Sitting suspended at 3.22 p.m. and resumed at 4.45 p.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT:
| Deputy Pearse Doherty, | Senator Sean D. Barrett, |
| Deputy Joe Higgins, | Senator Michael D’Arcy, |
| Deputy Michael McGrath, | Senator Marc MacSharry, |
| Deputy Eoghan Murphy, | Senator Susan O’Keeffe. |
| Deputy Kieran O’Donnell, | |
| Deputy John Paul Phelan, |
Ballymore Group – Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Mr. Sean Mulryan, founder Ballymore Group.
Chairman
| Thank you for coming before the committee this afternoon, Mr. Mulryan, and if I can invite you to make your opening remarks please. | 860 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 876 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| And in many other sites but what was happening I think, to be honest about it, there were too many … too much money chasing a small number of trophy sites. | 877 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay, and that was pushing up the price? | 878 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 880 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–that land was overpriced by an enormous amount. | 881 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No—– | 883 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–when you were bidding for sites—– | 884 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, you don’t get that in the UK. It’s a much bigger market—– | 885 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay—– | 886 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well—– | 891 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Or was it just a relationship you built up? | 892 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, all the banks had a very, very strict method of the process and I think on my statements I showed you the process that we have always been going through—– | 893 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| You did. | 894 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, no, no. Certainly not. | 897 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| How long? Never? | 898 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Two months, at least, I’d say would be the normal. | 899 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Before you’d have any indication from the bank? | 900 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Ah no, you’d have an indication, you know, you go through a process. | 901 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes. | 902 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| First of all we would ourselves, before … we have to assess, before we’d go to any bank, do we want this? Do we have to pay too much for it? So we go through our own process. | 903 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes. | 904 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Ballymore will pay all of the debt back – 100% of it. | 909 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| 100%? | 910 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Uh-huh. | 911 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And did you have such opportunity to spread that business? | 914 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I would have, yes, I would have. If we had really sat down and assessed it, we would have had the opportunity, in the later years, to have worked with some of the bigger international banks. | 915 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, of course Nationwide … all of our dealings with Nationwide was 100% debt-funded because it was a joint venture. | 921 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And they took 50% of—– | 922 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| And they … of the profits. | 923 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–the profits. | 924 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| That’s the 100%. | 925 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And was that the first of its kind in the Irish banking system that you’re aware of? | 926 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| It probably was, in ‘92, I would say. | 927 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| ‘92. | 928 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. I’d say it was. | 929 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And did they persist with that model in—–? | 930 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. And, for the other banks you say that 80% would have been typically available during the period, 80% debt finance for a project. Was that the Ballymore experience? | 932 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| It varied … it varied, 70%, 80%, yes. | 933 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. Were personal guarantees a feature of your borrowings? | 936 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay, and prior to that it had been 1990 was the—– | 938 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 939 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Oh, absolutely. | 945 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–and that the model wouldn’t—— | 946 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| And even today. | 947 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. How many companies were there in the Ballymore Group? Because you indicate that … if I’m reading your statement correctly, that there was a separate corporate entity for every project. | 948 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| For each development, yes. | 949 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| For each development. So at any point in time, how many companies would you have had—— | 950 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I can’t give you that answer, but I’m sure it was over 20. | 951 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Over 20. | 952 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| It was a lot … it was a big number. I just don’t have that. | 953 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And they would all have had the same parent company? They would all be sitting within the Ballymore Group? | 954 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 955 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. I—– | 957 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–rationalise that? | 958 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Sure. And your group also supported Fine Gael, PDs, Labour, but to a much lesser extent, and—– | 960 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| You wouldn’t get the same requests from the other parties as much as Fianna Fáil at that time, I would imagine. | 961 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Sure. | 962 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| They were more active in fund-raising, in a sense. | 963 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And why would you support political parties, or public representatives? | 964 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And did you ever feel that you gained influence for your business by supporting politicians or parties financially in this way? | 966 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I’d nearly say the opposite, to be quite honest. | 967 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Why would you say that? | 968 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 972 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–on the market. | 973 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| And did you believe there would be a soft landing; that the property reductions would be 10%-20%, as opposed to 50%-60%? | 974 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes, I thought 20%-25%. I thought that was max. | 975 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 976 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| But I expected 20%-25%. | 977 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. | 978 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Sorry, the