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02/09/2015: John Stanley Purcell – Former Finance Director & Secretary, Irish Nationwide Building Society

AN COMHCHOISTE FIOSRÚCHÁIN I DTAOBH NA GÉARCHÉIME BAINCÉIREACHTA

JOINT COMMITTEE OF INQUIRY INTO THE BANKING CRISIS

The Committee met at 09.30 a.m.

MEMBERS PRESENT:

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

DEPUTY CIARÁN LYNCH IN THE CHAIR.

 

Irish Nationwide Building Society – Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Chairman

With that said, I am now going to call the session back into … or the inquiry back into public session. Is that agreed? And to deal with session 3 of today’s hearings with Mr. John Stanley Purcell, former finance director and secretary of Irish Nationwide Building Society. 1821
The Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis is now resuming in public session. Can I ask members and those in the public Gallery to ensure that their mobile devices are switched off? Our focus today is on the Irish Nationwide Building Society and we continue our hearings this evening with Mr. John Stanley Purcell, former finance director and secretary of INBS. Mr. Purcell joined Irish Nationwide as financial controller in 1986. He was appointed secretary of INBS in May 1999 and was appointed to the board of INBS in December 1994 as an executive director. He is now retired. Mr. Purcell, you are very welcome before the committee this evening. 1822

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Thank you, Chairman. 1823

Chairman

Before hearing from the witness, I wish to advise the witness that by virtue of section 17(2)(l) of the Defamation Act 2009, witnesses are protected by absolute privilege in respect of their evidence to this committee. If you’re directed by the Chairman to cease giving evidence in relation to a particular matter and you continue to do so, you are entitled thereafter only to a qualified privilege in respect of your evidence. You are directed that only evidence connected with the subject matter of these proceedings is to be given. 1824
I would remind members and those present that there are currently criminal proceedings ongoing and further criminal proceedings are scheduled during the lifetime of the inquiry which overlap with the subject matter of the inquiry. Therefore, the utmost caution should be taken not to prejudice those proceedings. Members of the public are reminded that photography is prohibited in the committee room. To assist the smooth running of the inquiry, we will display certain documents on the screens here in the committee room and 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 that are so displayed. 1825
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 and will be relied upon in questioning and form part of the evidence of the inquiry. So with that said, if I can now invite Mr. Stanley Purcell to take the oath with the clerk please. Thank you. 1826

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Thank you. 1827

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

Mr. John Stanley Purcell, former Finance Director and Secretary, Irish Nationwide Building Society.

Chairman

Once again, Mr. Purcell, thank you very much for your attendance at the committee here this evening and apologies for the delay that we are actually starting. And if I can now invite you to make your opening remarks to the committee, please. 1829

