The Committee met at 09.30 a.m.
MEMBERS PRESENT:
Deputy Pearse Doherty, | Senator Sean D. Barrett, |
Deputy Joe Higgins, | Senator Michael D’Arcy, |
Deputy Michael McGrath, | Senator Marc MacSharry, |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy, | Senator Susan O’Keeffe. |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell, | |
Deputy John Paul Phelan, |
EBS – Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
Thank you Chairman. | 14 |
Chairman
The following witness was sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:
Mr. Alan Merriman, former Finance Director, EBS.
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Thank you very much, Mr. Merriman, for your opening comments this morning and if I can invite Senator Marc MacSharry, please, to begin questioning. Senator, you’ve 25 minutes. | 28 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
What was the dependency on wholesale funding at that time? | 31 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
And how did that manifest itself? Did you just get a call and say, “Look, we’re doing this and you’re in”, or, “Do you want to be in?” or—– | 35 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes, basically. I mean, quite literally got a phone call to say the guarantee had happened and, clearly, it was market-wide and, yes, that’s exactly how it happened. | 36 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
And who rang who? | 37 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I … my recollection is I certainly got a call from Kevin Cardiff confirming that this had happened, and it was as simple as that. | 38 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Was that early in the morning or 3 o’clock in the morning or—– | 39 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I can’t remember. I genuinely can’t remember. | 40 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
And would he … who did he make this case to? | 43 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I don’t know. | 44 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
You don’t … would it have been Kevin Cardiff or—– | 45 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I don’t know. | 46 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
—–was there any dialogue? You’re not aware of any dialogue at all? | 47 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Not directly. | 48 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
To the Central Bank or—– | 49 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. | 50 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Nobody. Okay. Was it your first to hear of it last week when you heard Mr.—– | 51 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Pardon? | 52 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Was it the first time you heard it when Mr. Murphy was—– | 53 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Again, I won’t have great recall but it would be most definitely in the second half of 2008 would be my guess from all I know. | 58 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
And were those meetings at your request or was—– | 59 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, they would have been … the vast majority would have been at the Central Bank’s request. | 60 |
Chairman
We’re getting some phone interference there now. | 61 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
I’m just trying to get a picture of what was routine and what wouldn’t have been routine. So let’s go back to the routine meetings pre-crisis. | 64 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Well—– | 65 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
How would they … what way would they manifest themselves? Would it be—– | 66 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Well, it would depend on the perspective. I mean, I never met – and I was the finance director – I never would have met with John Hurley until this time. | 67 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
And would you have met with Tony Grimes and Pat Neary? | 68 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
But certainly not the top brass that you say … Mr. Hurley and everybody was there together in the one—– | 70 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
As I said it was extraordinary times and it was very much in that context. | 71 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
And these meetings started in and around, to the best of your recollection, the second half of 2008? | 72 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. And I could be … I mean, the record might show that it was earlier but that’s my recollection. | 73 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Oh, yes, we’re only looking for your recollection. That’s fine. And did you have a sense that they were acting together? | 74 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 75 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
And they were on the same page, to your mind? | 76 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Broadly. I mean, they were meeting together, they were hearing us out together, they were sharing their input to us together. I’d no reason to believe otherwise. | 77 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Yes. So, really it was just a marking, a market kind of reporting set of meetings that was going on, as opposed to—– | 82 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Was there any sense that, that … or any discussion around that, that the liquidity difficulties could become solvency difficulties or anything like that? | 84 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. | 85 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
It … it … it was … it was more the aggregate. | 89 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
It was more the? | 90 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
The aggregate. It was … it was both—– | 91 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
It was a little bit of both? But again … so, just to … just to … sorry to be repetitive now, but, just to ask again, what kinds of actions were they recommending that you take? | 92 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
As I said, there were no explicit actions. There was no, “Alan, Fergus, go out and raise €500 million in the French commercial property market or in the French CP market.” | 93 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Yes. | 98 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
In my witness statement, the reference to the AIB merger is at a much earlier point in time, it’s December 2006-January 2007, and that was internal to the EBS board at that point in time. | 99 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
So, yes, thanks for that clarification. So … did, did AIB make an approach or … or—– | 100 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 101 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Okay. And—– | 102 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
And why did you feel that that was better? Was there—– | 104 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
So—– | 106 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
So was it your concern, in that sense, driven by a reducing market share? | 108 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Did you feel at the time that you were ahead of the curve and that you could see the demise of the society that nobody else could? | 112 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, no—— | 115 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
