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03/09/2015: Peter Fitzgerald – Former Director of Corporate & Retail Treasury, Anglo Irish Bank

AN COMHCHOISTE FIOSRÚCHÁIN I DTAOBH NA GÉARCHÉIME BAINCÉIREACHTA

JOINT COMMITTEE OF INQUIRY INTO THE BANKING CRISIS

The Committee met at 09.00 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.

 

Anglo Irish Bank – Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Chairman

As we have a quorum, the Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis is now in public session and can I ask members and those in the public Gallery to ensure that their mobile devices are switched off. 13
We begin today’s session 1, public hearing with Mr. Peter Fitzgerald, former director of corporate and retail treasury, Anglo Irish Bank, and in doing so, I would like to welcome everyone to the public hearings of the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis. This morning, the focus of the inquiry is on Anglo Irish Bank. At our first session, we will hear from Mr. Peter Fitzgerald, former director of corporate and retail treasury at Anglo Irish Bank. Mr. Peter Fitzgerald joined Anglo Irish Bank in 1998. While working in the treasury division, he developed a retail savings franchise in Ireland and the UK. He was director of corporate and retail treasury from 2006 to 2008 and Mr. Fitzgerald now works as an adviser to startup and SME companies in Ireland in the areas of strategic planning, corporate communications and business development. Mr. Fitzgerald, you are very welcome before the inquiry this morning. 14
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 of their evidence to this committee. If you are 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. 15
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. If I can now ask the clerk to administer the oath to Mr. Fitzgerald, please. 17

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

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald, former Director of Corporate and Retail Treasury, Anglo Irish Bank.

Chairman

Once again, I welcome before the committee this morning Mr. Fitzgerald and if I can invite you to make your opening remarks to the committee, please. 19

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Thank you Chairman and members of the committee. Firstly, I would like to say that I welcome this opportunity to share my experience in the roles I held in Anglo Irish Bank and IBRC with the members of the joint committee. I look forward to answering, as best I can and to the extent possible, any questions you have in relation to my performance in those roles and wider matters relating to the bank both pre and post its nationalisation. 20
To enable best usage of the time allocated to this session, I have narrowed the focus of my opening statement to deal with what I believe are the key areas of my testimony. By way of background, I have worked in financial services for a substantive part of my career to date, beginning in corporate treasury roles in First Active and KBC, followed then by a variety of roles within Anglo Irish Bank and, latterly, IBRC. These roles in Anglo were performed over a 15-year period from 1998 to 2013. From 1998 up to managing the sale of the credit … under the Credit Institutions (Stabilisation) Act of the bank’s deposits and NAMA bonds to Allied Irish Banks plc in February 2011, my main role was to raise customer deposits in order to fund the bank’s balance sheet growth. I performed that role as a corporate deposit manager up to 2001, as head of retail banking from 2001 to 2006, as director of corporate and retail treasury from 2006 to 2008 and as head of retail banking again from 2008 to 2011. During this period, I reported to the head of corporate deposits, head of treasury, director of treasury, the managing director of Ireland and the head of operations in the bank, respectively. 21
I was appointed to the senior executive board or the SEB for a 12-month period from in and around the middle of 2006 to 2007. This was a management level below the main board of the bank. I also served on a number of management committees and subsidiary company boards at various times. I did not, however, serve as an executive director or member of the board of Anglo Irish Bank or any of its sub-committees. Following the appointment of Mike Aynsley as the new CEO in late 2009, I became a member of the new leadership team of the bank and worked in a number of significant post-nationalisation restructuring projects. Finally, in early 2011, I was appointed as head of corporate treasury, or corporate affairs and communications, a role I held until my departure from IBRC in February 2013. For the purpose of clarity, my responsibilities in all of the roles previously mentioned did not extend to lending to customers or involvement in the credit, risk, audit or compliance functions of the bank. 22
The primary role of the group treasury role of Anglo was to fund the bank’s lending growth. Both wholesale and customer funding were sourced for this purpose. By 2008, a significant portion of the bank’s balance sheet was funded with customer deposits from two main categories, namely, retail deposit customers and corporate deposit customers. These deposits were the lifeblood of the bank and the business proposition was interest rate and customer service driven. The marginal returns offered for surplus cash on deposit made it worthwhile for customers to switch banking relationships for this aspect of their business alone. The corporate deposit customer profile ranged from SMEs to large corporate and institutional clients across practically every business sector. Retail customers were predominantly older savers with lump sums to invest. 23
The centres for sourcing corporate deposits in Anglo Irish Bank grew from a small network of branches in Ireland and offshore in the ‘70s to a large group treasury centre in Dublin in the ‘80s, followed by an … additional branches in the UK and another large treasury centre in London in the ‘90s. From 2000 onwards, further centres in Austria, Dusseldorf, Jersey and Boston were used to source corporate deposits in line with asset growth. As a result of this planned expansion, deposits from corporate customers in Anglo grew year-on-year to €32 billion in 2008, accounting for 36% of the total funding position of the bank. The strategic intent to broaden its funding base to include deposits from retail customers was established in 2001 in line with the introduction of the SSIA, or special savings incentive scheme, in Ireland. Once established, the retail savings function in Ireland became successful very quickly and attracted significant positive media coverage and commentary due to the perceived lack of competitive offerings for savers in Ireland at that time. 24
Following this success, a strategic decision was then taken in 2004 to launch a retail savings proposition in the United Kingdom. While the UK savings market was, at the time, one of the most competitive in Europe, it was agreed to proceed and, following a test-and-learn period in early 2005, the bank began to enjoy considerable success with UK savers and growth was driven using high interest rates advertised in best-buy tables, in online and offline media and other comparator and aggregator sites such asmoneysupermarket.com. 25
The remaining retail funding site of the bank was the Isle of Man. This had been in operation for many years and attracted a limited but consistent level of savings from onshore and offshore high net worth savers. While successful among its local peers in this space, the Isle of Man operation would always remain the smallest retail saving centre operated by the bank up to nationalisation. As a result of this planned expansion from early 2001 to its peak in 2008, the volume of retail savings from those three markets alone grew tocirca €19 billion of funds entrusted. Close to 50% of these funds had come from the UK market over a relatively short period of time, with the balance coming from Ireland and the Isle of Man. Total deposits from retail customers in 2008 accounted for 22% of the overall funding position of the bank. At its peak, therefore, Anglo Irish Bank had a total portfolio of €51 billion of deposits, which accounted for 58% of the total funding sources of the bank. Given the strong growth of the UK retail funding franchise, a full launch plan was developed and under consideration to enter the German savings market in 2009. This was with a view to reducing the growing geographic concentration and significantly expanding the bank’s future potential funding sources. This plan, however, was never implemented following the nationalisation of the bank. 26
The fast-growing concentration of UK-sourced retail funding was influenced by the increase in the Irish deposit protection scheme in Ireland and the subsequent introduction of the Government guarantee, as I have detailed in my witness statement. The collapse of Northern Rock was the first event that weakened customer confidence in the security of their savings with Anglo Irish Bank. The bank took thousands of calls per day from concerned customers who either wanted to withdraw funds or seek assurances that their deposits were safe. While the UK retail centre of the bank was the main focus of calls from UK customers, Irish savers became equally nervous when queues formed outside the Northern Rock office in Dublin. 27
The collapse of Anglo’s share price on 17 March was the second event to weaken customer confidence in the security of their savings. The seriousness of this event was greatly inflated by the fact that the Anglo share price, alone among Irish banks, was being targeted by sellers and fell bycirca 15% on that day. The outflows were significant and the bank ran a very real risk of not being able to handle the volume of inbound calls from concerned customers. It also introduced the first real risk of the bank’s branches in Dublin, Waterford, Cork, Limerick and Galway not being able to deal with the volume of customers calling to close their accounts. 28
The collapse of Lehman Brothers on 15 September 2008 was the third and final event that shook the confidence of customers in the safety of their savings. It is my view that the bank experienced a full-blown run on customer deposits from that period up to 29 September 2008. As the primary channel for both corporate and retail customers dealing with the bank, however, was via the telephone, this run never fully manifested itself in the public domain. In Ireland in particular however, the word on the street was that Anglo was in serious trouble. It was an incredibly stressful time for retail deposit customers in particular, many of whom still had all of their savings with the bank. While having survived two material events of this nature, the events of September brought a new level of uncertainty for the staff and management of the bank and, with the share price now below 30 cent, I believe most of the senior staff honestly feared the bank might not recover. 29
Up to the start of the crisis in August 2007, Anglo Irish Bank was lauded on the stock market for its spectacular balance sheet growth and highly profitable business model. This and Anglo’s commentary from a multitude of market analysts and other commentators led to Anglo being put forward as an example to its competitors and peers. In terms of the bank’s chosen credit strategy therefore, as a predominantly property-based lender in the Irish, UK and North American markets, it was difficult to foresee that everybody internally and externally could be wrong. The bank’s loan default rates had remained very low for the previous decade and there remained a huge appetite for commercial property projects, in particular among investors and developers in the bank’s chosen markets. Existing clients of the bank who had experience and track record in that sector were on hand to meet the demand and the clients’ stated credit policy was to back and work with these types of clients where the property had strong tenants, where cashflows could be identified and secured and where personal guarantees were available as additional security. 30
Anglo was three monoline banking divisions in one financial institution, namely, lending, treasury and wealth management. While all were successful in rapidly growing and diversifying their markets for their individual activities, each sold what could be broadly viewed as a single financial product into a highly targeted customer base, i.e., loans to borrowers in the real estate sector, deposits to interest-rate sensitive corporate and retail customers and predominantly real estate investment products often geared to high net worth individual clients. While the global liquidity crisis affected nearly every bank worldwide to some degree in 2007 and 2008, the underlying structure of the bank, together with the pace at which it had grown in that structure, compounded the stress of that crisis in a much higher degree to other banks who had lower concentration of lending exposures, more diversified funding sources and fee income from a wider universal offering to a diverse and longer-established customer base. 31
While Anglo Irish Bank had ceased development lending to new clients and had no direct exposure to private mortgage lending, the monoline exposure to a highly mobile customer deposit base in particular hit Anglo hard and fast in late 2008, as the perceived liquidity issue quickly became an actual one for the bank. Further complications arose for the bank out of the difficulty in reducing or stopping lending as the crisis worsened. This was in part down to the contractual commitments to borrowers and also the risk that without further lending, some development projects would cease and result in immediate and significant loan default. All of this took place in the face of unforeseen and therefore unanticipated risks, which included a total market dislocation and a practically simultaneous failure of each individual source of funding open to the bank over a period of less than 12 months. 32
I sincerely hope that my testimony today will be of benefit to the inquiry in fulfilling its mandate. I would like to say that I fully accept responsibility for my roles as both corporate and director . . . corporate . . . as director of corporate and retail treasury and head of retail banking of Anglo Irish Bank for any part that I may have played in its failure and the consequences it had on the Irish State. It is genuinely something that I will always regret. 33
Finally, I would like to highlight that at the time of writing and submitting my witness statement to this inquiry, I do not hold any documents or other memoranda such as minutes of meetings from my time in the bank and, therefore, its contents are solely based on my recollection of events at the time. Thank you, Chairman and members of the committee. 34

