inherent risk in that type of speculative lending on property? 780

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, I took into consideration … certainly, as I’ve said in my opening statement, I went through three of them, where there was a downturn in the property market, but I didn’t expect … or there was no evidence to support, either emanating from the Central Bank, who were charged with the financial stability of the State, or the Department of Finance or anybody else, to suggest that there was any downturn going to emerge, except a soft landing, which would equate to my experience of downturns in the ‘70s and ‘80s—– 781

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay. 782

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–and early ‘90s. 783

Deputy Joe Higgins

Mr. Fingleton, inthejournal.ie, 12 February 2013, there is a quote. Con Power, who sat on the INBS board between 2000 and 2006, noted how there were just six people, including himself, on the board and meetings would normally begin with the chairman asking Fingleton: “Well, Michael, what have you got for us today?”, with no agenda and no documents before the board members. That would give a picture, if it was true, of a really autocratic regime. Is that true? 784

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I absolutely … totally untrue. I mean, that is untrue. I would dispute that. 785

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay. 786

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Now, I would defer to Mr. Power in that he was a corporate … I would accept he was a corporate governance expert and all the rest of it but that was simply not true. Again, the board were the final determinator of all loans and all policies within the organisations. 787

Deputy Joe Higgins

Finally, Mr. Fingleton, for time—– 788

Mr. Michael Fingleton

So, it wasn’t exclusive … Michael Fingleton dictating everything and anything that happened within that organisation. 789

Deputy Joe Higgins

Right. Finally, Chairman. Mr. Fingleton, if demutualisation had happened in the course of up to 2005 or 2006, what would it have meant to the management of INBS in terms of financial gain? 790

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know. I don’t know, Deputy, because it wasn’t determined or evaluated at the time. Certainly, the management and the staff would have benefitted. To what extent, I don’t know, and they would be entitled to benefit from demutualisation … or the successful sale of the organisation would have merited some element of compensation to the staff. 791

Deputy Joe Higgins

Would it not have been much more than that, Mr. Fingleton? Would it not have been tied to the extent of the assets, the loans, the profits? 792

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, no. It never was. Nothing was ever attached to the loans, the profits. That … all bonuses in relation to any individual other than the branch managers, were incentivised to secure targeted home loans … were based on the performance of the society solely, not on any targets or anything like that. 793

Deputy Joe Higgins

So do you say then … do you deny the suggestion that is made in a number of sources—– 794

Chairman

You’ve to wrap up now Deputy. 795

Deputy Joe Higgins

—–that the drive for—– 796

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, where are these made? Where are these allegations made? In relation to? 797

Deputy Joe Higgins

Let me just state—– 798

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, Deputy. 799

Deputy Joe Higgins

—–state what’s said. That … Nyberg makes it, among others. 800

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What does he make? 801

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay, I’m about to put it to you. 802

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry. 803

Deputy Joe Higgins

That the drive for demutualisation was linked to the very high levels of lending, the drive for profits, etc. … that that’s the point that’s made. 804

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Totally untrue, Deputy. 805

Deputy Joe Higgins

Thank you. 806

Chairman

Thank you very much. Deputy Eoghan Murphy. Deputy, ten minutes. 807

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Thank you, Chairman, and thank you, Mr. Fingleton. You are very welcome. 808
I just want to go back to something that the Chair raised with you earlier on in relation to the NTMA and why they didn’t place deposits with your society. And your answer was? 809

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That our ratings received from the rating agencies wasn’t high enough. They would be looking for AAA—– 810

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. 811

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–for to place deposits with the counterparty institutions. We hadn’t AAA. 812

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

But when Mr. McDonagh was asked that when he was before the committee, he never mentioned the ratings agencies. 813

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well I’m mentioning them because that was the reason. 814

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Well, I’ll tell you what his reason was, as the NTMA. 815

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, yes. Sorry, yes. 816

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Yes. From page 93 of the transcript he said, “We won’t place any deposit with INBS. … They’ll look for credit lines from us and we wouldn’t give it to them. … we just couldn’t understand the business model”—– 817

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 818

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

—–“we just couldn’t understand the business model”. This is Mr. McDonagh. 819

Mr. Michael Fingleton

All right. 820

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

“We took the view that really it’s more trouble than it’s worth to place €6 million on deposit with this institution when it really was a very opaque structure.” So what do you say to that from the NTMA as to why they wouldn’t place deposits? 821

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That’s an opinion. I can’t … I don’t agree with it. 822

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

It’s an opinion. 823

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 824

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And you say that they wouldn’t do it because the ratings agencies didn’t give you AAA. 825

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, that’s … that was my interpretation of why they wouldn’t do it. 826

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Where does that interpretation come from? 827

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It came from … I remember asking one individual from the Auntie Mae or, sorry, the … what do you call … what the … that institution—– 828

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

NTMA. 829

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, NTMA. Sorry, NTMA, about deposits and he said, “Your ratings are not high enough”. 830

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And what was the context of that conversation? You were pursuing a credit line probably. 831

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Just a casual conversation that … I had just bumped into this individual and I just mentioned it. That’s all. 832

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And were they senior in the organisation? Were they speaking with authority or were they just—– 833

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, they were senior in the organisation, yes. That was only—– 834

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Can you tell us who you were speaking to? 835

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’m not … I’m not … I don’t know whether I can. Is that, Chairman? 836

Chairman

Go on. 837

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I can, yes. It was … it was Dr. Somers, yes. 838

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Dr. Somers. That was the reason that he gave you when you met him but it—– 839

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That is my recollection that—– 840

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

—–but it wasn’t an arranged meeting. 841

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It was only once. There was only the … the only time that we … that I mentioned it. I don’t believe … I am not too sure now about treasury … whether they had sought to put money with or obtain deposits … I don’t know. But that was the one, only one occasion, and that was the answer I got. 842