valuations? | 981 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| The valuation process by … by banks, yes. | 982 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, the valuation—– | 983 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| The valuation, valuing security and—– | 984 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–were done by … no, the Red Book valuations—– | 985 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Yes. | 986 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Okay. Finally, Mr. Mulryan, overall now, when you reflect on what happened, do you believe that Ballymore Properties was a victim of the banking crisis or a contributor to the banking crisis? | 988 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, I think we were a victim because we didn’t anticipate it. We had most of our assets in London and … so I would say a victim. | 989 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Thank you. Thank you, Chair. | 990 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Senator Susan O’Keeffe. | 991 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Thanks, Chair. Mr. Mulryan, if I can just go back a moment to the joint venture arrangement you had with INBS, was that vehicle called Clearstorm—– | 992 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well—– | 993 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–or were there several vehicles? | 994 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–there was several vehicles, yes. | 995 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. And would—– | 996 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I think every … almost every one was a different vehicle. | 997 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. | 998 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 999 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I don’t think it changes at all. I mean, it’s the same process. I don’t think it changes it a lot. | 1001 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Could it be argued that the financial institutions become speculators of a kind, do you think? | 1004 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, they’re taking risk, of course. | 1005 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Is that what financial institutions … is that what we understand them to do, to take risks? | 1006 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, it depends. There were … you know, it depends on who they lend the money to. I mean—– | 1009 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Quite. | 1010 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And that’s what happened? | 1012 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1013 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| In the … you listed there 11 banks with whom you did business – or 11 financial institutions – of which INBS was one. Would you have had similar joint ventures with all or some of the others—– | 1014 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. | 1015 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| —–or was it just them? | 1016 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Just Nationwide. | 1017 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| That was their model and I just don’t know. | 1019 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. Did you ever ask any other financial institution to engage in that kind of—– | 1020 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. Sometimes but not at all the time. | 1023 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| No, no. Not all the time—– | 1024 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Very, very, very … very … probably 10% of the business, yes. | 1025 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. And what would the purpose of that had been, when you did that? | 1026 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well it is … it is like … it’s a joint venture and the purpose would be, I suppose, sharing the risk. | 1027 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. Did you have an Isle of Man business part to your whole business structure and, if so, why would you have had that? | 1028 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Is it tax efficient? | 1030 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely, yes. That’s … that would be the reason. | 1031 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. | 1032 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| That would be the purpose but whether it worked out or not is a different story. | 1033 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I’d say mostly in London … in … in … mostly in London whereas you’d have areas that hadn’t been developed and I’d say London … London more so than Ireland, I would say. | 1039 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. | 1041 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| No. | 1042 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And you would, of course, have negotiated. | 1044 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, I wouldn’t be negotiating. I would have a managing director—– | 1045 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| No, but, I beg your pardon—– | 1046 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–that would negotiate. | 1047 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, in hindsight, absolutely, yes. | 1051 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. So were you aware of this selling of loans? | 1052 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. | 1053 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| No. Okay. And why … so I think you said it was … was it just that it became the way you did business, that you kept your business here and your … your banking business here—– | 1054 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely. | 1055 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And would he have been someone you might have invited to your home or to various events that you were hosting? | 1060 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely, yes. | 1061 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Would you have been able, Mr. Mulryan, to ring them up if you wanted to ask them something? Because, you know, some people don’t know politicians on that level and some people do. | 1064 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Never. No. Absolutely not. | 1065 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| No. Never? | 1066 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Never. | 1067 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Did you know, or have any relationship with, Mr. Brian Cowen, again the former Taoiseach and former Minister for Finance? | 1070 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And so again, obviously, you’d invite him to various events? | 1072 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely, yes. | 1073 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely, yes. | 1075 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. So would you have had a similar relationship with politicians across all the parties or was it just these politicians that we’ve spoken of? | 1076 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, I suppose I would know politicians cross-party, yes. | 1077 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Would you invite as many of them to your … in the same way as the three that we’ve discussed? | 1078 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Not really. These … I know, we’ll say, Charlie McCreevy and Brian Cowen going back, say, over 20 years. So it’s a different relationship. | 1079 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Do you believe that that allowed you any advantage, that relationship that you had with them, or not? | 1080 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I don’t think so. Most of my business was always outside of Ireland. And our business