Chairman

Thank you very much, Mr. Fitzgerald, I just want to clarify one matter there before I bring in the questioners this morning. Could you clarify to the committee as to whether or not you were a member of the assets and liquidity committee and whether you were a member of the supervisory board of the Austrian subsidiary? 35

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Sorry, I was a member of both, yes. 36

Chairman

Thank you very much. Senator Michael D’Arcy. Senator, you have 20 minutes. 37

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Thank you Chairman, just for a point of information for people who may – Mr. Fitzgerald, you are very welcome – people who may be tuning in this morning, I think it is appropriate to raise that Mr. Fitzgerald is Mr. Fitzgerald of the Anglo tapes and that they are not—– 38

Chairman

I am not going to go into that—– 39

Senator Michael D’Arcy

I just want to—– 40

Chairman

Sorry, Senator, let me make this very clear—– 41

Senator Michael D’Arcy

They are not on the agenda to be discussed today. 42

Chairman

Let me make this very clear from the outgo: this committee would be subject to a very serious court injunction if we were to go into that space. So that conversation is ending—– 43

Senator Michael D’Arcy

We are not discussing them is what I am saying. 44

Chairman

It’s ending right now. It’s ending right now. 45

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Thank you, Chairman. Mr. Fitzgerald, after the guarantee was announced, did Anglo use its enhanced credit status to attract deposits from non-guaranteed banks, either in Ireland or the UK? 46

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I have said in my witness statement that I am confident it didn’t, in that from my perspective, and, obviously, I had both a retail deposit team of some note in a couple of jurisdictions, and corporate treasury salespeople … clear instructions were issued and, I believe, were followed, that that was completely inappropriate. 47

Senator Michael D’Arcy

How many staff worked under you at that stage, both between Dublin and the UK? 48

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I would have had about 300 staff in total between retail saving centres and corporate treasury and we also had an outsourced call centre in the UK which may have had up to 150 people working in it. 49

Senator Michael D’Arcy

So you’d hundreds of people working and you’re satisfied that at no stage—– 50

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I’m completely satisfied. 51

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Were you ever instructed either explicitly or implicitly to use the guarantee as a method of attracting deposits? 52

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No. 53

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You weren’t? 54

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No. 55

Senator Michael D’Arcy

While potentially morally wrong to do so, was it considered? 56

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, it wasn’t, no. 57

Senator Michael D’Arcy

It was never discussed? 58

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

It was never discussed. In fact, it was discussed on the basis that there was clear instruction to staff not to use it. 59

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And who gave those instructions? 60

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well, I would’ve to my staff and my . . . the people working for me onwards down to their staff. 61

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And was that a matter of a decision that you made or was it discussed with you by senior other executives within Anglo Irish Bank? 62

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I don’t think we had a formal discussion about whether we would or would not use it. I just think the instructions were really clear at the time of the guarantee that it should not be used. 63

Senator Michael D’Arcy

But who instigated the policy of not using it? Was it yourself or was it other senior executives? 64

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I can’t recall who instigated a particular policy in that regard. I just know that from my perspective and with my team, when the guarantee came out, we explicitly instructed our staff that it should not be used as a means to market us as an Irish savings institution and the benefit of the guarantee that that brought with security of savings. 65

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And did you have that conversation with other executives? 66

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I would have, yes. 67

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You did? 68

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 69

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You did. And everybody was agreeable with that, was it? 70

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 71

Senator Michael D’Arcy

During your time on the board as a senior executive in ‘06-’07, did you ever express any concerns to other members regarding the bank’s increased concentration of risks, assets in the commercial property sector? 72

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I don’t believe I did. It wasn’t my area of responsibility in the bank, so I actually had no operational responsibility for lending and while there were frequent presentations of the business to the board, etc., there was a wide agenda at the senior executive board and I don’t believe that I would have expressed concern about development exposures or other lending exposures because it wasn’t my area. 73

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You were an experienced banker, Mr. Fitzgerald. Should you have considered those matters or raised them at the board level? 74

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well, the senior executive board was made up of both executive directors, of which I believe there were four and – sorry, five – and non-executive … or, sorry, executive directors and business or function heads. So I would have been a divisional director in the bank along with three other members of the senior executive board. Any communication with the board would have come from those meetings to the main board, because the executive directors were obviously members of those board … of that board. I mean, certainly, there was a conversation back in 2006 and, just for clarity, I sat on the senior executive board for less than a year. From the records I’ve received, I think it was eight meetings that I would have attended as a member of the senior executive board, and I do recall that development lending, for instance, was discussed, because the bank was … recognised that it was over-exposed to development lending, in particular, and had a policy from 2006 of not lending any more development finance to new customers. But, outside of that, the lending aspect of the business, as I described in my opening statement, just wasn’t part of my functional responsibility, so I can’t add any further insight into that, I’m afraid. 75

Senator Michael D’Arcy

I suppose where I’m coming from, Mr. Fitzgerald, is you had a large number of staff underneath you. Your job was to get … to look after the retail deposits—– 76

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

And corporate deposits. 77

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And the corporate deposits. And did you … a term that is being used is “silos”. Were you siloed? Did you only consider that and never offer other opinions to other executives within the bank? 78

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think the nature of Anglo Irish Bank was, both culturally and divisionally, quite siloed in that, as I mentioned in my opening statement, it really was three monoline activities between treasury, between lending and between wealth management. They did come together through the senior executive board. I think the concerns that would have been raised around funding was not in relation to the risk in terms of the credit risk but in relation to our ability to fund that prudently. And you will see in the minutes of the ALCO meetings and also in board presentations, the presentations made by the business from the treasury perspective in terms of the quantum of funding that we had to raise in order to adequately fund that lending growth, so… sorry, to your point, and just to be helpful, the discussions, I think, at senior executive board from my perspective and others in the treasury side would have been around the need to be able to fund that appropriately. I would not have expressed a view, because it wasn’t my area, on credit risk, because it wasn’t my area of expertise. 79

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You were aware of the extent to which Anglo Irish Bank was a monoline bank. 80

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

We were indeed, yes. 81

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Were you aware that the figures that we’ve had presented to us was … were, upon analysis, prior to the guarantee … 82% of Anglo Irish Bank was made up of commercial real estate lending, 17% corporate, much of which was attached to the commercial real estate, and 1% residential. Were you aware of that? 82

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I was, yes. And that was the chosen strategy of the bank on the lending side. So, yes, I was, yes. 83

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And were you satisfied at that stage that it was … you used the term “prudent” … that that was a prudent banking model? 84

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

The bank—– 85

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Not now, but back then. 86

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. Back then, the chosen business model operated by the bank was one that was deemed a success, was lauded as a success in terms of its … the value that it created in terms of its rising share price. The rating agencies, the market commentators, media commentators all put Anglo Irish Bank forward – and it’s a point I’ve raised in my opening statement as well – as the business model for comparison and best practice against its peers and its competitors. So it was very focused in three core markets. It had a sectoral approach, which in hindsight now was very, very monoline. It met its funding targets to achieve that lending year-on-year and when the crisis hit, that commentary changed and—– 87

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Sorry, at what stage did the crisis hit do you… in your view? 88

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

In my view, it was probably in 2006 when the bank was, I suppose, actively looking at not just its … I suppose the fact that it was a monoline in the main real estate lender but the fact that it had a very high exposure to development finance in particular, which was the highest risk element of it. 89

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Would you consider yourself somebody who is well-informed about what the market was saying about your institution – Anglo Irish Bank? 90

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I would have, yes, because it was talked about at senior executive levels. We would have been very conscious about what was being said about us both by equity investors and capital investors. 91