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

This wasn’t when you were pursuing a credit line from the NTMA; this was an informal meeting or a—– 843

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That was years … it was several years before. I think it was maybe the early 2000s or something like that. It wasn’t relatively recently. 844

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. 845

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And nothing connected with the opinion given by Mr. McDonagh. 846

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Is it possible that the view of the NTMA might have changed subsequent to that? 847

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I can’t comment on anything NTMA says or does or what their policy was. I can only give you my opinion, and that’s all, and what’s within my knowledge. 848

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Even after you were told that by Mr. Somers, you continued to seek credit lines from the NTMA. Is that correct? 849

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know. I didn’t. 850

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

You didn’t? 851

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I didn’t. 852

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. 853

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And I wasn’t aware that anybody else—– 854

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

This basically was €6 million in a credit line. 855

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I wasn’t aware anybody else did either. 856

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Did you ever raise this issue with anyone in government? 857

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Not at all. No, no. I understood the organisation. I would have accepted that as, “Grand, no problem”, you know? I would have accepted … I would have understood that they were in the most conservative element of the market and they had to be whiter than Caesar’s wife. 858

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Why didn’t you have the preferred rating from the ratings agencies? 859

Mr. Michael Fingleton

We had adequate ratings for our business. We had good ratings, but, apparently, not good enough for them. 860

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

For the rating agencies or for the NTMA? 861

Mr. Michael Fingleton

For their … for their … for the NTMA, or them. 862

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

How did that compare to other banks or other societies in Ireland at the time? 863

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know. I don’t … I have no knowledge of any other banks. 864

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

But you never pursued it any further with the NTMA, seeking of a credit line. 865

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Absolutely not. That was just a comment I made; a question asked, an answer I got. That was it. 866

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. 867

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And I never raised that issue with anybody ever after connected with NTMA. 868

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. And you refute that statement from Mr. McDonagh about the very opaque structure of the society. 869

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know what evidence he had. What evidence was he basing it on? I don’t know. I would dispute that. It’s his opinion. He’s free to make his opinion but he must have evidence and I don’t know what evidence he was relying on. We had published, at that time, 2007 accounts, I think, and in that context they were … the auditor had certified them and the controls were in place. The accounts were first class and all the rest of it, no qualifications, and they were excellent—– 870

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. 871

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–to any outside observer. So I don’t know why, or what, or why he made those comments. Only he can explain that to you and you had him in here. And I’m sure he did. I can’t remember. I wasn’t watching his interview. 872

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

I’ll move on to some of KPMG’s work for the society. 873

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sure. 874

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And in Vol. 1 of the evidence books, page 112, we’re looking at the statutory duty confirmation letters that the KPMG would have to send to the Financial Regulator every year. 875

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sure. 876

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

There is a series of them in the evidence booklets for 2004, 2005, ‘06 and ‘07. What KPMG is noting in this statutory duty confirmation letter is instances of breaches and errors in each of the sectoral returns, prudential returns and large exposure returns. And they also note in that letter to the Financial Regulator that you had already informed the regulator verbally and in writing of these breaches and these errors. 877

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sure. 878

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So, just tell me first about your relationship with the Financial Regulator. And what does informing the Financial Regulator verbally of something involve? 879

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It would be part of our policy always to inform the regulator if we came across any defect in any return we made. Returns are made. There’s large volumes of funds. They’re in different pockets, different codes, from time to time and errors can be made. And when we come across them, it has been our policy all the time to inform the regulator of them, even the most minute. And most of those referred to or that you’re referring to, were not material … maybe one or two of them, maybe, in final terms. 880

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Your relationship with the regulator? 881

Mr. Michael Fingleton

My relationship or, sorry, the society’s relationship with the regulator was grand, and my own personal relationship was very good. I respected the regulator and I thought he was very good—– 882

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And if there was ever a problem—– 883

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–in the manner in which he did his job under the policy he adopted on a principles-based basis. 884

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Could you or would you ever contact him directly in relation to an issue with the society? 885

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Never. The society … I heard that evidence being given that people went over the supervisory management to the regulator. We never did, as far as I am aware. I’d be very surprised, very, very surprised. 886

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Never direct contact from you to the regulator? 887

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’ve no recollection of it, unless somebody else has. But I didn’t. 888

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Just in relation then to these errors that you said were not material, in the documentation we see that they’re actually … they’re errors that are picked up during an internal review within the society—– 889

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, they wouldn’t be an internal review. They’d be a … you’re still referring to the returns, are you? 890

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

I’m talking about the large exposure returns, say, in March 2004. 891

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. They would be returns made on aggregates of lending, individuals, you know, and things change over a transitory period. At the 31st, something might be coming in and delayed. For example, a payment might come in and it wouldn’t be cleared by the bank, and we discover that we have mis-stated the loan balance of somebody and then we advise the regulator or whoever—– 892

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

But this continues to happen—– 893

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–in his office would be dealing with it. 894

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

It continues to happen in ‘04, ‘05, ‘06, ‘07—– 895

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, yes, but—– 896

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

In ‘06, you had to resubmit the September returns twice, the June returns twice, the December return—– 897

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t think it would be any different, Deputy, in relation to any other organisation. 898

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. 899

Mr. Michael Fingleton

To be mathematically perfect in assembling information, there would be some errors. 900

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Because—– 901

Mr. Michael Fingleton

If you evaluate them, the vast, vast majorities were non-material and they were advised to the regulator as part of our policy by the society, not—– 902

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And they keep on happening, and the Financial Regulator says to you, to the society, that it’s concerned with the number of errors reported and it requests the society to outline what controls the society was going to put in place. 903