—–more, or was it a one-off turn down and that was it? | 116 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Okay, and that would have meant demutualising, all that kind of stuff—– | 118 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes, and clearly that would have been very much against the grain—– | 119 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
An EGM to … of the members to—– | 120 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
In terms of the retail end of the banking, had you have much involvement in that, in terms of sales, product, product target development, and things like that? | 122 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, not at a granular level. Clearly, I was on the board, clearly, I’m the finance director, so I, I clearly have a good overview, but not at a granular level. | 123 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
Okay. But, I mean, was that the culture? I mean, were—– | 126 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Marc MacSharry
And then they, in turn, would motivate the front-line staff. | 128 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
As any normal business would do. | 129 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
You said there “to be profitable within reason”. Can you ever recall an incident where at board it would have been said, “Well, look we have enough profit there now”? | 130 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Final question there, Senator. | 132 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Thanks. Just to take advantage of your career before EBS, if possible, and we’ve had much discussion here about the international accountancy standards, in particular, is it IAS 39? | 133 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 134 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, it’s a complete red herring and let me explain. And I think Dargan Fitzgerald from E and Y put it very well. I’ll actually read out what he said and then I’ll—– | 136 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Okay. | 137 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Thank you very much, Mr. Merriman. Thanks, Senator. | 141 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Very good, thank you. | 142 |
Chairman
Thank you, Senator. Deputy Murphy. Twenty-five minutes. | 143 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. | 145 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
No. | 146 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Absolutely not and let’s think about it. How did they hide the crisis? | 147 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
In terms of not being able to look to the future and the potential losses—– | 148 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. Thank you. | 150 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
—–an inadequate accounting standard but not really any material impact on what’s come about. | 151 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay, and the fact that the Spanish banks decided to allow for cross-cyclical provisioning in their own system—– | 152 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
But you had a battle with the board about what you were reporting, didn’t you, at one point? | 154 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 157 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes. On that point, other banks weren’t doing that at the time. | 160 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I can’t speak for other banks. | 161 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. | 162 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
But do you think that was unhelpful interference by them? | 164 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, I don’t think it was unhelpful—– | 165 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
You were trying to more prudent and more honest, is that correct? | 166 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
And just to clarify, you were able to call it as you saw it? | 168 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Absolutely, and we did. | 169 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. Thank you. | 170 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
And, as I explained, the reality is that in due course the provisions that were needed were far greater than we even thought at that point in time. | 171 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Chairman
What period is that, Deputy? | 173 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
It’s 2002. | 174 |
Chairman
2002. | 175 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
So just to clarify … when did the EBS see it as strategically important or appropriate for them to enter the commercial lending market? You say 1991? | 176 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
My understanding is they entered it in 1991-1992. | 177 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay, and here, in 2002, we see them talking about making a play into development finance in a particular way. If you see it in front of you on the screen. | 178 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes, okay, yes. | 179 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
So what I want to understand is—– | 180 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I mean, before my time but yes, I see it. | 181 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes, but when you arrived in 2005, was this now settled policy for the society? | 182 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes. So, there it outlines two approaches for development finance. Go for broke or the toe in the water. | 184 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 185 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
And the toe-in-water approach is the favoured one. So when you arrived in 2005, would you still describe its involvement with development finance as toe in the water as it moved on from there? | 186 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
One hundred million in 2005 and then, I think you said, €500 million in 2008. | 188 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 189 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. | 190 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Back end of 2008. | 191 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. Sorry, I’m just unclear. The 2005 strategic delivery process—– | 193 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
No, no, it’s sorry it’s not up on the screen yet. It’s … I’ll just get some more time as well, Chair, as a result. Thanks. I’m going to … it’s going to come up. I’m going to—– | 194 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Okay. | 195 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
What, what’s the date of that? | 199 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
This is the same board meeting in 2002. | 200 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. You think it was acceptable for the society to make that proactive approach to people to offer them commercial terms—– | 202 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
And you see a distinction between the two? | 204 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Of course I do. | 205 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. And when you arrived in 2005, were those types of conversations happening—– | 206 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. | 207 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 209 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Were you responsible for developing or preparing this paper? | 210 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I’ll need to see the paper. | 211 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes. 99 is the first page of the report and then it goes into detail and 100 and 101 from there on. That’s the first … yes, sorry, the first page is here just in front of you. | 212 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Okay so—– | 213 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