in Ireland was just building homes. So I don’t see why political … I could be helped in my business. | 1081 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Did you ever calculate, Mr. Mulryan, how much the various tax breaks and incentives … did you ever make a calculation as to how much they might have benefited you, or did they benefit you? | 1082 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| On tax incentives? | 1083 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Urban renewal schemes and—– | 1084 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| We never done any in Ireland. | 1085 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Nothing at all? | 1086 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, I’m 99% certain. Just in case we did one. | 1087 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Well, that’s, I mean—– | 1088 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| If it was it was very … if it was it was tiny, but never. I never really went into that. I wasn’t interested in it. Not really interested in that. It’s a false market when you start doing that. | 1089 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Of course. | 1091 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Is that correct? Would you … did you ever, as Mr. Mulryan, make donations yourself personally? | 1092 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I don’t think so, but I can’t be 100% certain. But if it was, it would be insignificant. | 1093 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| There is no doubt towards the end of the … towards 2005 and around that period, the banks were seriously competing again … and—– | 1095 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| How was that clear Mr. Mulryan? How did you know that? | 1096 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Can you recall at any point when you said in your head “It’s gone to another stage”? Was there a moment, it may not have been a defining moment but—– | 1098 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I would really … I suppose when, and I’m not going to mention any names because some of these guys are friends of mine—– | 1099 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Of course. | 1100 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| So, to put it in the vernacular, it sort of became a free for all, where everybody thought they might make money too. | 1102 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely | 1103 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And then … and so … at that point did that change your view of what you were doing in Ireland? | 1104 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| We shared it and done our surveys and one of my guys … we used to send in our feelings in to the Department. | 1107 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Right, and did you ever get a response to that? | 1108 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| You were as described as the kind of person who likes to go through the snag list and, again, I’m quoting so it may be … is that a reasonable thing to say? | 1110 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Pardon? | 1111 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| You were described as the kind of person who himself likes to go through the snag list. | 1112 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, no, I supervise everything. | 1113 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| And if you were to define the key difference, because I’m sure that, I mean, might take quite a long time, but is there a key difference that you would do differently the next time? | 1116 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| What was Peter Bacon’s role in Ballymore? | 1118 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| But do you believe you made any contribution to the crisis that we have come through? | 1122 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, if I didn’t pay my debt back I’d say I did, but I don’t think so. | 1123 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Chairman
| Have you seen this, Mr. Mulryan, have you? | 1127 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| I’m sorry. | 1128 |
Chairman
| Just we need to allow flexibility for that. | 1129 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I haven’t seen it, no. | 1130 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Sorry, and if you don’t know it’s fine—– | 1131 |
Chairman
| In that regard, Mr. Mulryan, just to advise you, if you are unfamiliar with it and you don’t feel comfortable answering because it’s unpresented material you can refrain from replying. | 1132 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. | 1134 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| No, so thank you. That’s fine. Thank you. | 1135 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Sorry, deficiencies in …? | 1137 |
Chairman
| In the lending process, or not, at that time? | 1138 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well I can … I can only speak for ourselves. | 1139 |
Chairman
| In your own experience, yes. | 1140 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| From our point of view … I already said, you know, I think that the 70-30 is high risk. | 1141 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1142 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| That’s where I’d see deficiencies, yes. | 1143 |
Chairman
| What do you mean by 70-30? | 1144 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, the 70% debt to 30% equity in development. | 1145 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I’m sure it went on. We ring-fenced everybody, everything individually, so we knew exactly, you know, we were … we could monitor it from development to development. I don’t fully understand—– | 1147 |
Chairman
| Okay. Would there have been … would you have been familiar with loans that would have been issued on the basis that was no material cash deposit? | 1148 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Oh absolutely, yes. | 1149 |
Chairman
| Other than equity. | 1150 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes, the equity from another site. Yes, in certain cases, yes. | 1151 |
Chairman
| And would there have been instances where that equity could have been used as cross-securitisation—– | 1152 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1153 |
Chairman
| —–and that would have been to different financial institutions. | 1154 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, not with different financial institutions. | 1155 |
Chairman
| Okay, so development X, equity would be used for one loan or a number of loans with one institution, but they wouldn’t be with a number of institutions. | 1156 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1157 |
Chairman
| Thank you. Do you have a view on whether the valuation process in the pre-crisis period influenced lending practices in the Irish banks? | 1158 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| The valuation … the Red Book valuations? | 1159 |
Chairman
| Yes, yes. | 1160 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, it’s not a … it’s the only way that the system worldwide, this valuation, but it’s not exactly a science that … it can vary dramatically, the valuation system. | 1161 |
Chairman
| In your construction field, Mr. Mulryan, did you develop retail or commercial units? | 1162 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Our business would be 75% residential, and then … maybe 80% residential, and we did some retail. | 1163 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Not really. We were not … it wasn’t … a very small part of our business model. | 1165 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
| Okay. Thank you very much. I just propose we take a five-minute break, if that’s okay, thank you very much, and we’ll resume in five minutes. | 1171 |
Sitting suspended at 5.55 p.m. and resumed at 6.14 p.m.