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well—– 904

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So what controls were put in place? 905

Mr. Michael Fingleton

They were put in place and I think you’ll have the opportunity this afternoon of speaking to the financial director who will—– 906

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Well, I note that the errors continue after this … from the Financial Regulator in ‘06. 907

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Errors will always continue in the context of the manner in which comprehensive detailed information is provided and applied. That’s all I’ll say. 908

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

But they didn’t—– 909

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’m sure it’s not different in any other organisation. But, again, we would have preferred if there wasn’t any errors. We’re dealing with people who are human and who make mistakes. That’s it. That’s all I can say —– 910

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

You didn’t see them as a systemic weaknesses in the society? 911

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 912

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

You didn’t see them as systemic weaknesses in the society? 913

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, because they were not material. 914

Chairman

Final supplementary now, Deputy. 915

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Thank you. Can I just ask then about the final returns or the sectoral returns, which, in each of the years from ‘04 to ‘07, you were exceeding the sectoral limits – the 200% of own funds and the 250% of own funds. So, what was the regulator’s response to this when that was raised with you? 916

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, I recall – and I think I mentioned in my witness statement – that we discussed or made some proposal, I think, to the regulator in relation to that, that, as far as I recall, the criteria was very lumpy. 917

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Lumpy? 918

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Lumpy in the sense that we looked for more stratification, like to put in home loans … under construction, you put home loans separately, you put buy-to-lets separately, you put investment properties separately, retail separately and you apply a factor to them or a limit to them, whereas in the … historically, they were all lumped into one. Retail would be lumped in and then construction would be lumped in or property and construction lumped into one. So we wanted them to stratified and to apply … We were looking for that and we did ask … the regulator was to come back to us on it but he never did and even though we sent a reminder—– 919

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Between ‘04 and ‘07, he never came back to you? 920

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No. Well, I think the last reminder we sent to him was about 2004 or 2005, as far as I remember, but that’s our position on that. 921

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And the board was satisfied that—– 922

Mr. Michael Fingleton

So, since that there was never any communication and I believe, like, that he was considering implementing some policy on it. And I note in Honohan’s report, which I didn’t agree with, where he said it was nearly impossible to ring-fence sectoral limits between institutions as there was too many ways around them but I don’t agree with that. 923

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Just sorry, to clarify, the board was satisfied that you were in breach of the limits in those years. 924

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, they probably would be aware of them, as we were, you know, from time to time, but we were looking for clarification for them to be dealt with in a manner that was appropriate and necessary and clearly understood. 925

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Just to clarify finally, you don’t agree with the Honohan report either. Is that correct? 926

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, I didn’t say that—– 927

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Sorry—– 928

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I just… I disagreed—– 929

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

That’s what I heard—– 930

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–with one comment. I disagreed with one comment Honohan made in relation to sectoral limits—– 931

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. 932

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That he said the reason that he considered they weren’t … it wasn’t feasible to introduce sectoral limits or to implement them or to supervise them was that they could be easily evaded by institutions and I said I didn’t agree with that … that I couldn’t see why not, if the regulator choose to do so. 933

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Thank you. Thank you Chair. 934

Chairman

Okay, thank you very much. Now we’re moving on to Senator Sean Barrett. Senator, ten minutes please. 935

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you, Chairman, and welcome again to Mr. Fingleton. On the internal audits, if I may discuss that with you … in their 2005 report, KPMG stated: 936
The existing internal audit function is not best practice. … In particular it lacks the depth of experience necessary to challenge … areas of key risk which includes Treasury and Commercial Lending. 937
And in their management letter in 2008, they stated: “The Society’s Internal Audit department needs to build up … experience and training in order to perform reviews of key risks areas which are currently outsourced to a third party service provider.” I think they had concerns in 2004 and I think they had concerns in 1999. So, how would you respond to those critiques? 938

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, I think the internal audit report done by KPMG was a very good one and it was in the context of the original internal auditor leaving the society and engaging in … with … or employing a new internal auditor and it was appropriate at the time that we would seek, or the board would seek, the best advice possible in how we could structure or restructure – whatever way you want to put it – the department or the section of the … pertaining to the internal audit. And they did but they found a lot of positives. They found, Deputy, that we’d a strong audit committee in place. And the audit committee was extremely strong and dealt in detail on reports from the internal audit and, indeed, effectively supervised the internal auditor in his reports and in his activities. And the credit committee was made up of all of the non-executive directors. So they had a full, detailed knowledge of the business … of the micro-business of the organisation. They said we had strong mandate … there was a strong mandate for internal audit; they said funding available to enhance the section was available; they said the internal audit used a risk-based methodology; they said an audit manual was in place; they said large exposures were reviewed regularly. The new head of internal audit function was thought very highly of throughout the business and there was an expectation that improvements would occur, as advised by KPMG—– 939

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Could I put on the record—– 940

Mr. Michael Fingleton

There was an existence of a dedicated training budget and there was a strong team culture within the IA section. That’s … These are positives; it wasn’t all negative but we took on board … the board took on board the recommendations and we implemented them. And we got appropriate staff to do so and there was never an issue about increasing the staff numbers and other resources of that department—– 941

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Now, I have to put on the record as well that they also said, Mr. Fingleton, “Certain members of the [internal audit] team lack[ed] credibility with management.” This is not surprising, given that “Only one member of the [internal audit] team has a recognised [internal audit] qualification” and that the internal auditor did not attend crucial committee meetings, including the credit, provisioning and asset liability committees, nor was he included in the circulation of the agenda or minutes of these meetings, effectively leaving him in the dark. So, I mean, they did find faults—– 942

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Senator, the internal auditor would never attend a credit committee meeting. 943