And then it continues on. | 214 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
—–again just for … so, if I’m looking at … is this the right one in front of me now? | 215 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes, yes. | 216 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
You were comfortable with the plan. | 218 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I was. | 219 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
So was Fergus Murphy wrong then, in that they … none of the business was good? They weren’t getting the better business, none of the business was good? | 222 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
As worse—– | 224 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Again, I don’t have it on screen. | 227 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Sorry, it’s page 101 of Vol. 1. It’s also in your first booklet, the first green booklet, Vol. 1. It might be handier. | 228 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
What page? | 229 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
101. | 230 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
The “Step Up” strategy. | 231 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes, is that the one that you supported as well? I mean, was there unanimous support for “Step Up” or were there different points of view? | 232 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I don’t recollect the contrary view and you know, certainly I was comfortable with the “Step Up” strategy. | 233 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. The “Step Up” strategy allows for it to evolve into any of the other alternatives as circumstances allow. Did it? | 234 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Exit strategy. And when did that change to an exit strategy? After—– | 236 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
2008, first half. | 238 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
So second half of ‘07 and the first half of ‘08. | 239 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Was it a voluntary departure then? | 242 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, again, look, I, you know—– | 245 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
I mean, does that play into this decision? | 246 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Battle is … “battle” is the wrong word. | 247 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Battle … okay, I beg your pardon. | 248 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I was very clear that I had my concerns about the long-term sustainability – for the reasons I shared earlier – of capital and funding. | 249 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. | 250 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. | 252 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
What was going on in the boardroom in ‘08 was making sure that the society was doing all the prudent things it needed to be doing to best … to best protect the society at that point in time. | 253 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mm-hmm. But do you feel that—– | 256 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Well, again, the Haven CEO wasn’t invited to be re-elected because, at that point in time, the Haven business was going to be exited. | 259 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes. | 260 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
So that was that context. | 261 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Very shortly after it had been established. | 262 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes, but, again, you have to look at before and after. So it was established at a time when there wasn’t a funding crisis and it was exited when the funding crisis was front and centre. | 263 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. | 264 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes. | 266 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
—–but they were understood. | 267 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
And you supported the move, then—– | 268 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I did. | 269 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
—–with Haven? I mean, it was—– | 270 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
It was also part of the deleveraging strategy in terms of getting … it was an answer to some of the funding challenges because there was going to be a JV at that point in time. | 271 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
I wanted to ask you about that actually … with Britannia Building Society. | 272 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Correct. | 273 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
That failed. Why did that fail? | 274 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
So why did EBS continue with it then? Why not take the warning signal from the failure and pull out—– | 276 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Because … excuse me. | 277 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
—–instead of going ahead 100% on the—– | 278 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Yes, I mean, there was a potential sale at one point, €5 billion, but that—– | 280 |
Chairman
One last question now, Deputy. | 281 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Thank you. But that didn’t go ahead; why not? | 282 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I told you. Because, basically, Britannia had no interest in proceeding given the difficulties that emerged in the market. | 283 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Okay. | 284 |
Chairman
Thank you very much. | 285 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Thank you, thank you. | 286 |
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Yes. | 289 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Okay. And there was nothing out there in the ether, by your recollection, in that regard? | 291 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Not … not to my understanding. | 292 |
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
I see it there, yes. | 296 |
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes, absolutely. | 300 |
Chairman
Okay. Right, in … to what extent, in your opinion, did the board consider it was appropriate in this regard to pull on what was described as the “green jersey” and invest in such assets? | 301 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
A hundred per cent, I would say. | 302 |
Chairman
Okay. All right. The—– | 303 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
So, you know, absolutely, you know, appropriately and accurately articulated by yourself. Very clear. | 304 |
Chairman
As a—– | 305 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
And that was absolutely the intention. | 306 |
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
No again, look, let me make again a very clear distinction. This is now post the Government guarantee—– | 308 |
Chairman
Indeed. | 309 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
—–coming in. | 310 |
Chairman
Okay. | 311 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
It’s in the crisis and it’s trying to accommodate a normalisation of the market. | 312 |
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