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I’m 98% certain it would be Finance. | 1173 |
Chairman
| Okay. All right. Would these reports have been written by Mr. Bacon or by another individual in Ballymore? | 1174 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. Yes, one of my executives in Ballymore. | 1175 |
Chairman
| Okay, and they were the corporate view of the company going to the Department anyway, so. | 1176 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1177 |
Chairman
| Okay. Thank you. Deputy Eoghan Murphy. | 1178 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, they would be in the bank, and I would say average two … two to three hours. | 1180 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| They were going to have no more—– | 1183 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| More exposure—– | 1184 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Sorry, more or no more exposure? | 1185 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No more. | 1186 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| No more. | 1187 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| That they felt, and that, you know, at times they would have asked us not to come back looking for any more until we had paid down so much debt. | 1188 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. So on none of those occasions, none of the banks that you did business with—– | 1189 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1190 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–came to you or suggested to you that they had something to offer that you weren’t looking for? | 1191 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, no, not … absolutely no. | 1192 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1195 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| So there would be very little discussion about the Irish housing market. | 1196 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1198 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| What was that change? | 1199 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well some banks, not them all. | 1200 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Well, with some banks. What was the change that you noticed? | 1201 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And—– | 1203 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| And probably, maybe not in all cases now. | 1204 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, I didn’t. | 1206 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And was it easier for you to get credit or financing or loans at the time as a result of any change that you noticed in the banks at the time, whether to old or new lenders? | 1207 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, I think we’ve had the same procedure and model. I think that continued right through. | 1208 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1210 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, on the … on the Glass Bottle site we didn’t bid, we withdrew. | 1212 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1213 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Because we were … we weren’t remotely close to the asking price, so we withdrew. | 1214 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. But Jurys and Burlington? | 1215 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So, the bank approached you over the Burlington site? | 1217 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1218 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| But, sorry, just a moment ago I thought you told me that the banks never approached you? | 1219 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| But this was private banking, private banking. | 1220 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| I don’t understand the distinction. | 1221 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Sorry—– | 1222 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| This is a private bank or private—– | 1223 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| The private … private banking. Not the bank, the private … the private equity part of the bank approached me. | 1224 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| But part of the bank? | 1225 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, yes, private … private bank. | 1226 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| I mean, can we not deduce from that that it is the bank then approaching you—– | 1227 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, it—– | 1228 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–to go into a deal? | 1229 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1230 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| It is? | 1231 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1232 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So, in relation to my earlier question when I asked you if any of the banks ever approached you about new lending, or about, you know, investing in a particular site—– | 1233 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, that’s—– | 1234 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —-the answer to that question would be? | 1235 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, yes, but that wasn’t lending. I wasn’t … in this case, on the Burlington site, I was offered to come in, use Ballymore as the delivery of that particular site. | 1236 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And this suggestion was put to you by the private banking in—– | 1237 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Private banking. | 1238 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–in one of the banks? | 1239 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1240 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| And to just … to go back to the earlier line of questioning then, did this happen often? | 1241 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, that was the only one. | 1242 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| That was the only time it happened? | 1243 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes, yes. | 1244 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. You knew at the time that the market was overheated and that there was too much debt in the real estate sector, but you still went and bid? | 1245 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1246 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Why? | 1247 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| You weren’t taking any financial risk? | 1249 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. | 1250 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So, how did that work? | 1251 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| It was the same model as worked with Nationwide for 22 years. | 1252 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. So