Senator Sean D. Barrett

What about the qualifications issue? 944

Mr. Michael Fingleton

They had … The people that were there … the internal auditor at the time that was in situ was extremely well qualified and the staff that he had had a lot of experience within that department in dealing with the internal audit as was practice at the time. 945

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Well, how did they find only one member of the internal audit team had a recognised internal audit qualification? 946

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, but they had practical experience on the ground. Deputy, people get experience from activity and dealing with matters. Qualifications have a place all right but they’re not the ultimate in evaluating the ability of any staff member to do their job and do it effectively. If we relied on qualifications of people, then … okay, thanks. 947

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Could I refer to Vol. 1, at page 43, the letter from the Financial Regulator, dated 8 February. Now, you just said, I think, to Deputy—– 948

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, where are you now? 949

Senator Sean D. Barrett

8 February 2008—– 950

Chairman

On page 43, Senator, yes? 951

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Page 43, indeed. Thank you Chairman—– 952

Mr. Michael Fingleton

February 2008. What’s that? 953

Senator Sean D. Barrett

You said you … You were commenting on the regulator, that you respected him, but I have to say what he said—– 954

Chairman

Please formally relay it to Mr. Fingleton, there, Senator. 955

Senator Sean D. Barrett

—–in that letter—– 956

Mr. Michael Fingleton

43 is it? 957

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Page 43. 958

Chairman

Vol. 1. 959

Mr. Michael Fingleton

In Vol. 1, okay. I’m nearly there. 960

Senator Sean D. Barrett

“The findings of this inspection of INBS calls into question the adequacy of controls and risk management in place in INBS for large commercial property loans and suggest[s] that a significant degree of approval authority rests with a single individual,—– 961

Chairman

End of page—– 962

Senator Sean D. Barrett

—–Mr. Fingleton, who … appears to be the only source of information on some of the large clients.” 963

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Who said? I think I already dealt with that with an earlier answer. 964

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Well, this is not Mr. Neary. This was from … the—– 965

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Mary Burke. 966

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Mary Burke. 967

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, I think, Chair or Deputy, I’ve dealt with that fairly extensively in a reply to somebody out of the committee – I can’t recall – but I would disagree with her. 968

Senator Sean D. Barrett

And have you formally replied? 969

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I didn’t. It wasn’t to me, Senator, that that letter was addressed. It was replied to by the chairman, Dr. Walsh. 970

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Could I bring to the attention the resignation of Dr. Con Power? You said that the board discussed all major matters. Mr. Power resigned because the decision to take legal action against the financial ombudsman was not discussed at the board. You phoned him up from London to try to change his mind in 2006, but he did resign. Why was that decision not taken by the board? 971

Chairman

Just be careful of pre-judgment now, Senator, and a question please. 972

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, the … what is the question? 973

Senator Sean D. Barrett

The question is: would it be normal to engage in that kind of legal activity without telling the board members? 974

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It would be advised to the board. We would … I would deal with … I had the authority to deal with all elements within that function in the society, and it was not a materiative function – it was an administrative function, an ongoing administrative function – and we were dealing with the regulator in his capacity as regulator on an ongoing basis. That was it. We got legal advice that we were supposed to get, and also Dr. … well, I’m not going to get into a dispute with Dr. Power, but Dr. Power was at a meeting when this was discussed by the management and all the management around the table. And secondly, I do not accept that Dr. Power resigned because of that. He resigned because there was a conflict of interest between his appointment as … as chairman of the ombuds-committee and as a director of the society. 975

Senator Sean D. Barrett

The society lost … was it €243 million in 2008? 976

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 977

Senator Sean D. Barrett

The society lost—– 978

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh yes. It didn’t. 979

Senator Sean D. Barrett

—–€243 million. Is that correct? 980

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’m sorry, Chairman, it didn’t lose 200 … there was provisions made of €243 million. 981

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Yes, and what was the—– 982

Mr. Michael Fingleton

There was no losses. There was no losses realised. 983

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Yes, and—– 984

Mr. Michael Fingleton

There was a provision made by the auditors. Sorry, I’ve interrupted you. 985

Senator Sean D. Barrett

No, you say that the society was solvent in September—– 986

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 987

Senator Sean D. Barrett

—–2008, but Goldman Sachs advised that there was no hope of a sale. 988

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 989

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Goldman Sachs said—– 990

Mr. Michael Fingleton

What has that got to do with liquidity, Senator? 991

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Well, one would imagine that it was saleable if it was … and there was optimistic … and Goldman Sachs told you it wasn’t. 992

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It was still saleable, but the market was not there. That’s accepted. 993

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Well then it was not saleable. 994

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That’s nothing got to do with liquidity, Senator, nothing whatsoever. If you look at our balance sheet at that date, even the date of the 5th of, whatever it is, the 5 April when the … those accounts were published, we were—– 995

Senator Sean D. Barrett

So are you disagreeing with Goldman Sachs? 996

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Senator, I’m just going … they’ve said, they gave, they gave an opinion that we wouldn’t effect a sale, but Senator that’s nothing got to do with liquidity and what was in their balance sheet at that date. And in the balance sheet at that date, there was … there was adequate liquidity and capital of €1.5 billion. 997

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Did Professor Walsh think—– 998

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And all … and can I further add that it reflected on our book that only … subsequently what happened … that there was only a provision made of that amount at that time – in 2009 – which didn’t reflect any adverse findings in relation to the quality of our book. 999

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Did Professor Walsh share your optimism, because he was in secret talks with ILP at that stage? 1000

Mr. Michael Fingleton

ILP? 1001

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Yes, Irish Life and Permanent. 1002

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I cannot comment on, on that because I wasn’t aware of them. 1003

