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, |
Irish Nationwide Building Society – Mr. Michael Fingleton
Chairman
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Thank you. | 15 |
Chairman
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
Chairman
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy Pearse Doherty
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
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
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy Pearse Doherty
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
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
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
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
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
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Okay. | 98 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
And that was my—– | 99 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Were you aware of the risks? | 108 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy Pearse Doherty
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Chairman
We going to start moving to wrapping up, Deputy. | 133 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
But is it not—– | 182 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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 Kieran O’Donnell
So you’re disagreeing fundamentally with an independent organisation like NAMA? | 242 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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. Michael Fingleton
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. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
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
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
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
And in hindsight—– | 334 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
And that was—– | 335 |
Chairman
Last point. | 336 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
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
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
Chairman
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
Chairman
Okay. I’d just ask a question—– | 353 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Yes. | 374 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Can I, yes sorry—– | 396 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
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
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
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
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Were looking potentially to rescue you. | 456 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
Sitting suspended at 11.15 a.m. and resumed at 11.40 a.m.
Chairman
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Chairman
Vol. 1, page 3. | 476 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy John Paul Phelan
And why wasn’t there any action taken to ensure a more sustainable level of growth? | 479 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Chairman
Try and pose a question now, Deputy, rather than presenting an argument. | 492 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy John Paul Phelan
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Okay. Thank you. | 521 |
Chairman
Senator Marc MacSharry. Senator, ten minutes. | 522 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Marc MacSharry
So you’re happy that you did have the capacity; it was prudent at the time—– | 525 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Marc MacSharry
Did—– | 535 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
So it was as simple as that. | 536 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Did—– | 537 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Senator Marc MacSharry
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
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Michael D’Arcy
You were against it. | 588 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
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. Michael Fingleton
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
Senator Michael D’Arcy
But you’re saying the Nyberg report in relation to INBS is incorrect. | 648 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
Deputy Michael McGrath
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
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
No, I don’t. | 714 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
You don’t. | 715 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy Michael McGrath
Feel that you have been wronged? | 743 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Yes. | 744 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy Joe Higgins
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy Joe Higgins
Okay. | 782 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
—–and early ‘90s. | 783 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. | 871 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Lumpy? | 918 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Could I put on the record—– | 940 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Sean D. Barrett
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
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
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
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
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
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
Senator Sean D. Barrett
So are you disagreeing with Goldman Sachs? | 996 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Senator Sean D. Barrett
Did Professor Walsh think—– | 998 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Chairman
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
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
Chairman
Thank you. Deputy Pearse Doherty, five minutes. | 1030 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy Pearse Doherty
So the internal audit department makes—– | 1041 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Sorry? | 1042 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Deputy Pearse Doherty
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
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
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
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. Michael Fingleton
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
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Can I finally say or ask you—– | 1065 |
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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 Pearse Doherty
Mr. Michael Fingleton
The minutes of what meeting? | 1090 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Mr. Michael Fingleton
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
Chairman
Mr. Michael Fingleton
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 1.32 p.m. and resumed at 3.04 p.m.