it was an easy call then for you to make, if there’s no risk involved—– | 1253 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, it was—– | 1254 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–only an upside? | 1255 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes, but we still didn’t bid the asking price; we were €120 million under. | 1256 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay, so, if there’s no risk involved, why not up the asking price? There’s no risk to you, so you’ve nothing to lose and, if you bid a higher price, you could potentially gain? | 1257 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| You could, yes. | 1258 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| So why not … why bid low? Why not bid high? | 1259 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Because what’s the point? I mean, what’s the point in working for five years and losing money? | 1260 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| I don’t understand. | 1261 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, I mean to say, you’re getting 50% of the profits—– | 1262 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Yes | 1263 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–on this, I’m using the Burlington as an example. | 1264 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Yes. | 1265 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| You’re getting 50% of the profits; okay. If you pay too much for the land, okay? | 1266 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Yes. | 1267 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| €100 million too much, or €120 million, you’re going to get nothing anyway, so what’s the point? | 1268 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| But I thought you said there was no risk to making the investment on your part? | 1269 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| But there’s time. Time is money and time is risk. | 1270 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1271 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| So you don’t … you pay the price that you think is appropriate, regardless of whether you are putting in no money or not. That was the way we … that’s what was our decision on that. | 1272 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1273 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| So we thought that we would go with this. We were taking no financial risk, but we still stayed … we still put … we still bid what we thought was the appropriate price. | 1274 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1275 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| We didn’t take into consideration paying too much because we weren’t putting anything in to make sure we got it. | 1276 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1278 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–did that concern you at the time? | 1279 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Sorry? | 1285 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Were you successful in availing of credit from various providers so as to mitigate any level of dependence or over-reliance on a specific source? | 1286 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Probably not, when we see where we have … with NAMA, it obviously … obviously not. | 1287 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| How did it happen? | 1289 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| How did that happen? I mean, was there a breakdown inside Ballymore in terms of your internal lending strategies, your risk procedures? | 1290 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Chairman
| Be mindful of the sensitivity of the commercial information, like … that—– | 1293 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| I’m just using information that’s been provided, Chair. | 1294 |
Chairman
| Sure. | 1295 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Thanks. | 1296 |
Chairman
| I just need to, kind of, put that in the space, Deputy. | 1297 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Again, on page 11, Anglo Irish Bank seem to have always secured the most commercial … competitive commercial terms for you. | 1298 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I wouldn’t … I don’t agree with that. I mean—– | 1299 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. | 1300 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–I don’t agree with that. I think that … look, it varied from development to development. | 1301 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. But can I ask just then, as a final question, would you ever … have ever borrowed from Anglo, even if it wasn’t on the most competitive … or most competitively commercial terms available? | 1302 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| We probably would. | 1303 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| You probably would. Why? | 1304 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Because of the long-standing relationship and the trust that we had built up over 20 years. | 1305 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Okay. And just my final question then, would you ever have sought to borrow from an Irish bank, been refused and gone to its subsidiary in the UK to borrow orvice versa? | 1306 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, definitely not. | 1307 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| No. Okay. Thank you. | 1308 |
Chairman
| I don’t know if—– | 1309 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| It’s the answer to the question. It’s fine, Chair. | 1310 |
Chairman
| Okay. All right, thank you very much. Okay. Deputy Joe Higgins. | 1311 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1313 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Industrial. The rest of the land was industrial. | 1315 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| By doing a master plan and hiring the master planners to master-plan all of the … all of that area … for the infrastructure of the area and the roads to service it. | 1317 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| I just need you to be mindful, Deputy, of the overview that the relationship … the business model and the banking crisis. I’d just be careful of commercial sensitivity here, okay? Continue. | 1319 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. I’m … speaking under a particular terms of reference—– | 1320 |
Chairman
| I’m letting you continue on just … are you moving on? I just want to let you know that—– | 1321 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–it’s relation to leverage, as well—– | 1322 |
Chairman
| —–that guarded advice, Deputy. | 1323 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| It has been provided to the witness, has it? | 1325 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. This is an agreement dated 17 July and it’s … it’s between you and Wicklow County Council. You’re aware of this—– | 1326 |