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you. 1004

Chairman

Thank you very much, Senator. I’m now going to wrap up with a couple of matters – just a tidy-up on it – and seek further clarification on some earlier questions, and then after which I’ll invite the two lead questioners this morning, Mr. Fingleton – Deputy Doherty and Deputy O’Donnell – to conclude before we break. Can I just get clarification on one point, Mr. Fingleton, and it’s in regard to an earlier question by Senator O’Keeffe? Can you clarify that the findings made by the Financial Regulator in November 2006, raised by Senator O’Keeffe, were rated? How were they rated? Were they medium priority by the regulator? Were they? What was the rating of them? 1005

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Medium, yes. 1006

Chairman

Yes. Just to get, it was a medium rating, yes? 1007

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 1008

Chairman

Okay. All right. Thank you. 1009

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And a low … there was some low I think in it as well. 1010

Chairman

Okay. On the …. another matter … it’s just the … following … there’ll be two documents coming up on the screen there relating to the credit committee’s operational review. The first one relates to December ‘08. Following the delegation of authority of the credit committee in December 2007, internal audits carried out by two reviews of the operation of the credit committee: one in July 2008 covering the period of January to June 2008, and the other in January 2009 covering the period of July to December 2008. The findings note that the frequency of meetings declined as the year went on, to the point where the … in the internal audit’s opinion, the credit committee is not meeting just … is not meeting with enough frequency to fulfil its duties, and it’s listed there as being of high risk. It’s given a rating of 2.4 that the credit committee may not be adhering to its terms of reference of meeting. 1011
Then moving on to the January ‘09 report, it also notes that several other weaknesses, including one critical issue re the failure to present a facility for approval before drawdown, and that relates … I think it’s coming up on the screen there. It says, when it comes – it’s the fourth one down I think – the credit committee minutes may not be adequate and may not represent an accurate description of each meeting. And the other one, once again the credit committee may not be adhering to its terms of reference and so forth. Mr. Fingleton, can I ask you to explain why the credit committee was not functioning properly during this critical period in 2008? 1012

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Chairman, the reason there wasn’t any meetings of the credit committee as set down there was there was no loans being issued, simple as that. The credit committee met when it was required to meet. The volume of meetings had no … has no relationship to anything except the approval of loans and at that time, we weren’t lending. 1013

Chairman

Mr. Fingleton, as chief executive of INBS over a period of 37 years, you had ultimate executive responsibility for the operations and businesses of the society during this period. However, from your evidence here today, you would appear to have excused yourself from many of the key credit decisions during that time. You also dispute the … many of the findings made in several reports produced by a number of independent parties, such as Deloitte Touche, KPMG, the Financial Regulator and on the governance of the society, and have suggested that there were no real problems with INBS. Could you please explain to the committee as we come to our conclusions today of the session why you believe INBS has ended up costing the Irish taxpayer €5.4 billion and what responsibility you personally bear for this? 1014

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Chairman … I’m just going to … I just have … hold it a minute. Sorry, can you just ask me that again because I have lost your—– 1015

Chairman

I can. Can you—– 1016

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–train, yes? 1017

Chairman

As we come to the end of today’s proceedings and—– 1018

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Ah, yes. It’s okay. I’ve got it. All I say is, Chairman, that you’ve implied that I haven’t answered the questions to this inquiry—– 1019

Chairman

I said that you—– 1020

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–to the best of my ability. 1021

Chairman

—–dispute many of the findings made in several reports. 1022

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, yes. You … I’ve … I’ve—– 1023

Chairman

You would appear to have excused yourself from many of the key decisions. 1024

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I have … I have … I have not excused myself from anything. I have merely answered the questions to the best of my knowledge and given my opinion on the various questions that were asked to me, and that’s what I have done. And, secondly, in relation to the second question—– 1025

Chairman

So can you explain to the committee why you believe that INBS has ended up costing the Irish taxpayer €5.4 billion and what responsibility you bear—– 1026

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Simply—– 1027

Chairman

—–in regard to this? 1028

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Simply, Chairman, because we failed to reduce our commercial loan book sufficiently, despite having decided ahead of the market – well ahead of the market – to downsize the book in September 2008 in the expectation … the realistic expectation … on the basis that over … around €5 billion of the loans were due to mature in 2008. We failed to achieve that prior to the crisis and we had too much of those loans on our book at the time the crisis happened and that’s why we were, or that’s why we lost that much money. 1029

Chairman

Thank you. Deputy Pearse Doherty, five minutes. 1030

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Go raibh maith agat. Can you put that last document that you had on the … on the screen in terms of the internal audit that the Chairperson was just talking to you, the findings? Do you accept the findings from the internal audit? 1031

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, he, he made the findings and that was his findings. I, I don’t know whether you have a … have a report or a commentary or a reaction from the head of commercial lending at the time, I don’t know, or the—– 1032

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Do you, sorry, there’s three significant witnesses—– 1033

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, I accept that he has, he has … that those reports are his opinion and I have no reason to doubt him—– 1034

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. 1035

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–but as I’ve said before … that there was, in relation to the, the meetings, there was no necessity for a meeting—– 1036

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay, no, that’s fine—– 1037

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–so, therefore, he was wrong … he was wrong on that one. 1038

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–we’re under the clock. Point 3 there, which is … a loan for €10 million was advanced without sufficient back-up documentation and without receiving credit committee approval, do you accept that finding? This is an internal audit department review. 1039

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, we would … we would … we would probably … I can’t comment on that because that would be part of the ongoing litigation that that was … that’s in the courts. We would … it would be disputed, Deputy, but that’s … that’s it. 1040