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And in terms—– 92

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Sorry, just to your point … so at a time that I sat on the senior executive board from 2006 to 2007, almost up to that point, the bank was still deemed by many externally and internally as operating a very successful business model. Its cost-income ratio was very, very low. 93

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Did RBS not have a market note in relation to Anglo Irish Bank being monoline and that it was not systemic to the Irish sector? Were you aware of that market note? 94

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Sorry, yes. There was … obviously, there were—– 95

Senator Michael D’Arcy

That was in 2007. 96

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. So there were people that had that view but it was an individual view. It wasn’t necessarily a wide view at that time and I make mention in my witness statement that the bank then brought in three investment banks in, and I’m not 100% sure of the timing of this, it was either in late 2006 or early 2007. I believe it was on the instigation of the head of capital markets at the time basically on how our balance sheet was being structured to fund future growth. I believe those investment banks were BNP, Barclays and Merrill Lynch. They came in. We gave them substantial information in advance. They did a due diligence process and they presented to executive directors and the wide member … and a wide grouping of the management team and I believe I highlight in the witness statement that they reaffirmed that we should be slowing growth in terms of our lending books, that our funding bases, while they had proved successful to date, were quite thin, and what I meant by that, is we were wholesale and customer and then the customer itself was just in a couple of markets. 97

Senator Michael D’Arcy

If I could move on, Mr. Fitzgerald, did you consider at any point during 2008 that the bank was insolvent? 98

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I didn’t. I didn’t. 99

Senator Michael D’Arcy

On the night of the guarantee, did you believe the bank was insolvent? 100

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I didn’t, no. 101

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Did you believe there was billions required by the State at that stage or tens of billions required by the State to underwrite the bank? 102

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, I didn’t, no. 103

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You didn’t? 104

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No and I didn’t and I didn’t for, I suppose, a very simple reason from my perspective in that my role was on the other side of the balance sheet. I didn’t have—– 105

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You said earlier that you were a person who was well-informed. 106

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, no, true but I wouldn’t have had any insight into the fact that property values were as over-inflated as they were, not just in Ireland but in other markets. 107

Senator Michael D’Arcy

But you must have been well-informed that the corporate deposits were possibly likely to … I think the term used “flight to quality”, that was your term. 108

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 109

Senator Michael D’Arcy

That that was likely to happen based upon the monoline status of the bank. 110

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, what I’m talking about here is … I think … I would regard that as liquidity as opposed to solvency. 111

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Liquidity runs directly into solvency depending on the extent of the crisis. 112

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well no, I believe the solvency issue genuinely came post the guarantee. And I’d agree with a lot of market commentators that that is the case in terms of the deterioration in the asset values that applied in the bank at the time. The liquidity issue was one that was short-term ability to meet our obligations, not in terms of the—– 113

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Were you aware of Professor Morgan Kelly’s interview on “Prime Time” immediately after the … I think it was within … I think it was 30 September, in relation to … his theory was that the asset values were so poor that the guarantee was a mistake? Did you see that interview on “Prime Time” with Professor Morgan Kelly? 114

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I didn’t see that interview, no. 115

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Are you aware of it? 116

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I am, yes. 117

Senator Michael D’Arcy

His assertion was that the liquidity wasn’t available through Irish banks because of the quality of their loan book. 118

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Okay. 119

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And do you think that’s a fair comment? 120

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

In hindsight, yes. 121

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And, which caused which? Was the liquidity crisis caused due to the standard of the loan book or was it, as you say, the crisis came after the guarantee? 122

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think the roots of the crisis that led to a liquidity crisis were based on solvency as opposed to liquidity. I don’t think that manifested itself in terms of asset values in Ireland or the UK until … in fact, right out into 2009 and 2010. I think when confidence in, for example, in Northern Rock was lost it was around, predominantly, their lending business but it manifested itself in a loss of confidence in the savings and so, therefore, the liquidity that the bank had built up in terms of its savings and wholesale funding ran, which perpetrated a further crisis whereby they weren’t able to meet their liabilities. 123

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Sorry, Mr. Fitzgerald, but the question I asked you was which caused the bank to crash. Was it … the theory that Professor Morgan Kelly put forward was that the standard of the loan book was so poor that that caused the liquidity crisis within Anglo and other Irish banks. 124

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I don’t think that was evident to—– 125

Senator Michael D’Arcy

I’m not asking you what was evident. I’m asking you which caused it, in your opinion. 126

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

In my opinion, it was a liquidity issue that caused the bank to crash, in that we simply couldn’t meet our short-term obligations. 127

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Not the standard of the loan book, as put forward by Professor Kelly? 128

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Ultimately, I think that proved to be correct but in the months leading up to the guarantee, I don’t think that that was evident to the bank. I think it was a short term liquidity—– 129

Senator Michael D’Arcy

But which was correct? I’m not talking about the months prior to the guarantee, what was evidenced. Which was the case, with hindsight, Mr. Fitzgerald? 130

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

With the benefit of hindsight, it was the asset values in the bank. 131

Senator Michael D’Arcy

The standard of the loan book? 132

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

The standard of the loan book, I would suggest, yes. 133

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Fitzgerald, Project Atlas – conducted by PwC – I think some of it had started prior to the guarantee and subsequently concluded the field work prior to Christmas 2008. The report was presented to the Minister in early 2009, the Minister for Finance, Mr. Lenihan. I think it was February 2009 it was presented. Were you aware of that? 134

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I had no involvement in the preparation of Project Atlas. 135

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You had no involvement. In terms of theThe New York Times headline in 2010 … you were still with Anglo Irish Bank at that stage? 136

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I was, yes. 137

Senator Michael D’Arcy

The headline that, “[Could] one bank bring down a country?” Did you think that was a fair headline? 138

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I guess, in hindsight, it was, given the fact that we required the greatest bailout of any bank in Ireland, ultimately. 139

Senator Michael D’Arcy

It was a bit more than that; it was the equivalent of half of the national debt—– 140

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 141

Senator Michael D’Arcy

—–at that stage. The NAMA figures subsequently … that were transferred – with a discount of almost 60%, I think it was 59% – were you surprised at the level of discount? 142

Chairman

Final question now, Senator, and then I’m moving on. 143

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. I can’t honestly offer an opinion on that because I wasn’t involved in the NAMA transfer process or the valuation of our loans at that time. Post-nationalisation, I was still head of retail banking, working with treasury, and so I wasn’t involved in the valuation process. 144

Chairman

Okay. Thank you, Senator. I’ll bring you back in later. Deputy McGrath. 145

Deputy Michael McGrath

Thank you very much, Chair. Good morning, Mr. Fitzgerald. Can I just start by asking you to clarify your own position? Because from the biog and from your own witness statement, you were head of retail deposits from 2001 to the summer of 2006—– 146

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 147

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–and then you joined the senior executive board and you became director of corporate and retail treasury and about a year later you came off the senior executive board and you went back to being head of retail deposits. Is that correct? 148

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

That’s correct, yes. 149

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. So what led to you coming off the senior executive board after just a year and were you promoted and then demoted or what was the situation there, moving to director of corporate and retail treasury and then head of retail deposit, or was it the same job? Just clarify. 150

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, it was a promotion. The advancement to the senior executive board was me taking two portfolios – one was a retail deposit portfolio and the other was a corporate treasury business, which I had been involved in previously. 151

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. 152

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

So maybe if I would just go through it. When I joined the bank, I raised corporate deposits for the bank. It was decided, for a variety of reasons, that we needed to get into the retail business in 2001. I was asked to leave that and set up a retail savings franchise for the bank, which I did. 153

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. 154

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Following that success, David Drumm was appointing some new people onto the senior executive board, asked me to join that and brought me back in under the total customer funding unit. 155

Deputy Michael McGrath

In June ‘06. 156

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Exactly, yes. 157

Deputy Michael McGrath

Summer of ‘06. Yes. 158

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

He then, about a year later, removed myself and three other individuals from that, so it had gone from a committee of about nine—– 159

Deputy Michael McGrath

The senior executive board. 160

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Senior executive board. 161

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. 162

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

He removed four to bring it back down to executive director level only. So, as I mentioned earlier on, it was made up of executive directors and heads of function. His reason to me was that he wanted to just rationalise it in terms of its structure and that was it. I was a director at the time so it wasn’t a demotion in terms of grade but obviously it would have been important to me to be on the senior executive board, so—– 163

Deputy Michael McGrath

Were you a function head as head of retail deposit? 164

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, I was a function head, yes. 165

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 166

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

So I always reported in to an executive director in the bank. 167

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 168

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 169

Deputy Michael McGrath

And that executive director was on—– 170

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Was on the senior executive board. 171

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–the senior executive board then and not you. You were no longer on it from—– 172

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, exactly. 173

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–the autumn of 2008. 174

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Exactly. So we just went back to our function, but not sitting on the senior executive board of the bank. 175

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. In September 2008, Anglo’s loan-to-deposit ratio was 160% up from 125% in September ‘07. So, as head of corporate and retail treasury during the period ‘06 towards ‘08, were you concerned at any time during that period that the growth in customer deposits was not sufficient to fund the growth in the bank’s loan book. In other words, there was clearly a growing dependence on wholesale funding as opposed to the bank’s deposit base. Was that an issue that concerned you and were you raising that with your superiors? 176