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Thank you, Chairman. I wish to begin by thanking the committee for inviting me to attend to give evidence at the inquiry. I also wanted to express my sincere regret to everyone who suffered as a result of the demise of INBS. 1830
My role in INBS was very diverse and I was engaged in a wide variety of functions on a daily basis. Whilst I was heavily involved in reporting, treasury, retail deposits, IT systems and compliance, I was not involved in the lending function outside my role on the board. 1831
Up to the crisis, INBS was successful. Profits increased year on year and the society grew accordingly. During the period leading up to the crash, much of the focus of the society and a huge amount of my time was taken up with demutualisation. The members hoped to gain a windfall profit from the demutualisation and sale of the society and the board worked extremely hard to put the apparatus in place for demutualisation. This involved the production, in 2007, by KPMG of a vendor’s due diligence report which provided a detailed snapshot of INBS at that time. The report was provided to the Central Bank. 1832
The strategy of the society, including demutualisation, developed over a long period of time. In terms of lending, as time progressed it became apparent that the residential market was overly competitive and margins were diminishing. Tracker mortgages, which INBS did not market, were commonplace. During the years 2004 to 2007, INBS, AIB, Anglo Irish, Bank of Ireland, Bank of Scotland, EBS, Permanent TSB and Ulster Bank lent heavily in the commercial-residential sectors. All of the institutions suffered extraordinary losses as a result of that lending. A combination of the availability of funding, low interest rates, increased competition, Government policy – including tax incentives for development – and rising property prices caused a surge in lending. 1833
INBS’s strategy was to increase lending in the UK. The UK property market did not collapse in the same way as the Irish market and the London market improved in the aftermath of the economic crisis. Over 50% of the loan book which transferred to NAMA related to assets outside Ireland. Consequently, I believe that the INBS assets transferred to NAMA were significantly undervalued. 1834
INBS developed a strategy over time which involved lending to clients who had a proven track record. Towards the end of 2007, it became clear that liquidity was tightening. The board decided to cease new lending in December 2007 when other institutions continued to lend anew, and this was the right strategy at that time. 1835
By September 2008, INBS’s liquidity was coming under pressure due to a credit rating downgrade and an inaccurate report on INBS by Reuters. The regulator arranged, at short notice, a meeting on Sunday, 7 September 2008 with AIB and BOI to discuss the possibility of the provision by AIB and BOI of a standby facility for INBS. INBS’s liquidity on 7 September was about €3.5 billion and information was provided to the meeting at short notice on liquidity, funding liabilities and the maturity of funding liabilities. The meeting concluded without any agreement to progress the provision of a standby facility. Had the matter progressed, any additional information required not brought to the “at short notice meeting” would have been provided. 1836
Towards the end of 2009, Ernst and Young began an investigation into legacy issues at INBS. I gave Ernst and Young every assistance required. The investigation ultimately led to the initiation of legal proceedings against the “old board” for the losses of the society. IBRC and INBS formally accepted in the pleadings in the proceedings that there was no dishonesty whatsoever on my part. 1837
The proceedings represented an attempt by IBRC to make the directors personally liable for the losses of the society. A central plank of the claim was the allegation by the plaintiffs that the delegation of powers by the board of the society to Michael Fingleton was excessive. On legal advice, I joined the Central Bank to the proceedings as a third party because they had approved the delegation of powers to Mr. Fingleton. 1838
Given the extraordinary magnitude of the claim – for up to €6 billion – I entered into a confidential settlement with the special liquidators after a mediation process. The terms of the settlement are confidential. I can say that the settlement involved no admission of liability on my part. I paid a sum personally to the plaintiffs for the benefit of the State. 1839
Separately, the E and Y investigation led to administrative sanctions proceedings being initiated against me by the Central Bank as far back as 2011. A notice of inquiry was issued on 9 July 2015 and I would ask the committee to be cognisant of the fact that I am the subject of that inquiry, pursuant to which punitive sanctions could be imposed on me by the Central Bank. I really can’t understand how the Central Bank can purport to investigate me in relation to events for which they bear responsibility. That is the subject of legal proceedings. 1840
I am not aware of any civil proceedings or any administrative sanctions having been initiated against the management of any other bank or building society as a result of the crash. I can’t see how there is any benefit to the public in INBS being investigated and pursued on the double, when institutions which subsist have not been the subject of any serious investigation, inquiry or proceedings. 1841
I will now address areas I have been asked to consider. 1842
Financial reporting and accounting rules. INBS’s financial reporting system was designed to meet regulatory and management information needs. The system was developed over the years to accommodate new accounting standards and additional reporting requirements. 1843
The new accounting standards reduced INBS’s loan loss provisions in 2005, and resulted in low provisioning while the property market remained strong. In addition, the solvency ratio was boosted by unrealised surpluses in good economic times and then reduced sharply in the downturn. 1844
INBS’s business model was commercial and residential property lending to experienced people in Ireland and the UK. The model evolved over time due to competitive pressures and lower margins in the residential lending market. INBS’s loan book was concentrated and significant amounts of new lending was repeat business with existing customers. 1845
INBS was funded in equal amounts from customer accounts and the wholesale market. INBS’s treasury function was operated in a risk-averse manner with the emphasis on maintaining safe, readily available liquid assets. The funds raised on the wholesale market extended the maturity profile of borrowings. INBS sought to eliminate interest rate and exchange rate risk through swap agreements. 1846
INBS had sought to enhance the effectiveness of internal audit by recruiting more staff, together with training and improvements to internal audit systems. KPMG carried out a report on internal audit in 2005. KPMG also produced a strategic performance review of internal audit in 2008. INBS engaged Deloitte to carry out internal audits on the IT function, treasury and commercial lending. Internal audit had a direct reporting line to the chair of the audit committee. The internal auditor met non-executive directors without executives being present. Internal audit had a documented internal audit charter which set out the purpose of internal audit, the scope of internal audit work, reporting lines, responsibility, standards and authority. Internal audit had a documented internal audit policies and procedures manual. That, Chairman, concludes my address. 1847

Chairman

Thank you very much, Mr. Purcell, for your opening comments and if I can commence questioning and in doing so invite Senator Marc MacSharry. 1848

Senator Marc MacSharry

Thanks very much and welcome, Mr. Purcell. Sorry for delaying you earlier. INBS’s annual report for 2007 shows that over the period ‘02 to ‘07, profit before tax increased by 303% and total assets by 190%. Do you think that these levels of growth were prudent or sustainable in the context of the level of competition in the Irish lending market during this period? 1849