Chairman
| Mr. Mulryan, are you familiar with the document that has been provided to you? | 1327 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely not, no. | 1328 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| All right. | 1330 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay? | 1331 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Mm-hmm. | 1332 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| You know the agreement I’m talking about? | 1333 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I don’t, but go for it. | 1334 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| But, Mr. Mulryan, it’s … present when the official seal of the council of county Wicklow was affixed is a nominated member—– | 1335 |
Chairman
| You’re moving beyond the terms of reference now, so I need you to kind of move to a question or to make clear why you want to travel with this please. | 1336 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| Okay, sorry, Deputy, you’re … we’re drifting into … sorry, Deputy—– | 1338 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
| Okay. | 1340 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| But you were not aware that the elected members were not notified of this? | 1341 |
Chairman
| Sorry, sorry, Deputy … Deputy, I’ll have to … I’ll have to bring you back from that space, okay. I really do. | 1342 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| We’re drifting outside the terms of reference now—– | 1344 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Would that be … would that be a normal way of—– | 1345 |
Chairman
| —–I have to give Mr. Mulryan a bit of space here, Deputy. | 1346 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–discussing the problems? | 1347 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Sorry, I don’t see, Chairman—– | 1348 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1349 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–what this has to do with the banking—– | 1350 |
Chairman
| No, I—– | 1351 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–with the banking inquiry. I’m astonished. | 1352 |
Chairman
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| I … if you wish I’ll just go through the … just legal advice now. If you wish, I can go into private session … or, just private session to deal with this, if you wish, Deputy. | 1355 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| No, but let me just—– | 1356 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1357 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| I want to move on—– | 1358 |
Chairman
| Okay, please. | 1359 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| I need a question, Deputy, please. | 1361 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–in March and that you and Mr. Dunne—– | 1362 |
Chairman
| I need a question, Deputy, that’s in the terms of reference. | 1363 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–and the councillor attended. Do you remember that meeting? | 1364 |
Chairman
| I need a question. | 1365 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, we had … we had many meetings and I would have to say—– | 1366 |
Chairman
| Mr. Mulryan, I just need to advise you that we’re drifting beyond the scope of the terms of reference here. | 1367 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Okay. | 1368 |
Chairman
| I’m not going to choose this moment to tell somebody not to answer a question but the prerogative and the decision to answer, that rests entirely with yourself, if you wish to or wish not to. | 1369 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, I think … I think, I’m certainly not fully up to speed with it and I don’t think … I don’t think it’s … it is … it’s more relative to planning—– | 1370 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Yes. | 1371 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–and it’s more relevant to—– | 1372 |
Chairman
| Please, Deputy, without interruptions. | 1373 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| The point, Mr. Mulryan, is—– | 1374 |
Chairman
| Deputy, without interruption. | 1375 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–would it be normal for … or would it be appropriate, for someone from a major—– | 1376 |
Chairman
Deputy Joe Higgins
| No. But just in terms of the interaction between the local authority and the developers, the banking sector, etc., would it be normal for developers, or appropriate to meet with a councillor—– | 1378 |
Chairman
| It would assist you, Deputy, if you ask a question. | 1379 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–to discuss details, and then the councillor brings their proposal into the local authority in the interest of the developer. Do you think that’s appropriate, or was it normal? | 1380 |
Chairman
| You’re outside of terms of reference there. | 1381 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely, yes. We would do that, yes. | 1384 |
Chairman
| Okay. Deputy. | 1385 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Or decrease, depending on the market. | 1387 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| In the period of the bubble that this inquiry is trying to look into, would the price of a site like that increase manyfold? | 1388 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Joe Higgins
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely, yes. | 1391 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| By … could you put a factor on it? | 1392 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Not specifically, no. | 1393 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Any rough—– | 1394 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| It varies on many, many issues it varies – there’s many variations, you can’t generalise – and locations. | 1395 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. Well—– | 1396 |
Chairman
| Wrap up so, please, Deputy. | 1397 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| I’ll just put … to finish the line. Just, I don’t know, and unless you want to tell me how much you paid and then when you sold the land on to other developers, how much you—– | 1398 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I actually wouldn’t be able to tell you that. I don’t know. | 1399 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
Chairman
| Deputy, I’m going to have to interject there. The question is made, Deputy, and the intent of it … I’m not too sure if Mr. Mulryan wants to—– | 1401 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, I might as well tell you, I do sympathise with young people and trying to get on the housing ladder. Absolutely. | 1402 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Okay. But—– | 1403 |
Chairman