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, it was an issue. And if you go back to late 2007, early 2008, it was obvious to us that the markets that we were funding both corporate and retail deposits from were too thin. So if you take a retail deposit business, for example, we were operating out of Ireland, which is quite a small market in European terms, the Isle of Man, which is very small, and the UK had at this stage over three years produced 50% of our retail deposit funding. So we knew that we needed to diversify. And hence I worked on a plan with my team for a retail expansion into Germany, which was actually pretty much launch-ready shortly after the nationalisation of the bank. And we presented that to Donal O’Connor at the time. And obviously the bank had been nationalised so it didn’t go any further. But there was certainly a strategic intent, to your point Deputy, that we were stretching our existing markets for too much funding and we needed to get into at least one or more … to European markets on the retail side. And the other strategic development was we had got approval in the United States to raise deposits from a limited number of jurisdictions in North America, which again would have opened up much further funding capability. So in the … I think one of the messages from the 2008 results was that the aim of the bank, predominantly through the customer deposit side, was to be 100% loan-to-deposit ratio by 2011. 177

Deputy Michael McGrath

To be less dependent on wholesale funding. 178

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 179

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. You were a member, as you indicated to the Chairman, of the supervisory board of Anglo Irish Bank Austria. The sale of this bank in December 2008 reduced Anglo’s deposit base by around €600 million at a time when the bank’s overall liquidity position was coming under pressure, so can you explain why did Anglo agree to sell this subsidiary at this juncture despite the resulting loss in deposits which the bank was needing? 180

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. Okay, well, maybe just one minute of background: the sale of the Austrian private bank followed on from a strategy of the bank to divest of private banking businesses outside of Ireland and the UK, so there was a trust business in the Isle of Man which was sold in 2006, I think, a private bank in Geneva that was sold around the same time, a fledgling private banking operation in Dubai, which we closed very early on, and I was asked to lead the sale of the private bank in Austria following on from that. That sale process started before the crisis. To your point, we did pause halfway through that process as liquidity issues were hitting the bank to determine if we sell this bank we are also selling, I think, it was either €575 million or €600 million in deposits, so it was considered. I had a discussion with the CEO and the finance director about it. We decided to proceed for three reasons. One was we had … we were now fully engaged in a sale process and, obviously, stopping the sale of a private bank in particular is quite difficult in that you’ve got counterparties now actively doing due diligence etc., so we felt that pulling the sale would not just reduce the value significantly then but also any further time that we were to put it on the market. That’s number one. Number two, our view was that the deposits at the time were a very small percentage of our overall customer funding business, so if you think about it we may have probably had about €45 billion, I can’t remember the number, of total customer deposits then and this was €600 million. I think the third was I don’t think we genuinely believed that the liquidity stress that the bank was under would actually result in its total collapse. We believed that we would get through it. 181

Deputy Michael McGrath

Did you support the decision, agree with it at the time? 182

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I did. 183

Deputy Michael McGrath

Did Anglo provide some vendor financing as such, €24 million to the buyer as part of the sale agreement? 184

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

It did, yes. 185

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. And what was the rationale behind that? 186

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I am not … totallyau fait with that, and the reason being was that it was done at the finance division in the bank level rather than myself. 187

Deputy Michael McGrath

In your witness statement you take us through the key events leading up to the autumn of 2008, and you refer to the Northern Rock issue in the autumn of 2007, then the so-called St. Patrick’s Day massacre where the share price of Anglo took a hammering, and then you come to the collapse of Lehman Brothers on 15 September 2008, and you say at the end of that paragraph on page 6 that “While having survived two material events [the previous two, Northern Rock and the St. Patrick’s Day share collapse], the events of September brought a new level of uncertainty for the staff and management of the Bank and with the share price now below 30c, I believe most of the senior staff honestly felt the Bank would not recover.” So, can you elaborate on that? Who were you talking about there? And on what are you basing that assertion that senior people in the bank felt the bank would not recover? And what does “not recover” mean? 188

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Okay. Yes, well, to put that in perspective, really, I suppose, what I was observing in my statement was the stress that the bank had been under for such an extended period at that stage. I think it was predominantly around the fact that we had no answers to the constant outflow of customer and wholesale deposits at that stage in that every day was just a fight to try and reassure customers, to try and retell our story, to try and outline that we had no mortgage lending, and all of the other types of answers we would have been giving to the marketplace. 189
I also think that when the share price went to the point that it did, it probably made equity raising very, very difficult for the bank. And so, without specific, you know, sitting down and saying, “Oh, this has to be the end”, I think what I was describing really was just a sense in the bank that, you know, we were in serious trouble here. 190

Deputy Michael McGrath

Sure, but, I mean, the sense comes from what people were saying and what you were hearing and what was being discussed. 191

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 192

Deputy Michael McGrath

What I’m asking you is do you believe that the people who were running Anglo Irish Bank in the second half of September 2008, before the guarantee, felt the game was up, that the bank really had no long-term future? 193

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think that’s … yes, I think that’s a fair assessment. 194

Deputy Michael McGrath

That they knew the bank would not survive? 195

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think the bank … I think we felt that the bank had very, very serious issues and that it—– 196

Deputy Michael McGrath

But were existential issues. 197

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. Genuinely I’m trying to be as helpful as I can here but it is my view. 198

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes, and what are you basing that view on? 199

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I’m basing that view on conversations where we had no answers at that time and an incredibly stressful environment where we had been trying as many things as we possibly could to try and restore confidence in the bank. 200

Deputy Michael McGrath

And do you believe that those grave concerns about the survival of the bank pre-guarantee in September 2008 were shared with the authorities? 201

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I had no involvement with the authorities but I had a sense that they were. I had a sense that there was lots of conversations externally as to how we might rectify the situation for the bank but I wasn’t a party to them. I wasn’t at that level … I cannot explain to you … at executive … the level of board level, so I don’t know. 202

Deputy Michael McGrath

Can I just ask you about the area that you had responsibility for? And when I look at the annual report for Anglo at September 2008, which was the year end, the amount of customer deposits was €51.5 billion, of which retail deposits were €19 billion and non-retail deposits were over €32 billion. So, this is the very end of September 2008. Can you define “retail deposits” first, Mr. Fitzgerald? What are retail deposits? 203

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Sure, yes. Retail deposits are deposits from individual customers. 204

Deputy Michael McGrath

Persons, individuals? 205

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, persons. There may have been, but it’s a tiny, tiny percentage of, you know, sole traders, kind of, owner-managers, where they might have used their … but, we’re talking less than … we’re talking hundreds of thousands of euros and very few of them in that it did actually fit into the definition of “retail”, but, in the main, it was either individual or joint savings accounts. 206

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, and that €19 billion of retail deposits, how much of that would have been in Ireland? This is the group figure now. The bank was €14.7 billion, the group, €19 billion, broadly speaking. 207

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well, yes, working backwards, €10 billion of it came from the UK in euro equivalent. There was probably €4 billion from the Isle of Man and the balance from Ireland, so, €6 billion to €7 billion, I would suggest, yes. 208

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. And then non-retail deposits of €32 billion. What are non-retail deposits? 209

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Non-retail deposits are anything from an incorporated entity. It could have been from a—– 210

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 211

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–a small business with €100,000 on deposit up to a financial … or a fund manager in the UK who gave us €600 million—– 212

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 213

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–on deposit here. 214

Deputy Michael McGrath

And how much volatility was there in the overall level of deposits that the bank was holding? Would some of those non-retail deposits be overnight deposits which were flowing in and out? Can you give us the sense of the level of movement? 215

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Sure. Well, the retail business, you could take it that 50% of it was in one-year fixed deposit accounts. 216

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 217

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

The bank only sold two types of deposit accounts. You either had on-demand or it was a one-year fixed. It didn’t get any more complicated than that. 218

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 219

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

And, so 50% of the retail deposits, being the €19 billion, was basically at risk of moving at a phone call’s notice; 50% of that would have required notice for whenever the maturity was coming up to say, “I’d like to have it repaid”. 220

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. Were you in charge of non-retail deposits as well? 221

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I was, yes. 222

Deputy Michael McGrath

Even when you were – your title was head of retail deposits – you were in charge of non-retail deposits? 223

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, I was in charge of retail deposits … in around 2000, I think, it was either July or August 2008, my role changed again, where David Drumm asked me to … basically because the retail business was proving, I suppose, the future, going back to my earlier piece where if we could have 100% of loan-to-deposit ratio, a huge portion of that would be from retail. 224

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 225

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

He asked me to concentrate on the retail business and actually move it across into something that’s much more operational, as in—– 226

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 227

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–go in under the head of operations for the bank. Now, that said, that was a conversation before the year-end. I would have still been quite active in the corporate deposit area—– 228

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 229

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–right up to the end. 230

Deputy Michael McGrath

Just to clarify, on top of the €51 billion of retail and non-retail, then there were interbank deposits of €20 billion. That wouldn’t have fallen under your area. 231

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No. 232

Deputy Michael McGrath

Was that under treasury? 233

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, it was treasury, but on the capital market side—– 234

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 235

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–and liquidities. 236

Deputy Michael McGrath

So, talk me through the scenario where at the end of September 2008. If Anglo had collapsed or had been allowed to collapse, how would this have worked itself out? You had €51.5 billion of customer deposits. How much cash should you have on hand? If the bank collapsed, how would it have played out? 237

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I don’t know if I can answer that with any level of qualification. 238