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, during that period there was a great expansion in lending in all institutions in the Irish market. Some institutions may well have expanded more than Irish Nationwide. Irish Nationwide’s expansion in that period was also … resulted from lending in the UK, where we lent to experienced people, mainly in the London market. I think at that time, it was not considered unusual, although it was fairly strong growth. 1850

Senator Marc MacSharry

In your opinion, did this growth… was this growth influenced by the wish to add value at demutualisation and the potential windfall that that could bring to members and staff on it? 1851

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, we weren’t lending purely because it would increase demutualisation dividend to members. I mean, the lending was done because there was good lending opportunities to be availed of. 1852

Senator Marc MacSharry

Did this in your opinion lead to levels … these growth levels? Did it lead to … did it affect credit quality and lending standards in any way to your mind? 1853

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I had no reason to believe that credit quality was affected and I think actually, looking at the figures, that our lending in 2007 was slightly less than 2006, our new lending. 1854

Senator Marc MacSharry

In a letter dated February 2008 regarding the inspection of commercial property lending exposures, the Financial Regulator “calls into question the adequacy of controls and risk management in place in INBS for large commercial property loans and suggest[s] that a significant degree of approval authority rests with a single individual, Mr Fingleton, who also appears to be the only source of information on some of these large clients.” 1855

Chairman

That quotation will be provided in documentation given to you, Mr. Purcell. Senator? 1856

Senator Marc MacSharry

Sorry, it’s on Vol.1, page 43 and 44 but I’ve quoted it for you anyway. Could you provide your view on the Financial Regulator’s statement on what I’ve just said and did you agree? 1857

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Mr. Fingleton was head of lending and Mr. Fingleton spent a lot of his time working with the senior commercial lenders. He was involved in the lending. He kept in contact with large clients. He would have seen that as a major part of his function in Irish Nationwide. I think information was available from sources as well as him. 1858

Senator Marc MacSharry

Was he the one-stop-shop in terms of underwriting and decision-making? 1859

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, no, no. There was a department there. There was a head of commercial lending Ireland. There was a head of commercial lending UK, and there was a number of underwriters and there was processes in place. I think those processes are set out in one of the Deloitte reports that you may have. 1860

Senator Marc MacSharry

Do you believe that the degree of approval authority outlined by the Financial Regulator in that letter was appropriate? 1861

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Sorry, the degree of—– 1862

Senator Marc MacSharry

Do you believe … do you think that the degree of approval authority outlined in the letter that I quoted was appropriate? 1863

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I mean, are you referring to the fact that loans of up to … over €1 million came to the board? 1864

Senator Marc MacSharry

No, I will just quote you that section again. “INBS [this is a portion of it] INBS … the adequacy of controls and risk management in place in INBS for large commercial property loans and suggest that a significant degree of approval authority rests with a single individual [as opposed to a department or heads of credit, or whatever], Mr. Fingleton, who [it goes on to say] also appears to be the only source of information on some of these large clients.” Do you think that degree of approval authority, as I’ve just outlined, is appropriate, or was appropriate? 1865

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I think the approval authority was in the context of that loans were underwritten in the department by the commercial lenders and that loans of €1 million and more came to the board. 1866

Senator Marc MacSharry

Did loans ever, above €1 million, go to the board and be declined in your time on the board? 1867

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

There was loans declined and there was loans sent back that wouldn’t … they were sent back because, maybe, they might go ahead some time but they were sent back for more—– 1868

Senator Marc MacSharry

And without getting into any specific loans, can you recite any … well, can you recall any occasions where, for example, as managing director or CEO, that lending was coming with the recommendation of the head of lending, the managing director, but that the board felt, “No”? 1869

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I think there was the odd case, but I can’t—– 1870

Senator Marc MacSharry

The odd—– 1871

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

There were cases, but I do recall that there would have been a lot of loans talked about that, you know, who were not brought to the board, for a whole lot of reasons. 1872

Senator Marc MacSharry

And, occasionally, on the over €1 million scenario, the credit committee, with the managing … the head of lending, could take a decision if there was an urgency to do it for corporate reasons or whatever, and then it would go to the board at the earliest possibility, Mr. Fingleton was telling us earlier. Can you recall any instances that that happened? And, in all of the instances where that may have happened, were any of those odd occasions where the board declined it sent back? 1873

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I can’t recall that a loan that was treated in that way was declined by the board, but I do recall occasions where a loan came and there was reasons why it may have had to be approved prior to it going to the board. 1874

Senator Marc MacSharry

And just again, to the extent that you can remember, where these exceptional circumstances existed, where something had to be done urgently so that two members of the credit committee, plus a managing director, took the decision, and then the board had to be informed, was there always unanimity? Was this a rubber-stamping exercise? 1875