This would be more … I’d no direct involvement—– | 321 |
Chairman
Well, you … no, I’m asking you were you aware—– | 322 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, and I’m answering your question. | 323 |
Chairman
—–that the NTMA had reservations about these? | 324 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Yes. | 326 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Sure. And so this is after the guarantee and you’re now looking to be buying bonds from other banks and all the rest of it as a kind of means of a cross supporting one another. | 328 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Which is normal. Normal in a normal market—– | 329 |
Chairman
Yes, I understand that. | 330 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
—–and clearly normal in a stressed market. | 331 |
Chairman
But we’re not in a normal market here now one month after the State has actually guaranteed financial institutions. | 332 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
So it’s easier in this context. | 333 |
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
At this point or earlier? | 335 |
Chairman
At any time. | 336 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. And again I just go back to the transactions were senior debt. | 339 |
Chairman
At that time? | 340 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
At that time. | 341 |
Chairman
Okay. Thank you. Senator Susan O’Keeffe. | 342 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
Well, look, it’s … no, it’s well, no, I mean—– | 344 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
It was private? | 345 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I’m very sure it was private. They wouldn’t be disclosing by counterparty where their money was being placed. | 346 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
And you were not aware of it through other people? | 347 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Not especially. I’m guessing, and it’s a guess, so, therefore, I’m … you know, I don’t want to—– | 348 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
The historic one of 13% or the forward one of 25%? | 350 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
No, the forward one. Was it an ambitious target at that time do you think? | 351 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I think it was and I think it was understood as being ambitious. | 352 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
So, why have it there as part of the strategic review? | 353 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Well, because it … well again, as you rightly say it was before my time. But clearly that was their plan and that was their ambition and—– | 354 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
Well, let me answer. First of all, I think the dates here are maybe out of sync by a year, I think. | 358 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Well, I can’t be … yes. | 359 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
That, that—– | 360 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
I’m sorry I don’t know that. | 361 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, that’s all right, but that … I’m just, just clarifying it here. So, I think they’re out of sync by a year. I think they’re cash payments made in those years for the prior years, I think. | 362 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Yes, it does say that, for the previous year. But, again, you would have known in 2008 what was going on in the world around you and I’m asking—– | 363 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Sure and I’ve—– | 364 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
—–whether it was appropriate to take the bonus for the previous year in 2008? | 365 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Okay, so again, to try and clarify it for you, so it’s I think it’s the ‘07 bonus you’re asking me about which I took in 2008. | 366 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Correct. | 367 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
And so part of the courting of coming to the EBS would have been appropriate bonuses and—– | 369 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
As as is natural for any move in any employment. | 370 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Yes. I mean, he would have been … he was a man with a strong track record in other organisations wasn’t he? So he was a very senior manager. | 375 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Very experienced, very senior, very commercial. | 376 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. I think we have to be careful about, you know, when we talk about what did EBS do, what do we really mean by that so—– | 378 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
But what was the response at that time to his observations? | 379 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Chairman
I need you to ask the question so that he gets time to respond. | 385 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
No, I am not asking about the inundated—– | 388 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
In my view the frequency and the number would not have been of that magnitude. | 389 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Mr. Alan Merriman
No, there wasn’t a rush. There was a requirement for the business to be able to get board approval within a 24-hour period. | 393 |
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
In a 24-hour period. So that is correct? | 394 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Susan O’Keeffe
Thank you. | 396 |
Chairman
Senator D’Arcy. | 397 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
You joined in early 2005; is that correct? | 404 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
July 2005. | 405 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Merriman, have you seen the witness statement from Fidelma Clarke? Have you read that? | 410 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I have. | 411 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Sorry, I’d just like to find the—– | 413 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
It’s page 5. | 414 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I’ve different page numbers on mine. | 415 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Oh, sorry, okay. | 416 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Her statement starts on page 41 in my book. | 417 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
It’s, “Effectiveness of banks’ credit strategy and risk management.” | 418 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 419 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
And it’s the last paragraph, first line. Oh sorry—– | 420 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. | 421 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
—–first paragraph … last paragraph, first line. | 422 |
Chairman
It’s page 45 in the core booklet. | 423 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Is it? | 424 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Page 45. | 425 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
I’ll read the line to you, “The traditionally conservative approach to lending in EBS unravelled in the period [‘00 to ‘07].” You came in mid-’05. Did you … were you aware—– | 426 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Sorry, she said ‘00 to ‘07, is it? | 427 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Correct. | 428 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Okay, so over that seven-year period. | 429 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