Deputy Michael McGrath

Your opinion is all I’m asking. 239

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 240

Deputy Michael McGrath

You know, you were in charge of all the deposits. 241

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 242

Deputy Michael McGrath

If the bank didn’t open its doors in early October 2008, how would it have played out? 243

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

As in if there was no back-stop funding facility available for the bank? 244

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes, if the bank collapsed. 245

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Liquidation. Yes, liquidation, I presume, where the retail deposit customers would have been covered. If you remember, back on 20 September—– 246

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. 247

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–deposit protection increased to €100,000. 248

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. 249

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

So two things happened then. Now, it was only within a week of the Government guarantee, so—– 250

Deputy Michael McGrath

So the State would have had to pick up the—– 251

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 252

Deputy Michael McGrath

And that—– 253

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

And there was—– 254

Deputy Michael McGrath

That figure … that sum would have run into several billion, which the State would have had to pay. 255

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

If the fund was sufficient enough to pay. So, obviously, the deposit protection fund is a fund—– 256

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. 257

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–which the Minister guarantees to top up—– 258

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. And it wasn’t sufficient at the time but, yes. 259

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. So, I can only assume liquidation, where retail deposit customers would have been covered up to the deposit protection scheme … would have been at risk thereafter. Corporate deposit customers would have been totally at risk, based on the proceeds of a liquidation. Sorry, is that satisfactory? 260

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes, I’m just trying—– 261

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I’m trying to be as helpful as I can. 262

Deputy Michael McGrath

—–to tease out that scenario. You were in charge of the whole deposit area. There were over €51 billion of deposits that you had direct responsibility for. You have conceded that Anglo was facing an existential crisis. The State intervened, as we know; we know what happened since. We don’t know the other scenario, which never played itself out. 263

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

True. 264

Deputy Michael McGrath

So I think it’s important just to ask that question. Finally, from the period, March 2008 until the end of September 2008, the liquidity situation was changing very quickly. 265

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 266

Deputy Michael McGrath

What level of concern did you have over that period of time about the liquidity position of the bank? 267

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well, through the ALCO committee on which I sat, the bank had internal liquidity ratios, and also then it had regulatory liquidity ratios. So I won’t go into the regulatory liquidity ratio now in terms of detail but it basically meant that from a regulatory point of view … and I think this came in in the middle of … or the start of 2007, the bank had to hold an amount of liquidity that was able to meet any outflows within 30 days with inflows in 30 days. The bank … and we then set more stringent internal liquidity ratios, and it’s evident in the minutes of the ALCO meetings that the bank actually held its line in terms of liquidity … regulatory liquidity until … practically up to the collapse of Lehman’s. So, while liquidity was incredibly volatile, yes, the bank was liquid, yes? So it had a lot of liquidity; in fact, we were lenders into the market for quite a period of time. And the liquidity ratios as set by the Central Bank or the Financial Regulator were actually only breached almost September time, when liquidity stress became the most severe. But, obviously, from March right through, we were concerned daily about larger customers pulling credit lines that they had for the bank, ongoing retail worries where people weren’t renewing their savings accounts when they hit a one-year maturity, as I described earlier. But, from a liquidity point of view, we were sound until Lehman’s, in effect. 268

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, thank you. 269

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

And then it was very swift. 270

Chairman

If I may stay with that for a moment with Mr. Fitzgerald, in that, in December 2007, the group ALCO – or asset and liability committee – and the ALCO liquidity committee approved a stress testing and scenario analysis. I’ll just bring it up on the screen there, just an example of it. This relates, I think, it’s to you … it’s one of the core documents, Vol. 2, 37 to 59. I think it’s two or three pages into that document. And the title of it is, “Stress testing: a scenario analysis – funding, liquidity, risk policy”. This details a number of stress scenarios against the bank’s liquidity and how they would be tested. Were you involved in developing or writing this policy? 271

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I wasn’t. It was presented, I’ve seen, and approved by the ALCO, by the liquidity … by, it was … this was put together by group risk and by the group trading and liquidity management function of the bank. And it was then presented into ALCO … sorry, asset and liability committee—– 272

Chairman

Right. 273

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–and approved by them, and then on to the board … risk and compliance of the main board. 274

Chairman

Okay. 275

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 276

Chairman

The policy does not include an extreme doomsday scenario similar to that which occurred post the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Can you explain why that wasn’t the case in this instance? 277

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I just don’t think it was envisaged. I mean, when I was looking at this in terms of my preparations for today, one of the things that struck me was that while the bank had, I suppose, adequately put forward a variety of different stresses that may occur to affect its liquidity and funding, practically all of them occurred throughout certainly the latter half of 2008, either to some degree and then, finally, all degree, yes? So, if you look here at the … and this was done, I suppose, at a time when the outlook was more benign but we are regarding the probability of a neutral stress as being most likely then, and then very low probabilities attaching to even an Irish-specific market event. 278

Chairman

And that is December 2007. 279

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 280

Chairman

Just about nine months later, the bank doesn’t go beyond the point of rescue; it actually gets rescued—– 281

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 282

Chairman

—–in September 2008 and in January 2009, the bank is nationalised. In the period leading up to the guarantee, were you aware of any discussions that might have been taking place in Anglo that the bank was seeking to be guaranteed or may be guaranteed? 283

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Not at all. I learned of the guarantee in … on the morning itself, on the way into work. 284

Chairman

Okay, yes. 285

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

So, I had no insight into that. 286

Chairman

Were you surprised that your bank was guaranteed, or were you not? 287

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I was relieved, but I wasn’t surprised, no. 288

Chairman

And why were you not surprised? 289

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I didn’t think at the time that there were choices being made as to who was being guaranteed or otherwise. I thought it was a general blanket guarantee to sort a systemic issue. It’s only in hindsight that I learned that there was a debate as to whether the bank should be included together with the INBS or not. 290

Chairman

And from hindsight what is your understanding of the rationale as to why Anglo Irish Bank was guaranteed? 291

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

From hindsight my understanding? 292

Chairman

Yes, as and from now. 293

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

That it was systemic. 294

Chairman

That it was systemic. 295

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, systemically important. 296

Chairman

The bank was subsequently nationalised in January ‘09 and this committee has heard evidence in regard to … that even nationalisation of Anglo was considered on the night of the guarantee. When did you first become aware of any consideration that your bank might be nationalised? 297

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

The … I became aware from a phone call on the evening of its nationalisation, in other words about two hours beforehand. 298

Chairman

There was … and was there any discussion or debate or consideration in the ether, to the best of your knowledge, through any period prior to that, either prior to the guarantee or prior to the nationalisation itself, that Anglo was going to be nationalised? 299

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Not that I was aware of or a party to. As I said, I think it was announced … it might have been announced on the national broadcaster in the 9 o’clock news. 300

Chairman

Okay. 301

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I remember I found out about it through a phone call from a senior executive at 7 o’clock that evening. 302

Chairman

Okay, and no other indication to your knowledge? 303

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

None. 304

Chairman

Okay. Thank you. Deputy Kieran O’Donnell. 305

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Thanks, Chairman. Welcome, Mr. Fitzgerald. 306
In September 2008, Anglo’s – and I’m referencing Vol. 2, page 33, its board’s presentation and strategic options – and in September ‘08 Anglo’s loan-to-deposit ratio was 160%. That’s up from 125% in September 2007. That’s roughly a year. Did you regard Anglo’s increasing dependence on wholesale funding as a risk to the bank and would you’ve ever raised these concerns with other members of the senior management team? 307

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Thanks, Deputy. Yes, I think I might have dealt with that earlier on where—– 308

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Yes. 309

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Certainly it was a concern to the bank. It was discussed at ALCO. It would have been discussed with the senior executive in terms of, I suppose, the stretch that we were putting on the funding to cover that amount of lending. But, equally, we were funding sufficiently at the time and the long-term aim was that we have 100% loan-to-deposit ratio with further initiatives. So, if you look back, we had already moved funding from very, very small and humble beginnings – ‘80s, ‘90s, 2000. Probably what surprised us was the success of the business in the UK market which was tentative to start off with – very competitive market – and therefore we were looking at at least one new European market in the following 12 months to try and redress that. But, it was a concern and it was discussed. 310

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And would you have been aware of the level of ECB funding that Anglo would have been looking to source, we’ll say, as its deposits base was drying up? 311

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, to be honest, again there was three divisions in treasury and that wasn’t one of mine. 312

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And how big of a factor was … when the contracts for difference issue arose with Mr. Quinn, were you aware of that? When did you become first aware of the contracts for difference issue between Anglo Irish Bank and Mr. Quinn? 313

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Can I seek the direction of the Chairman on that? Is that—– 314

Chairman

I just need your attention there. I was just taking a note—– 315

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I’m sorry, just in terms—– 316

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

What I was asking really, Chairman, was I am really trying to—– 317

Chairman

What’s the question? 318

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Really, what was the impact of the contracts for difference in terms of Mr. Fitzgerald’s capacity to source deposits for Anglo? The question, I suppose, I was asking was, the contracts for difference in terms of Mr. Quinn and Anglo, what impact did that have on Mr. Fitzgerald’s role as securing deposits for Anglo? 319

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

In terms of, I suppose, the … any legal action, just any legal action relating to Mr. Quinn, that position, its effect on the bank, and knowledge of that in the bank, I’ve just … I have concern … I have concern voicing something today that might be prejudicial in six months’ time. 320

Chairman

I would err on the safest side, on the side of safety. The issue of Mr. Quinn’s involvement with Anglo Irish Bank has been discussed at this committee before—– 321

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Okay. 322

Chairman

—–so if your concern is in regard to just entering that into the debate at this committee, I wouldn’t consider that a concern. But if you have material information that is related to a potential or pending matter that’s under consideration by the DPP, I would ask you to take a more cautious approach. 323

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, no, I understand, and thank you, Chairman. So, if your question is in relation to how it affected my role—– 324

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

In accessing deposits for Anglo. 325

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I am advised that we should seek a short adjournment, if that’s okay. 326

Chairman

That is more than accommodating. What I propose is, if you need to speak to your own legal team there, I’ll certainly accommodate that. I presume that you just need maybe about five minutes, Mr. Fitzgerald. If you need longer than that, just come back to me. 327

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

That’s fine. I just want to get clarity as to where I can go with this. 328

Chairman

Just adjourn, and I’ll just put the meeting into a very short suspension for a couple of minutes. Okay? 329

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Okay. Thank you, Chairman. 330

Sitting suspended at 10.17 a.m. and resumed at 10.35 a.m.