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Ah no, no. The loan—– 1876

Senator Marc MacSharry

Or—– 1877

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Sorry, sorry. 1878

Senator Marc MacSharry

Sorry, I don’t want to lead you either. 1879

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, no. 1880

Senator Marc MacSharry

Was this a matter of form, the managing director, the head of lending, lent “X” last week. There was nobody around; it wasn’t quick enough to have a meeting; so, “Is that agreed? We all agree.” Or, was there anybody who said, “No, like, I don’t agree, like”? 1881

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I don’t recall that happening, but where a loan came like that, it would discussed in the normal way, along with the reasons why it had to be paid out. 1882

Senator Marc MacSharry

Would it have been better if such circumstances didn’t go, that there didn’t be an exceptional circumstance? 1883

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, it would have been better. It should—– 1884

Senator Marc MacSharry

It would have been better. Okay. Good. Can I ask, during the period 2003 to 2006 the society’s loan book trebled from €3.4 billion to €10.7 billion, in your opinion, was the growth rate prudent and sustainable, particularly in light of the acknowledged fact, it seems, that the society did not have either “a highly developed approach to risk assessment or a sophisticated management information system”? 1885

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well—– 1886

Senator Marc MacSharry

The Project Harmony report, that’s what I’m quoting there. 1887

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. Yes. Well, what we were doing was, we were doing loans, repeat business with people we knew. There had been an increased level of lending. The market was fairly active, so we were more or less repeating the same business as we had done all along. 1888

Senator Marc MacSharry

If you were a good bet in the past with Irish Nationwide, did you skip the processes of underwriting for future loans? 1889

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, the loan went through the normal process. 1890

Senator Marc MacSharry

No matter how good you were in the past. 1891

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 1892

Senator Marc MacSharry

So if it took B, as a new customer coming in, three months to get assessed for X loan, then if I, equally, had been a customer for 20 years and paid back all my loans and I was coming for another loan, it still took three months. 1893

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It meant the same processes applied. 1894

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. The Nyberg report states: 1895
INBS’s overarching driver [and I touched on this earlier with you] was demutualisation and sale. This was frequently expressed by management, the Board and INBS members and was expected to result in a cash windfall for all parties. As the value of INBS would dictate the size of the windfall, it is noteworthy that the bank’s most significant growth spurt was during the years leading up to the expected demutualisation. 1896
And that’s page 24 of the Nyberg report. In your opinion, did the desire on the part of management to maximise the value of INBS result in the adoption of poorer lending practices or more lax lending practices, or did it lead specifically to the growth in the UK? 1897

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, I don’t think the growth in the UK was a result of trying to improve the situation after demutualisation. As I said earlier, the level of new loans fell in 2007. 1898

Senator Marc MacSharry

The Project Harmony report states: 1899
The overall approach to risk assessment would not be described as highly developed given that the group continues to rely heavily on the managing director, does not have sophisticated IT systems and operates across a limited range of products. Themodus operandi would be described by management as fit for purpose, particularly given the degree of board oversight on the lending approval process. 1900
Can you explain why you consider, and if you do, such amodus operandi to be fit for purpose for a financial institution with a balance sheet of €16 billion in size by the end of 2007? 1901

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I mean, we were continually improving our systems as our loans increased over the years. The … we were adopting new systems to deal with Basel and we were also conscious of producing information that would be needed in the event of a demutualisation. So we were improving systems but the basic loan model was still there. 1902

Senator Marc MacSharry

Earlier we heard from Mr. Walsh, the then chairman … and following a KPMG report recommending that a series of improvements needed to be made such as on the whole area of corporate governance and there were a number of them including the independence … to assure the independence of directors and to ensure that the board in terms of reference and so on and we put it to him that, “Why had you not, as chairman, introduced these things much earlier?” I think we were talking about a period now of 2008, if I recall correctly. He used words like, “Well, you know, corporate governances can be somewhat of a box ticking exercise and so on.” Can I ask, in your time on the board … I mean, you know, those recommendations by KPMG at the time, you know, would hardly have been pioneering new ground in terms of the expectations of how corporate governance would be taken, or how serious it would be taken by a company with a balance sheet so large. Did you have a sense at the time that, look, this whole thing is loose; I mean—– 1903

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, I didn’t—– 1904

Senator Marc MacSharry

—–look, everything is going well so—– 1905

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, I didn’t have a sense—– 1906