You … were you aware that that had happened? | 430 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I was very conscious, as I think, generally, anybody in the market would be. So, five of those seven years were before my time—– | 431 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
I’m well aware. | 432 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
It’s on the monitor there now, Senator, as well, just to assist you. | 434 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Yes. | 435 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
I suppose where I’m coming from is—– | 439 |
Chairman
Last question now, Senator. | 440 |
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Senator Michael D’Arcy
Thank you. Thank you, Chairman. | 443 |
Chairman
Thank you very much. Deputy John Paul Phelan. | 444 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Thank you, Chairman. Good morning, Mr. Merriman. | 445 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Morning. | 446 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Chairman
There’s some phone interference coming by you there, Senator. Obviously—– | 448 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
It isn’t my one anyway. | 449 |
Chairman
I appreciate that, but sometimes proximity can cause it so, if it is, I’d ask the member to deal with it, please; not to have it interfering with your questioning. | 450 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy John Paul Phelan
They should have been paying the premium. Yes, okay. | 453 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
So I just thought it was madness—— | 454 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
And did you raise that? Did you—– | 455 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy John Paul Phelan
But you’re saying there was a discussion but perhaps not as in-depth as there—– | 457 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
It would have been understood but—– | 458 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Yes. | 459 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
—–it was a feature of the market. EBS was not going to change the market. | 460 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Alan Merriman
I do, yes. | 464 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Okay. | 467 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
That’s my view. | 468 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Okay. | 469 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Yes. I don’t think anyone … I’m not here to disagree, I don’t particularly disagree with anything that you said, but my—– | 471 |
Chairman
Last question, Deputy. | 472 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
—–my point still remains. I mean, this investigation by the regulator which was, as you said, kind of, standard practice, highlighted a number of fairly startling and—– | 473 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
But like—– | 474 |
Deputy John Paul Phelan
—–omissions by the EBS. | 475 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy John Paul Phelan
Okay. | 477 |
Chairman
Okay, thank you very much. I’m moving to wrap things up. First up is Senator MacSharry. Senator. | 478 |
Senator Marc MacSharry
Nothing further. | 479 |
Chairman
Okay, thank you. Deputy Murphy. | 480 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
That was 2005 at that point? Or it was—– | 483 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
That was late 2005. | 484 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Late 2005. | 485 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
Can I just ask—– | 487 |
Chairman
Final question, Deputy. | 488 |
Deputy Eoghan Murphy
—–what changed then in 2007? Why did the Financial Regulator change his opinion? | 489 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
Yes. | 492 |
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
Sure. | 494 |
Chairman
Mr. Alan Merriman
Chairman
But the affordability in that competition became difficult and more difficult than when—– | 497 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
It came … it’s the point I made earlier about—– | 498 |
Chairman
So for the purchase—– | 499 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
—–you know, change credit policy, go from 20 years to 25 years. Yes, it helps at that particular point in time but the reality is it’s just pushing up prices for everybody. | 500 |
Chairman
Okay. | 501 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
But, again, that’s not an EBS making. | 502 |
Chairman
I’m going to bring matters to an end. | 503 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Chairman. | 504 |
Chairman
Yes. | 505 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Could I invoke just one clarification? | 506 |
Chairman
You can, indeed. Quickly, before we go. | 507 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
You made reference that—– | 508 |
Chairman
Just a clarification not a question now. | 509 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Yes. It was on IAS 39, Chairman—– | 510 |
Chairman
Yes. | 511 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
—–and Mr. Merriman said it was a red herring, and the question I want to ask—– | 512 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Big picture. | 513 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
—–was EBS ever asked by the Financial Regulator or the Central Bank to increase the provisions on loan losses? | 514 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. | 515 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Were you surprised with that? | 516 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. | 517 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Did you—– | 518 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
They’d no reason in the context of we had auditors, they clearly knew we were very robust in our approaches. So they’d no reason to ask us to increase provision. | 519 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
But did they have the power to ask you? | 520 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
They’d the power to engage with us. | 521 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Did they have the power to ask you to increase the provisions? | 522 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
I think they could have asked us. But – and I’ll be very clear on this – we couldn’t have complied if it was outside of the accounting standard. | 523 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
So, therefore, how do you regard it as a red herring then? | 524 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Because I’m very clear the provisions are simply an accounting number. They’re nothing to do with the underlying losses that are true and economic. | 525 |
Chairman
All right, Deputy—– | 526 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Just for the final point, just in—– | 527 |
Chairman
Final point. | 528 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Mr. Alan Merriman
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
Why wasn’t that done? | 531 |
Chairman
Sorry—– | 532 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
Sorry, that was done. That was done. | 533 |
Chairman
—–Deputy, I take the point of clarification, now that’s it, it’s done, okay. | 534 |
Deputy Kieran O’Donnell
That’s fine. | 535 |
Chairman
Mr. Merriman, I want to bring matters to an end. Is there anything you’d like to say by … in addition or by closing remark or anything else? | 536 |
Mr. Alan Merriman
No. Thank you, Chairman. | 537 |
Chairman
Sitting suspended at 11.47 a.m. and resumed at 12.16 p.m.