Chairman

All right. I propose we go back into public session so. And if maybe Deputy O’Donnell could just maybe resummarise the question again, and then I’ll go back to Mr. Fitzgerald. 331

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Thank you, Chairman. Mr. Fitzpatrick, just to recap the question I asked—– 332

Senator Michael D’Arcy

His name is Fitzgerald. 333

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Fitzgerald. What did I say? 334

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Fitzpatrick. 335

Deputy Michael McGrath

Fitzpatrick. 336

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Fitzgerald. To recap on the question, what I’d like to know is when did you first become aware of rumours that the Quinn contracts for difference with Anglo Irish Bank shares was happening. And did that have an impact on your role in terms of your capacity to raise deposits for Anglo Irish Bank? 337

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Okay. I was aware of Mr. Quinn’s reported stake in the bank. 338

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

When did you first become aware? 339

(Interruptions).

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Yes, when did you first hear the rumours? 340

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I cannot recall when. 341

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Roughly. 342

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Roughly the start of 2008, maybe. 343

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay. 344

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. And in terms of the second part of your question, the rumours that were in the marketplace – and I think are already talked about in the public domain – about the reasons for the short-selling of the Anglo Irish Bank share price really only affected the business that I ran in the bank on 17 March. 345

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

17 March. 346

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Exactly. 347

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

When the share—– 348

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Exactly. 349

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay. 350

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

So what was the impact of that? So—– 351

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

17 March is when the share price—– 352

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Apologies, yes … 17 March … the Patrick’s Day—– 353

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Yes. 354

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

—–massacre, as it was named afterwards. So the share price of the bank fell substantially – I think at the end of the day it was close to 15% or more – and that caused obviously considerable stress among savers. It precipitated a short run on the bank … and what I would describe as “run” is thousands of calls over the course of a number of days. 355

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

That was in the week after the 17th. 356

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 357

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Patrick’s Day ‘08. 358

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, so the day after for approximately four days. And it went broadly unabated to the extent that it was—– 359

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And were these both corporate and retail deposits? 360

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Both corporate and retail deposits, yes. There was then an announcement by the Financial Regulator of an investigation into short-selling. I’m not sure whether it was just of bank stocks or in the Irish marketplace. I believe that was on a Friday. And when that announcement was made, the share price rose, withdrawals abated and eventually stopped. So it was a real spike impact, to answer your question. 361

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay, and in your presentation – and following on from Deputy McGrath – you said this was about the post-Lehman’s 15 September 2008 collapse. And your last sentence is “I believe most of the senior staff honestly [felt] the bank [would] not recover.” And then you said there was no answer at that time, when you spoke earlier. What do you mean by that, that there was no answer? 362

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I personally believe that the bank felt it needed external assistance. 363

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

When you say “external assistance”, what form? 364

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well, I genuinely believe the bank didn’t feel it could survive on its own. 365

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And are you talking about liquidity or capital investment? 366

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I’m talking about … well, liquidity at the time. 367

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Yes. 368

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

As I mentioned previously, I don’t believe the bank believed that it was requiring capital investment at the time. And so that was my sense, that the bank felt we won’t be able to survive as an independent entity as Anglo Irish Bank. 369

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

From what time would you have felt that was the view in the bank? From what period? 370

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think very late in September, very late in September. 371

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And was that emanating from the top down in the bank? 372

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I didn’t have a huge interaction with the chairman or members of the board at the time but certainly among my peers—– 373

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

The CEO? 374

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No I don’t think I got that directly from the CEO but certainly among the divisional heads in the bank and especially in treasury where we were seeing the greatest impact of the outflows and as I mentioned earlier on every day was more difficult than the next, certainly post the collapse of Lehman’s. 375

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And what was generally the atmosphere like in Anglo say in that month of September? What was it like amongst the staff? Was it crisis management, was it chaos, was it chaotic? What was it like to be head of a division dealing with staff, dealing with customers? Did you feel the end was nigh, what was generally the … describe to me the atmosphere? 376

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think very difficult obviously, very worrying obviously. The bank had built up very, very strong, I mean one of the … one of the great cultural things about Anglo was its relationships with customers, and I think that’s well documented. So, you know, we didn’t have an online banking system, you know, customers dealt with us by phone, yes. The fear with customers was palpable despite deposit protection, despite maybe having removed some of their savings, they were very, very worried that the bank was not going to survive and that their deposits would be lost. I think it’s very, very true to say that. The stress on the staff was dealing with that, trying to reassure them as best as possible that we were doing everything we could and I think generally then among staff themselves, having been through the bones of nine months of almost constant stress – and certainly from my perspective I would have managed three runs on our savings business in particular—– 377

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

From the St. Patrick’s Day massacre? 378

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well from Northern Rock, thousands of calls, Patrick’s Day massacre, thousands of calls, in around September, thousands of calls. I mean, an anecdote is, you know, we were moving customers that called to our savings branches which we had a number of, well predominantly in Dublin, off the street and into meeting rooms in the back of the building to avoid precipitating a crisis by people seeing a queue outside the bank on Stephen’s Green. 379

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So there was a real worry—– 380

Chairman

Last question please Deputy. 381

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Sorry yes, so there was a real worry in Anglo—– 382

Chairman

Last question. 383

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Sorry, was there a concern in Anglo that you would see people queuing in the streets to take out their deposits? 384

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Oh very much. 385

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I just very … just one—– 386

Chairman

I need discipline now from everyone. 387

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

I will be very quick. There was a dinner with Mr. Cowen, the then Minister for Finance, on 24 April in Stephen’s Green. Were you present at that dinner? 388

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I wasn’t. 389

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay, thank you. 390

Chairman

Senator Susan O’Keeffe, ten minutes Senator. 391

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Thanks Chair. Mr. Fitzgerald, why in your opinion, despite the fact that the bank appears to have undertaken regular stress testing on its liquidity position, did the bank not react sooner and more robustly to the liquidity crisis as September unfolded? 392

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I believe, sorry, as I said earlier on, I believe from my experience – and I was on the customer funding side as opposed to the interbank or wholesale market side where it was predominantly managing the liquidity of the bank – but I do believe that every option was being explored to deal with that. 393

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And by “every option” can you give us some indication of what you mean by “every option”? 394

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well I can’t, it’s a highly specialist area so I … it would be wrong of me to try and inform you of that. 395

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Would you say that the bank had its own emergency plan to deal with the crisis or were you making plans as the crisis changed? 396

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I certainly think the latter is true. I think we would have always had overflow arrangements, as I mentioned earlier on we had outsourced call centres, we had plans for escalation of calls, both for good reasons and bad. In other words, if we had a market leading product we’d get more calls, if we had a negative environment we’d get more calls. Unfortunately from 2007 on it was predominantly the latter. So we had, I think, sound operational plans in place to deal with high volumes and stress and what I mean by that, just referring to the earlier piece, of just being able to control the environment as best we could with staff working late, etc. I don’t think we had a plan to deal with every aspect of our funding sources drying up over that sustained period but also then in a very, very stressed way from the collapse of Lehman’s, which really was a turning point, as I mentioned, in terms of breaching our regulatory liquidity requirements and just the sheer volume of outflows every day. 397

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

As you said, you could see that sheer volume of outflow and it was, as you said in your statement, effectively a sustained run on the bank albeit not a public run in the way that we might understand. In what way was that run being made known to the Department of Finance, to the Central Bank to the Financial Regulator? How was that … how was the severity of the crisis transmitted to those people? 398

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, I understand—– 399

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

If indeed it was. 400

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, true. The only piece that I am aware of, because I wasn’t – and I mentioned in my statement earlier on – I wasn’t party to conversations with the regulator, the Department of Finance or Central Bank. So, from my perspective I know that our risk function would have sent a daily, if not twice daily, report generated from the bank’s systems of our liquidity position to the Financial Regulator. It was on their behest and going right back to early in the crisis, so it was now a formal part of our day. 401

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So sorry, when you say “early in the crisis” do you mean January ’08 or September ’07? 402

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No it might have been slightly, I can’t remember, I mean, first or second quarter of 2008. 403

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay. 404

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

We started this … three o’clock, I remember it’s three o’clock, either call or —– 405

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

But as it turned into a sustained run there, after Lehman’s, did you do anything or were you asked to do anything different as that accelerated before your eyes? 406