| Deputy, I’m going to have to close it there, I really am. Deputy Pearse Doherty. | 1404 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Sorry, that? | 1406 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Is that an accurate statement or not? | 1407 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| That they would mingle where? | 1408 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Chairman
| Can you just quote the source of that there please, Deputy? | 1410 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| The source is … it’s by a … the investigator editor of, I think it’s the Mail on Sunday, it’s Michael O’Farrell, posted on 30 October 2011. | 1411 |
Chairman
| Are you familiar with that, Mr. Mulryan, are you? | 1412 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. | 1413 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I can’t remember that, but … Seánie FitzPatrick has been in my home on very few occasions. Very few, that he has been there, but I couldn’t tell you off the top of my head, but very few. | 1415 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay, okay, and … they, they would be events where other guests would be in a … in attendance. | 1416 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Mostly sporting occasions, once a year we would do a … we would do a party and we would invite neighbours and … and people from the horse racing business. I’m in horse racing in a way. | 1417 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1421 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Who else was in attendance at that meeting? | 1422 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| There was two Ballymore executives, the Taoiseach had a delegation with him, I—– | 1423 |
Chairman
| Now, we’re kind of moving to the edge of the terms of reference—– | 1424 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I don’t think he was at the meeting but he was in China with Bertie Ahern at that time. | 1426 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay. Do, what … can you outline to the committee your relationship with Fianna Fáil’s main fund-raiser, or the person behind the Galway tent? As he called it this week, I think it was his baby. | 1427 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Sorry? | 1428 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| I think he said it was his baby, this, this week, so can you outline the relationship, did you have a relationship either personal or business relationship—– | 1429 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| With who? | 1430 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| With Mr. Richardson. | 1431 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Included the chief fund-raisers? No. | 1434 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| No. And did you ever purchase property or were the beneficial owner of property from either Ministers, TDs or … the chief fund-raiser, in the form of Mr. Richardson? | 1435 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. | 1436 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes, we had a … there is a company that is not related to this, it’s a company that myself and a friend of mine owned, Markland, and it’s not, it’s outside of this. Not within the reference. | 1438 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| But it’s within the terms of reference, it’s … would this company … this company would have had—– | 1439 |
Chairman
| Mr. Mulryan is entitled to commercial sensitivity as well, Deputy, okay? | 1440 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| This is … now I’m talking for Ballymore Properties. | 1441 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1442 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| That’s what this is, what I’m asked to discuss. That’s what I’m here to do. | 1443 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Chairman
| We’re going into commercial sensitivity here now again, Deputy. | 1445 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. | 1448 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| No, you’re talking about all entities? | 1449 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely. | 1450 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| And, can we just clarify that you’re talking about the loans that were taken out from the financial institutions and not the money that was paid for those loans by NAMA? | 1451 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely. | 1452 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Chairman
| What document are you referring there to Deputy? | 1454 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| It’s a document from the PAC but it’s a public … the question I’m putting to him is—– | 1455 |
Chairman
| I know they might be public but the witness does need to have a familiarisation with things as well. | 1456 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Okay, are you familiar with the incentivisation proposal that NAMA has? | 1457 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Look it, I have a legal agreement with NAMA and, in that legal agreement, I have a serious confidentiality—– | 1458 |
Chairman
| And I don’t want you to breach that, Mr. Mulryan—– | 1459 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–and I can’t breach that—– | 1460 |
Chairman
| —–and I’m not asking you to do so either. | 1461 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Unfortunately, that’s a breach in my confidentiality. | 1463 |
Chairman
| And in respect to the witness, that is a document that he has signed and a legal position that he has to maintain. | 1464 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, 1,000 sounds a round number. I don’t know who … one of my guys … okay, so it’s speculation whether it’s 1,000 or 800, to be honest, okay? | 1466 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| Yes. | 1467 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I … I can’t answer that because it didn’t happen, it’s … I just don’t know. It didn’t happen. | 1472 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| You mention in your—– | 1473 |
Chairman
| Leading, Deputy, now. I’ll allow you with the question but don’t lead, okay? | 1474 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes, but—– | 1476 |
Deputy Pearse Doherty
| —–your loans would obviously be in default and would be called upon—– | 1477 |
Chairman
| Now, let Mr. Mulryan answer the question. You’re putting—– | 1478 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Where would I be? I’ve no idea. | 1479 |
Chairman
| And if he wishes to. | 1480 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| I’m sorry, I’ve just missed that one. | 1483 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Absolutely, yes. | 1485 |
Chairman