Deputy Pearse Doherty

So the internal audit department makes—– 1041

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 1042

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–the internal audit department makes that as a significant weakness. The Deloitte … in the Deloitte report they have … on page 74 they talk about a loan amount of … a loan amount was increased by £10 million sterling from £71 million to £81 million with the approval of the manage … managing director, with only an accompanying memo stating that the £10,125,000 of VAT moneys will repay … be repaid within three months. It goes on to say it’s in breach of the commercial lending policy “as the increased approval can only be given by the Credit Committee” and it says “in this case only the Managing Director [which was you] agreed to the increase”. 1043

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t … while that is again in dispute, I, I … that is not true. I’ll … I’ll just make it clear that I would have done it with the approval of two members of the credit committee and only in that context and the materiality of it is, is … is mentioned there that—– 1044

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Mr. Fingleton, you were given what some have called excessive powers going back to, what, 1994. And, again, in August 1997, in … an extract from the board minutes say that the … they are to include the powers to set, vary and alter its interest rates, fees, terms and conditions of all loans, whether secured or unsecured, and on all investment and deposit accounts. It goes on to talk about reviewing settled documentation, legal or otherwise, to initiate legal action and so on, and to make arrangement with individual borrowers, investors and depositors in the normal course of business. The board devolved those powers solely to you. 1045

Mr. Michael Fingleton

They were standard executive powers enjoyed by any CEO in any institution to manage the day-to-day operations of the society—– 1046

Deputy Pearse Doherty

But you … can I clarify … can I clarify this because the question was put to you by a number of my colleagues on a number of occasions in terms of did you issue a loan without the approval of the board or the credit committee and to my knowledge you’ve responded to say that you’ve … you’ve only ever done so with the—– 1047

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No—– 1048

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–let me finish, this is an important point—– 1049

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, sorry. 1050

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–you’ve only ever done so with the approval of the board’s policy. But is it not the case, as far back as 1994, you had that authority yourself to actually do this, to vary loans, to change interest rates, to create extensions – that you were acting within the policy of the board—– 1051

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I had … I had—– 1052

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–but you could do it solely yourself—– 1053

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh, yes—– 1054

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–as an individual? 1055

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–I had power to vary interest rates and it was very useful when Bank of Scotland came in and I started targeting our mature loans and it … we had even a retention department in … in the mortgage administration section whereby they would identify requests from borrowers for the … the deeds of their … of their … their home loans and we would, through the managers, contact those borrowers and see were they switching to another … another provider and we would seek to hold on to the business. And in seeking to hold on to the business, they would evaluate whether we could meet their requirements to reduce the interest on their loans. 1056

Deputy Pearse Doherty

You, there was a review—– 1057

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And that decision … that decision would have to be ultimately approved by me on their recommendation—– 1058

Deputy Pearse Doherty

There was a—– 1059

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And that was continuous all through … since 1999, right through. 1060

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Mr. … Mr. Gerry McGinn, who became your successor, talked about the shoddy and well-below-standard practice in relation to what went on in Nationwide. He talked about it as an “outrage” but he also carried out a review into what was called “celebrity loans”. He said that there was nothing untoward in relation to them because the … powers had been devolved by the board to you which could allow you to have interest-only repayments or moratoriums or reduced rates. So was this … was there a special category for certain connected people? I think there was reference to sports stars and politicians and some others which Mr. Fingleton gave these celebrity loans to. 1061

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Another … another, Deputy, another one of the myths. There were people who may be considered as celebrities who got loans but they got them on the basis that they qualified for them in the normal … in the normal criteria. 1062

Deputy Pearse Doherty

So, when Mr. McGinn talks about … Mr. McGinn talks about the reduced interest rates and so on and exceptional rates, this is—– 1063

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That … I … I would like Mr. McGinn to produce one iota of evidence of me unilaterally reducing an interest rate that wasn’t recommended to me to do so for competitive reasons by … by another member of the staff. 1064

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Can I finally say or ask you—– 1065

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And also … talking about Mr. McGinn, he also criticised us for not having enough of meeting rooms, which, of course, being a civil servant, he needed a lot of meeting rooms, and we had eight or nine meeting rooms but they were adequate for our needs when I was in charge of the society. 1066

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay, Mr. Fingleton, can I ask you finally, you’ve made the claim that Nationwide was solvent on the night of the guarantee but is it not the case—– 1067

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It’s not a claim, it’s a fact Sen … Deputy—– 1068

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Well—– 1069

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–and it hasn’t been disputed by anybody that I have heard or read in this … in this—– 1070

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Well, it actually has … sorry, with respect, it has been disputed—– 1071

Mr. Michael Fingleton

By whom? 1072

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–in this … in evidence to this committee. 1073

Mr. Michael Fingleton

By any … any contributor? 1074

Deputy Pearse Doherty

By their claims – and at the minute their claims – in defining the facts also—– 1075

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes, okay, it’s been … also been disputed by members of you committee. I accept that. 1076

Deputy Pearse Doherty

The question is, is it not the case that you were steering or the institution … maybe not you, personally, but the institution was on a collision course with … with a financial iceberg? It was going to happen anyway. You had €4.5 billion on euro medium-term notes due to mature between December 2008 and November 2009. Unless the crisis disappeared, it would be very challenging, if not impossible, to actually refinance those. Was it not the case that you were on this direction anyway, that there was a collision course coming? And is that not the reason, as we’ve heard in evidence here, that nationalisation legislation that was being prepared by Government was not originated for Anglo Irish Bank, it began for your institution, it began for Irish Nationwide Building Society? We have documents here, reams of them, in terms of 24-point plans as to what the Government would do when the decision would be taken to nationalise Irish Nationwide. All of this exists. Why was there crisis meetings if you believed that everything was so—– 1077

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Of course the CRD committee … was it CRD … is that what we’re … would make contingency plans. That was what they did for all institutions—– 1078