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

For me it was managing what was in front of us at the time on the treasury side. At levels more senior than me I assume, and I don’t know, that there was pretty significant engagement with the Financial Regulator, but as I said I wasn’t party to it so I don’t know. 407

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay, you say in your own statement on page 6, you talk about, you know, finding in hindsight the sort of problems that Nyberg showed – “That credit risk management structures [in the Bank] were, in practice, deficient [and there was] ineffective overview of Group credit decisions”, and so on. And you say, “Look that wasn’t part of my detail, but I know about them now.” But on your side of banking are you saying that while there were problems on the other parts of the bank, there weren’t similar kinds of problems, deficiencies, lack of governance—– 408

Chairman

There is phone interference there Senator, somewhere in proximity to you. 409

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Sorry, you know, what were the problems on your side or were there any? 410

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Well if you think about what the treasury business was doing, it was basically taking money, predominantly from counterparties as opposed to lending it, so the risk was on their side as opposed to ours, yes? 411

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes, yes. 412

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

So while we had credit risk around interest rate management and around volatility of currency and lots of things that you’d expect on a treasury operation, it was a very, very different business. It was a very transactional business as opposed to committing bank funds based on longer-term lending decisions. 413

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Sure I appreciate the difference but what I’m asking you is whether or not your side of the bank was clean and pure while there were other activities going on in the other parts that—– 414

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, I understand what you are saying. I’m just trying to think in relation to our own business. I don’t recall significant governance issues on the liability side of Anglo’s business as opposed to … as compared to those that have transpired on the asset side. And that’s … I’m being as helpful as I can but I don’t think—– 415

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

In those last few weeks of September were you aware that, if you like, Anglo was now trying to find a partner, trying to find somebody to save the business, talking to other banks, talking to anybody who would talk to Anglo? Was that known among you generally? 416

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

It wasn’t known and certainly I’m aware now that the chairman and chief executive at the time would have contacted AIB, Bank of Ireland, etc. That was news to me on hearing about it post event. What I did know was their reasonably strenuous interactions, and perhaps at board level as well, with the Financial Regulator and perhaps the Central Bank about the funding position of the bank and the deteriorating funding position of the bank. So, anecdotally, I would have heard that in the corridors of the bank but in terms of trying to partner the bank or, you know, sell the bank or merge the bank with another entity, I hadn’t insight into that. 417

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Senator D’Arcy raised the matter of, you know, “Can one bank bring down a nation?”, the headline of 2010 inThe New York Times. Would it have been your view or anybody … well, would it have been your view much earlier than that that, in fact, the bank had brought down a nation or could bring down a nation? 418

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, it wouldn’t, no. 419

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Not even … not even, sort of, after 2008-2009 when it was nationalised. 420

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, because I don’t think the extent of the losses that ultimately came about on those transfers across to NAMA, which I think were €21 billion … until they came to light, with fresh eyes on the risks that the bank had undertaken and the credit assessment of the recoverability of the loans that had been made over the previous five-ten years, I wouldn’t have had any foresight that that level of loss could have been perpetrated by the bank on the lending side of its activities – genuinely. 421

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

The public would say, having looked across the years, that, you know, bankers had a good time, bankers were paid well, they were incentivised, they had good salaries, they had good pensions and they got away lightly given what had happened. Is that true? Was that true for you? 422

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Personally? 423

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. 424

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I genuinely believe that when I worked with Anglo Irish Bank in the area that I did, that we built a business that was successful, albeit it turned out to be flawed in terms of the thinness of the funding basis that we were building to support the lending. I know that on that side of the business, we certainly worked hard and had some successes. When we look back, I think we had a responsibility and accountability obviously for what happened – most certainly. I don’t know whether I could honestly give a view for bankers whether everybody got off lightly or otherwise. Everybody has had to deal with it in their own particular way, I think, in terms of the changed banking environment now. 425

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And finally, Mr. Fitzgerald, do you think that the contracts for difference situation in fact was the piece that brought the bank down? 426

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I … unfortunately, I’m going to have look for direction on that. It … I’ve been legally advised that I shouldn’t cover that area. 427

Chairman

I think if you go into that space, there are prejudgments that could be in that. 428

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I definitely think I would be putting myself and the committee at risk. 429

Chairman

I would concur with your position. Senator O’Keeffe’s time is up anyway, which is just convenient. Deputy Joe Higgins, please. 430

Deputy Joe Higgins

Mr. Fitzgerald, in page 3 of your written opening statement, you say: 431
[T]he size of deposits taken from individual customers however grew significantly from 2005 onwards [where] some ‘institutional’ clients had over €1 billion placed on overnight deposit with the Bank. This concentration level meant the deposits in the Bank became increasingly more volatile and, while every effort was made by the treasury teams to attract deposits from a wider range of small customers, the growth in deposits and other funding sources required to fund the huge volume of lending growth during the period from 2005 onwards made that task almost impossible. 432
And you finish by saying, on this point, that “This was to lead to significant problems for the Bank in 2008.” Can I ask you did you ever express this concern to any member of senior management as it became clearer to you the type of problems that were emerging? 433

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Okay. Well, if I could for a moment, I just want to put that … put a little bit of context around my statement there because the … I’m sorry, without going on too much of a tangent but when I worked in First Active Building Society very early on in my banking career, savers would come in and they would lodge regular savings or small deposits with the bank … with the building society through a multitude of branches which would then result in mortgages for 20 and 25 years being issued. 434

Deputy Joe Higgins

Yes. 435

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. There was no treasury function-corporate deposit-taking function of note in the building society at that time and it was a stable business. The context of my point there was that, while we operated in treasury and started off life very early on taking hundreds of thousands of euros from deposits … in deposits from customers, the loan growth and the general market environment meant that customers had … corporate customers, in particular, had a lot more money. I used the billion euro overnight deposit as just an example. There may have been one or two in those but for me—– 436

Deputy Joe Higgins

Yes, but essentially you could sum it up by saying you became quite dependent on large corporate—– 437

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes, and it increased the volatility for sure. 438

Deputy Joe Higgins

—–deposits, yes. 439

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

And we did discuss that. We were aware of the risk of that. 440

Deputy Joe Higgins

And who did you discuss it with? 441

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

We would have discussed it at the ALCO committee of the bank, which would have gone to the board risk and compliance committee. We would have had customer concentration lists in terms of the largest customers. 442

Deputy Joe Higgins

Yes, and would the top management have been … above your level, have been aware of this? 443

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

They would have indeed. Yes. 444

Deputy Joe Higgins

Were any plans, at any stage say from 2005 on, put in place to mitigate the impact? 445

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. So, as I’ve mentioned, we had opened from … in the 2000s we had opened new centres to try and get more customers, to try and get more granular deposits. 446

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay, that was to try and spread the—– 447

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Exactly, yes. 448

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay. 449

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

And, just to finish, I think while those plans were in place, the liquidity crisis of 2008, from a timing perspective, just caught up with a lot of those plans. 450

Deputy Joe Higgins

Right, I’ll just move on because of time, Mr. Fitzgerald. On page 10 and 11 of your statement, you say: 451
Merrill Lynch, BNP and Barclays Capital Markets were separately retained in 2007 to conduct a detailed due diligence of the Bank’s balance sheet. The resulting findings highlighted, among other matters, the Banks high concentration to property and development lending, the thin nature of its funding base and the possible need to raise more equity as a capital buffer for possible future [use]. 452
Did each of those entities make a report, a formal report, to you? 453

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

They developed their findings and report … and made them in a report to the bank, yes. 454

Deputy Joe Higgins

Each had a written report to the bank. 455

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. 456

Deputy Joe Higgins

And where did these reports go? Who … were they discussed? 457

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Oh yes. So, each of the counterparties mentioned presented, over perhaps a half day, to the executive directors of the bank and a selection of the management team. Then the report was obviously left at the end of that and it was discussed. I don’t know if those reports were then brought by the executive directors up to the board. 458

Deputy Joe Higgins

You don’t know if they were presented to the board. 459

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I don’t know, no. 460

Deputy Joe Higgins

You would expect that they would, would you? 461

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I would expect that those findings certainly would have been passed on to the board, yes. 462

Deputy Joe Higgins

They haven’t … those three reports, Chair, haven’t appeared in our evidence book. I mean, it seems to me that they are very material. The resulting findings, according to Mr. Fitzgerald, are quite stark, you know, again highlighting the concentration to property and development lending, the thin nature of the funding and the need to raise more equity. So, could we, at this stage, for further consideration, request that these come from IBRC? 463

Chairman

I’ll have that noted today, Deputy. 464

Deputy Joe Higgins

Yes, thank you. Okay. On page 11 again, Mr. Fitzgerald, you say, and I quote: 465
[T]he bank found it extremely difficult to reduce or stop lending as the crisis worsened. This in part was down to contractual commitments to borrowers and also the risk that, without further lending, some development projects would cease and result in significant immediate loan default. 466
And then you say that in the first part of 2008 a, by any standards massive, €6.5 billion was lent out. 467
This is a … is this a very, very kind of a stark situation, Mr. Fitzgerald, that you are locked into something as if it is out of your control, despite the fact that everything should be saying that you should be cutting back on lending? I mean, a picture that came to my mind, would it be too dramatic to describe Anglo as let’s say a “legal prescription drug supplier” with a highly addicted client who shouldn’t … who should be weaned off the stuff but you are terrified of the effects of cold turkey, economic arrest, cardiac arrest or something like this? Is … does this paint, does this in your mind paint a very stark picture in retrospect? 468