| Could you maybe elaborate upon that, please? | 1486 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| You’re talking about, sorry … funding—– | 1487 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, that’s where … before the crash, that’s where we were going. | 1489 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1490 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, from my experience, we had a model and it never changed right through that long period with the banks and I can’t comment on how the banks dealt with other borrowers. | 1493 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| As I said, I didn’t … from the model that we had right through, I didn’t see much of a change at all. | 1495 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Sorry? | 1497 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Did the banks loosen their business model in relation to Ballymore? | 1499 |
Chairman
| Yes. | 1500 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| And—– | 1501 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
| Okay. Thank you. We’ll move to wrapping things up so and if I can move to Deputy Michael McGrath, please. | 1504 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| I’ve no more questions. | 1505 |
Chairman
| Thank you very much. Senator O’Keeffe. | 1506 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Mr. Bacon left Ballymore in 2007 and since then I have had one phone call and one meeting with him in that period of time. | 1508 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Okay. Were you paid a salary by NAMA while you were—– | 1509 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No. Please—– | 1510 |
Chairman
| It’s very confidential … so. | 1511 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Sorry, I didn’t realise. David Brophy was one of your directors, isn’t he? Or one of your—– | 1512 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Yes. | 1513 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Yes. He was also a director of INBS, isn’t that the case? | 1514 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Correct. | 1515 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| How did that arise and can … could that have contributed to any conflict of interests that one of your directors was—– | 1516 |
Chairman
| Mr. Mulryan now might not be factual in that. I don’t want you to be speculating. So, unless you can … factual—– | 1517 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, on David Brophy I can give you … I have … I’m going to read it out, is that okay? | 1518 |
Chairman
| Okay, yes. | 1519 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Of course. | 1520 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, I suppose what would have happened that—– | 1523 |
Chairman
| Just there—– | 1524 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–these are legal contracts—– | 1525 |
Chairman
| They would, yes. | 1526 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| NAMA was established in 2010, so it would be the finalising of the—– | 1527 |
Chairman
| Indeed—– | 1528 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–legal contracts—– | 1529 |
Chairman
| Okay—– | 1530 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| —–leading in from 2008 and ‘09. | 1531 |
Chairman
| Okay, if we can get one—– | 1532 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| It stopped after that. | 1533 |
Chairman
| Okay, if we can get one asked that can be answered, we’ll end with that. | 1534 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
| Thank you. | 1535 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Okay, well, I’d just like to read this out. | 1539 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1540 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Sorry, Chairman, sorry, Chairman—– | 1541 |
Chairman
| Okay. | 1542 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| I think this is completely out of order, with respect. | 1543 |
Chairman
| I’ll suspend—– | 1544 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| You stopped me from asking Mr. Mulryan questions that I believe were very pertinent to try to explore the whole bubble and—– | 1545 |
Chairman
| Just, just—– | 1546 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–crisis and role of developers and banks and now you are allowing the witness to read a statement in relation to—– | 1547 |
Chairman
| I, I am hearing you, Deputy and I’m trying to operate—– | 1548 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| —–an issue over in Europe? | 1549 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, this is related to Ballymore and NAMA and finance and a contract right now. | 1550 |
Chairman
| Okay, I don’t know if we are getting into contracts now it might not be appropriate. | 1551 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| Can we ask questions on it then? | 1552 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Chairman, I mean, if its pertinent to the banking inquiry, as we have been progressing this—– | 1553 |
Chairman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| Just to clarify, Chair, I mean if you could clarify it through the witness. If this in relation to a particular commercial decision—– | 1555 |
Chairman
| Yes, we can’t—– | 1556 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–then we shouldn’t be able to go into it. We weren’t allowed to go into other commercial decisions—– | 1557 |
Chairman
| Yes, exactly—– | 1558 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
| —–with the witnesses—– | 1559 |
Chairman
| And that would be the balance. If this relates to a commercial matter and a business relationship, we didn’t pursue—– | 1560 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| It’s related to NAMA, Ballymore and €80 million. | 1561 |
Chairman
| Sorry, Deputy—– | 1562 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Can I ask if the statement has been made with the consent of NAMA? | 1563 |
Chairman
| Yes, that’s—– | 1564 |
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| No, I don’t have the consent, but I don’t need it. I’d just like to put it on the record because there was—– | 1565 |
Chairman
| Okay, what I—– | 1566 |
Deputy Joe Higgins
| What is the purpose of—– | 1567 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Well, if you, Chairman if you feel it’s … we’ll just leave it. | 1569 |
Chairman
| Okay, thank you. | 1570 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| Chairman, if it’s a significant story, we should hear what the man has to say—– | 1571 |
Chairman
| Okay—– | 1572 |
Deputy Michael McGrath
| —–I believe—– | 1573 |
Chairman
Deputy Joe Higgins
| It might be that the members can then ask questions in relation to the statement that is made? | 1575 |
Chairman
Mr. Sean Mulryan
| Great. Thank you. | 1577 |
| The joint committee went into private session at 7.06 p.m. and resumed in public session at 7.19 p.m. | 1578 |
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 7.19 p.m. and resumed at 7.45 p.m.