Deputy Pearse Doherty

No, they didn’t. With respect, Mr. Fingleton, they did not have nationalisation legislation for AIB, Bank of Ireland or, indeed—– 1079

Mr. Michael Fingleton

They had it for banks … for banks generally. 1080

Deputy Pearse Doherty

The point I’m making is that in relation to Nationwide … in relation to Nationwide—– 1081

Chairman

Deputy, I understand the question needs to be answered. 1082

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Nationwide was the first area that was identified as a crisis. This is where the legislation originated and it was amended then for banks. 1083

Mr. Michael Fingleton

They had not … they had not—– 1084

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Is it not the point … going back to the core issue, is it not the point, given the funding difficulties that you had which you discussed at board minutes – and we have the minutes – about how you were going to try and refinance or repay that €4.5 billion … given the fact that you were shut out of the markets at that point in time, that it was a … an accepted … that this was going … that insolvency was going to be an issue in the future? 1085

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Deputy … Deputy, the benefit of hindsight is wonderful but let me remind you that we, in 2008 and prior to the guarantee, had no need to access the … the wholesale market and I’ve made that clear earlier. We had sufficient liquidity and perhaps if everybody put their liquidity on the table – of other institutions – we might come out very fairly indeed. And it was all in cash, it wasn’t in other instruments where … some institutions lost a lot of money by not having some of their … by having their liquidity in those derivatives. 1086

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Mr. Fingleton, you did not have enough liquidity to cover what was maturing in the following 11 months. 1087

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Deputy, we had … we had … if you look at the accounts of the society in 2010 – remember, 2010 – and we would have … we had enough cash to deal with it in relation to the evaluation of the loan book at that time. 1088

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Well, can I just put on the record this here? The minutes of the meeting actually does not suggest that the liquidity available to the bank would actually cover this. It actually talks about retail deposits wanting to be increased by—– 1089

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The minutes of what meeting? 1090

Deputy Pearse Doherty

The minutes of the board of directors of Nationwide on 10 March 2008 deals with this issue, the fact that there was €4.5 billion going to mature. At this point, you’re shut out of the markets. It talks about the society continuing to market and promote through its branches and trying to raise €1.4 billion. It talks about trying to squeeze €600 million out of the Isle of Man society. It talks about asset covered funding and trying to secure €800 million from that. It talks about €500 million in mortgage-backed promissory note, which would have been in the future, and it talks about, in terms of your loan book, which you mentioned that matures and rolls over every so years, it talked about only €900 million coming from that in the period of 2009. 1091

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Senator, or Deputy, at the date of the guarantee, the society was solvent. 1092

Deputy Pearse Doherty

That’s not the question. We’re not disputing in terms of a theoretical moment in time—– 1093

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And after—– 1094

Deputy Pearse Doherty

The point is is that—– 1095

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And as the market evolved beyond … even at 2008, in March after the audit by KPMG, we were extremely solvent and had €1.5 billion of capital. I think after the audit of 2010, we still had €1.2 billion in capital and about nearly €4 billion in assets. What we were anticipating was all the possibilities and the contingencies that may or may not arise, as would be prudent for us to do. This was not to say that we had any, any at that time, worry about our liquidity or our solvency. What materialised afterwards – after 2010 and NAMA and all the rest of it and the crash – that took care of all that and then we were insolvent. Certainly at the time of the guarantee and a year later in March 2009, we were very liquid and very solvent and had capital of, let’s say, 10.2% on our balance sheet. 1096

Chairman

Okay. Deputy Kieran O’Donnell. 1097

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fingleton, can I refer? Are you familiar with the book, Fingers: The Man Who Brought Down Irish Nationwide and Cost us €5.4bn? Are you familiar with that? 1098

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I would prefer not to discuss that book because there’s at least 20 libels in it. Be very careful, Deputy. 1099

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Well, I will refer to something and you can either answer it or not. On page 254, it speaks about a special account within the society called a No. 3 account—– 1100

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Yes. 1101

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

—–which consists of Irish Nationwide, yourself and Mr. Purcell, between 2008, jointly controlled. It could make payments without limits and were used for such things as loans to particularly sensitive figures for the settlement of disputes, fast-track mortgages of kind advanced. 1102

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry. Sorry, say that again. 1103

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

They effectively are saying that you had an account, under the control of yourself and Mr. Purcell, that effectively could fast-track loans without approval from the board. 1104

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Absolutely, totally untrue. That’s absolutely and totally untrue and it’s defamatory. 1105

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay. Can I ask you, your pension, when you took it from Irish Nationwide society in 2007, did you seek the approval of the board? 1106

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry? 1107

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Did you seek the approval of the board? 1108

Mr. Michael Fingleton

It was the board were fully engaged in it and the trustees. So the board made the decision to terminate the fund at the time and then I took the options that were available to me. 1109

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay. 1110

Mr. Michael Fingleton

The board didn’t decide the options. I took the options because it was up to me to make the decision. 1111

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And why was the decision taken at the time for you, for the fund to go from the society into your own—– 1112

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, the board and the trustees determined it was an appropriate time to do so. 1113

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I ask you, if the guarantee … you believe that Irish Nationwide was solvent on the night of the guarantee. 1114

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Absolutely. 1115

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

If the guarantee hadn’t been put in place, could Irish Nationwide Building Society have survived without the guarantee? 1116

Mr. Michael Fingleton

On the basis of the increase in the deposit guarantee from €20,000 to €100,000, over 95% of our deposits were within those limits. Therefore, we would have been in a very good position if the guarantee didn’t take place that night, maybe to survive better than some of the banks that were guaranteed. On that basis. Our book wouldn’t be targeted—- 1117

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So how do you reconcile that—– 1118

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–without having the guarantee. 1119

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fingleton, how do you reconcile that the €5.4 billion of taxpayers’ money went into Irish Nationwide? 1120