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I don’t think your analogy is offside at all, in that I know that we obviously had – and if we just break it down, I suppose, when you are trying to curtail lending to a client base that have a multitude of projects that are on-running, etc. – then you basically have, as I mentioned earlier on and just, I suppose in context as well, I wasn’t on the lending side … I was just aware of the funding implications, yes, of the continued lending in 2008. 469

Deputy Joe Higgins

Can I ask you, Mr. Fitzgerald, then, just to … did that situation arise largely from the methods of Anglo? Large loans, for example, for speculative land development and then to justify this you had to fund the developers who were speculating with a construction of some kind to go on it. 470

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

That—– 471

Deputy Joe Higgins

It was an inevitable consequence of this method of work. 472

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I don’t, I couldn’t give you an informed answer on that because I wasn’t on the lending side of the business. I suppose the highest level-view that I could give you on it was that lending to try and stop the lending machine in Anglo, yes, from the start of 2008 or maybe the last quarter of 2007, involved careful choosing of which projects that could be backed, I believe, which projects would need to be not backed any further. And I suppose the point and the reason I put it in my statement was that stopping lending outright when a crisis hits – and it may well have been a factor for all of banks, all of the banks that were hit by the crisis – proved very difficult for Anglo and I don’t think your analogy is wrong either. 473

Deputy Joe Higgins

And Mr. Fitzgerald, was this partly what left us, for example, with a multitude of ghost estates? That the initial lending had been made to buy but then the crisis came and no more—– 474

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think that is very possible, yes. 475

Deputy Joe Higgins

Yes. But did it not occur to you, Mr. Fitzgerald, an experienced financial person who keeps an eye on world affairs, that booms like this inevitably slump and crash, so it’s a musical chair but at some stage the music will stop? 476

Chairman

You must give way now, Deputy. 477

Deputy Joe Higgins

Would that not have occurred to you in the course of the 2000s? 478

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Yes. To be honest, Deputy, I had no experience of that other than a growth environment for the bank. I believed the model that we operated was sound until it was evident that it wasn’t. 479

Deputy Joe Higgins

My very last question, Mr. Fitzgerald for the time, I beg your pardon, is this. Again, to say, to quote you, “[A]s I understand it, a substantial portion of the [total] new net lending figure of €6.5 billion in 2008 was lent in the first half of 2008 when funding the existing balance sheet was becoming increasingly more difficult”. Mr. Fitzgerald, was that reckless trading to dole out €6.8 billion at a time when you had difficulty funding the existing commitments? 480

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

The only comment I would make on that, I think, is that what I was looking to do was describe the challenge of maintaining and growing funding, together with curtailing, as best as possible, the amount of lending. If that was the net result that was probably the best the bank could have done at the time. I would also add that it was our view that the credit crisis would abate and that it would resolve. If you look at the results, the presentation of the bank in 2008, it was for, you know, dislocation in the markets to last for another 12 months, maybe 18 months, and then we would regain traction. So it was about slowing, curtailing growth so that we could recover and move on. I think there was never a view in the bank that, quite obviously, that we wouldn’t see it to the end of the year. 481

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay. Thank you. 482

Chairman

Thank you very much. I’d like to move towards wrapping up and in doing so I invite Senator D’Arcy in please. Senator D’Arcy, three minutes. 483

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Fitzgerald, what was your salary and bonuses at the peak during the boom? 484

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Can I ask direction on that, Chairman? 485

Chairman

That’s a matter that has been raised with a number of other witnesses that have been before the committee, Mr. Fitzgerald. It is your prerogative whether you wish to answer that or not. 486

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I’d prefer not to answer that question, if that is okay. 487

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Fitzgerald, in terms of your role in retail and non-retail deposits, can I ask in terms of anti-money laundering legislation, was that high on your list of issues to be dealt with and did you have any interaction with the Financial Regulator in that matter? 488

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

It was very high on the agenda. We were inspected on it regularly, externally as well as internally, but I didn’t have interaction with the Financial Regulator – it would have been through the group compliance function of the bank. 489

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And Mr. Fitzgerald, to finish, did you read the Simon Carswell book? 490

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I did, yes. 491

Senator Michael D’Arcy

In your view, did it paint an accurate picture of life within Anglo Irish Bank? 492

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think it did. 493

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And just to finish on a specific issue, in relation of page 148 and I am discussing the St. Patrick’s Day massacre, in relation to Merrion Capital and a broker and adviser, Mr. Ken Costello, who was, I use the term “focused upon” by Anglo Irish Bank. Are you aware of what I am discussing? 494

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I am from the book, yes. 495

Senator Michael D’Arcy

From the book. Were you aware that that occurred? 496

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I wasn’t at the time, no. 497

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You weren’t. You had no knowledge of that matter. 498

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No. 499

Chairman

Thanks very much, Mr. Fitzgerald. I just want to wrap up with a couple of questions myself with you and then we will bring matters to a conclusion. Mr. Fitzgerald, do you believe that it was appropriate that you, as a member of senior management having a team of over 300 people reporting to you, were focused solely on one area of business and that you appear to have operated in a type of isolation from the rest of the bank? Would that be a fair assessment? 500

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think it is a reasonable assessment, yes. I think it is the way the bank operated in that it was very segregated in terms of its divisions – lending, treasury and wealth management – and within those lenders had geographic locations and individual portfolios, and in treasury it was the same. 501

Chairman

And in that regard, do you believe that you had an obligation to concern yourself with the wider business strategy of the bank? 502

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

For the period of time I was on the senior executive board which was, as I have mentioned, probably less than a year I did input into that strategy but aside of that it wasn’t part of my role. 503

Chairman

Okay. Do you feel it should have been? 504

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

In hindsight, I think the board of the bank regularly took budget presentations from the bank – and when I say “regularly” it was on an annual basis. If they had concerns they would make an agenda item for your business function to come up and the debate at those board meetings was always robust but in hindsight, yes, we probably could have benefited from being less segregated. 505

Chairman

And in your opinion what was the fundamental failing of the management structure of the bank? 506

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

My personal view is that one of the deficits in the structure was that we didn’t have a director of treasury represented on the main board of the bank as an executive director. We did have non-executive directors with banking and treasury experience but, if you think about it, for a considerable period before and during the crisis we did not have a director of treasury at an executive level. 507

Chairman

Mr. Fitzgerald, I’d like to return to maybe the period of in and around 2008 and maybe first ask you as to where do you think that Anglo eventually ran out of road and was beyond the point of no return? 508

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I think it was … certainly, in my mind, it was post the collapse of Lehman’s, because—– 509

Chairman

Which was in what period? 510

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

It was 15 September onwards. 511

Chairman

Okay. 512

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

It’s when it became most stressed. 513

Chairman

Of 2008? 514

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

In 2008, yes, excuse me. 515

Chairman

Okay. Prior to that? The road looked okay, yes? 516

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

No, I think the bank …. and I mentioned in my statement …. the bank found itself defending its position and defending its business model from probably the last quarter of 2007 onwards. 517

Chairman

So there was a growing awareness of evolving issues in the bank at that time, yes, okay? 518

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

They were predominantly equity issues, where the share price started to fall and we were vigorously defending, I suppose, the business model of the bank at that stage. 519

Chairman

So in that environment of growing awareness and evolving issues, did you have any discussion with any board members, senior management or, indeed, any officials at any level in Anglo Irish Bank on the need to get access to what might be called “the political air” or to get issues facing Anglo into the political air? And, if so, was there any mechanism by which this would actually happen in Anglo? 520

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

It wasn’t a conversation that I had with anyone in the bank. 521

Chairman

And would you be familiar that if such a conduit was to be taken, who would be the conduit? 522

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I would’ve assumed it would’ve been the chairman. 523

Chairman

Who was who? 524

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I would’ve assumed it would’ve been the chairman. 525

Chairman

Which was who? 526

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Seán FitzPatrick. 527

Chairman

Seán FitzPatrick. Okay, with that said, there’s just one final issue I want to raise with you, Mr. Fitzgerald, this morning. And that is in regard to just the general perception of Anglo Irish Bank and its senior management and so forth, and to ask you if … there’s been a lot written over the last number of years, a lot spoken about Anglo and its senior team. Mr. Fitzgerald, as a senior executive in Anglo Irish Bank, what are your views on the public perceptions that were put forward? 528

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

Given everything that’s gone on with Anglo Irish Bank in terms of its activities, both from a business perspective and also in terms of alleged issues of corporate governance, I fully understand that the actions of the bank can never be forgiven or forgotten. And I would never look to defend them, either in a forum like this or outside of it, and from that perspective, I’d leave it at that. 529

Chairman

So with that said, I just would like to invite you, Mr. Fitzgerald, if you so wish, if there are any closing comments or remarks that you’d like to make, to give you an opportunity to do so and then I’ll bring matters to an end. 530

Mr. Peter Fitzgerald

I’ve no further comments to add and I just want to thank the Chairman of the committee for your time today. 531

Chairman

Okay, thank you. Thank you also for your participation today and your engagement with the inquiry. Mr. Fitzgerald, you’re now formally excused and I propose that we take a recess for 15 minutes after which we will move on to our next session. Is that agreed? Agreed. 532

Sitting suspended at 11.13 a.m. and resumed at 11.38 a.m.