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’ve already explained that … that at that time, that the four billion materialised was based on the discounts applied by NAMA, which I dispute. 1121

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

What discounts should have been applied by NAMA? 1122

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I don’t know. I don’t what discounts but certainly the ones that were applied to us were not accurate in my view. 1123

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

But the discounts gave rise to about €5 billion of a discount, right. 1124

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That was their opinion. 1125

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Yes, but even if it hadn’t been that level of a discount—– 1126

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Okay, it could’ve been €4 billion – that is fine – but it was too much. As I already said before to another member of your inquiry, that was too much. 1127

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Therefore, taking out the fact that the discount would have been less, do you—– 1128

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Any loss, Senator, or Deputy, any loss would be too much. Any loss at all would be far too much. 1129

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So, your view is that Irish Nationwide did not need a guarantee, was not insolvent—– 1130

Mr. Michael Fingleton

No, no, no. We are saying we were solvent on the night of the guarantee and subsequently. 1131

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So when did Irish Nationwide become insolvent? Did it—– 1132

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’d say ultimately when NAMA decided to crystallise the losses because certainly up to … In the accounts, and this is the new management now, in the accounts for 2009, which were produced in March or April 2010, the expectation of the losses accruing to Irish Nationwide was, on the book of €8.5 billion, it would fall, having—– 1133

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So, do you believe that—– 1134

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Sorry, it would fall to about €5.6 billion or €5.7 billion. 1135

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So, do you believe if NAMA wasn’t established—– 1136

Mr. Michael Fingleton

That is a big difference from where it ended up at €5.4 billion. 1137

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Do you believe that if NAMA hadn’t been established, Irish Nationwide would never have become insolvent and would be still standing today? 1138

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I am not saying that at all. 1139

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So what are you saying, Mr. Fingleton? 1140

Mr. Michael Fingleton

From once the liquidity crisis hit and the funds dried up, it was inevitable that that would happen. On the basis that there was a closure, a full closure, in the market, that there was no funds available for anything, it would happen. 1141

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Do you believe on the night of the guarantee—– 1142

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Whether in the absence of NAMA, it would have meant … it would have led to the extent of the discounting by NAMA, that’s another argument, Deputy. 1143

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Two quick questions. Do you believe then on the night of the guarantee, Irish Nationwide had no liquidity problems of any description? 1144

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Well, we had, we had … You have the Goldman Sachs report there and it was … I don’t think it was appreciated. It certainly wasn’t, from the evidence that was given to this inquiry, it wasn’t appreciated, even by the officials, because I think maybe the regulator didn’t, for regulatory reasons, didn’t disclose information, it wasn’t appreciated by the people there that we had so much cash. 1145

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fingleton, do you believe that you knew best? Did you believe that you knew what was best for Irish Nationwide Building Society, as the CEO? 1146

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh no, no. I was CEO and I gave my opinion as the CEO and the board gave their opinion and that’s it. We did the best we could—– 1147

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Do you agree with—– 1148

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—– the same as every other institution did. Nobody, Deputy, conducted their business to achieve the ultimate result that was achieved in—– 1149

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Do you believe the corporate structures of operations in Irish Nationwide Building Society during your tenure were adequate? 1150

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I think they were adequate. I don’t think they were perfect and I don’t think any other institution would claim perfection in their systems but they were adequate for our needs because we were running—– 1151

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Just one quick question. 1152

Mr. Michael Fingleton

—–we were running a very restricted type of business. 1153

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

You said earlier in reply to a previous Deputy that there was no conflicts of interest in any loans that were given in respect of the board or anyone else. How do you explain Mr. David Brophy continuing on the board in 2005 after he became the chief operations officer of Ballymore Properties? 1154

Mr. Michael Fingleton

He declared his interest like anybody will do on any board who are connected with any company that would have borrowings from that institution and there were many directors in many boards who would have had the same conflict of interest. They would have excused themselves from any decisions that were made in relation to—– 1155

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Sorry Chairman, would—– 1156

Mr. Michael Fingleton

And in fact, I think there is a statement made at this committee by, I think, somebody from Ballymore that there was no loans given to Ballymore after Mr. Brophy became CEO of that. 1157

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And finally, you made reference earlier that what was written about you that 80% was inaccurate, 10% you disputed and 10% you agreed with. Which of the 10% did you agree with? 1158

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I haven’t read that particular … I haven’t cogitated on that but I think that would be fairly accurate. I mean that would be my assessment. 1159

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Do you agree with any official report that was issued in respect of Irish Nationwide? 1160

Mr. Michael Fingleton

Oh yes but there is official reports and there is official reports and there is inquiries and there is opinion, Deputy. And I am entitled to disagree if it is my opinion – honest opinion – that I disagree and that’s it. 1161

Chairman

Mr. Fingleton, I am going to bring matters now to a final conclusion. In doing so I would like to give you the opportunity to invite you to make any final comments or thoughts or observations that you might mean to or would like to add as we conclude. 1162

Mr. Michael Fingleton

I’d just like to thank you, Chairman, for the courtesy of this inquiry and the ways it has been conducted and also to each of the members of the inquiry who were fair – tough but fair. That is my only comment. 1163

Chairman

Thank you, Mr. Fingleton. With that said, I’d like to thank you for your participation today and for your engagement with the inquiry and to now formally excuse you. I will be proposing to suspend the meeting until about 2.30 p.m. or so. If I can maybe just ask members of the committee to hang on for a few moments at the end of this, while the room is being cleared, just to deal with one or two matters and then we will resume with our next session this afternoon with Mr. Michael Walsh. Is that agreed? Agreed. 1164

Sitting suspended at 1.32 p.m. and resumed at 3.04 p.m.