Senator Marc MacSharry

—–there’s no need to fix anything? 1907

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–that everything was loose. But, you know, when those recommendations were made, I mean, they were probably setting out best practice, having looked at a range of reports that it mentions in it. And some of the things they mention about conflicts of interests, I mean, we were handling those under terms of the Building Societies Act and our own rules. So some of the recommendations would involve maybe more documenting of what we were doing already, say, in areas like conflicts of interest. 1908

Senator Marc MacSharry

Did you ever know about the existence of a No. 3 account that was specifically for—– 1909

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 1910

Senator Marc MacSharry

What was it for? 1911

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, it was an account that was there before I started in 1987 and it was an account that the signature on it was my predecessor and then me and the managing director. And there was also a number of other people who could act as signatories on that account. 1912

Senator Marc MacSharry

And what was it for? 1913

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It generally was for non-standard payments. 1914

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. 1915

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

And maybe payments that would … regarded as confidential. 1916

Senator Marc MacSharry

Political donations? 1917

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No. The main ones I remember, and it would be … stuff like maybe settlements in legal disputes. 1918

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. 1919

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes … maybe … sometimes maybe if something came in … you know … you might want to pay it back to somebody and … it was just stuff that you didn’t run through the normal system. But everything that was on that account was fully documented. There was, I think, in the period from the start of the euro to the time I left there were only about 60 cheques written. 1920

Senator Marc MacSharry

Was it ever … on those 60 occasions ever to give anybody a dig out, for want of a better expression? 1921

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No. Some of the payments were just routine stuff, say maybe came into a wrong account and I was moving it around. 1922

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. In a letter dated March 2008, regarding the inspection of commercial property lending exposures, the Financial Regulator states the following under the heading “Credit Risk Management”: 1923
The Financial Regulator has raised issues relating to INBS’ risk profile and credit risk management over a number of years. Our letter of 9 December 2004 set out our concerns regarding the significant shift in the nature and risk profile of INBS’ business towards commercial property lending. 1924
In the same letter the Financial Regulator continues to outline similar concerns raised in ‘06, ‘07 and ‘08. Can you provide an insight into the INBS board considerations of the Financial Regulator’s inspections and why no apparent effort was made to address the concerns to the satisfaction of the regulator of the years? 1925

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, when … well Deputy, when the regulator wrote a letter or met us about any issue, I mean the matter was taken very seriously. Any letters to, say, the chairman or the managing director were given to board members and they were discussed at the board and depending on the issues all the matters were responded to and where we had to do things, you know, we carried out our response and our rectification of any matter to the best manner possible. 1926

Senator Marc MacSharry

So, to your mind, any issues raised were dealt with to the fullest extent. Is that correct? 1927

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

We responded fully and—– 1928

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. Just two—– 1929

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–dealt with stuff as we could. 1930

Senator Marc MacSharry

Just on that, and two very final questions, and we’ll have covered all of that ground then, Chairman. You mentioned in your report, and I am conscious that I don’t want to get into a particular area and the Chairman will stop me if I am going offside, you mentioned that your view as to why other financial institutions weren’t the subject of investigations in the Central Bank. Can I ask how are you certain that there are no investigations into other financial institutions? 1931

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

As far as I’m aware there are none. 1932

Senator Marc MacSharry

And how would you be? 1933

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, just being cognisant of what’s in the press and stuff like that. 1934

Senator Marc MacSharry

I know, but I mean you yourself weren’t cognisant until 9 July or thereabouts so how would you be cognisant about other financial institutions? 1935

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, the particular matter of 9 July there was something on that going back, and I think I said it in my statement, back to—– 1936

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. So just to be clear, to the best of your knowledge but you don’t know. 1937

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 1938

Senator Marc MacSharry

Okay. Very finally, do you feel, and I asked this of Mr. Walsh as well, do you feel that throughout your career in INBS that there has been an unfair focus by the regulator and Central Bank on the INBS and its activity? 1939

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well throughout my career there, the way I regard it as the regulator would correspond with us, would meet with us and issues would be raised, and we would deal with them as best we could. I wouldn’t … I wasn’t aware of, say, regulator dealings with other people so I wouldn’t regard, you know, as being excessively unfair. It was just part of their job. They dealt with the thing properly and we tried to respond in a professional way. 1940

Senator Marc MacSharry

But you have said in your statement maybe you’re less than enamoured with activities since. 1941

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Oh well that’s since, but in the time I was there, I mean, I said in my statement there that, I mean, I … there was an issue with IBRC, INBS and then—– 1942

Senator Marc MacSharry

Again, without getting into the specifics of Central Bank, regulator, Government, this inquiry or anybody else, do you have a sense or do you feel a sense, Mr. Fingleton said he felt wronged, do you feel that in some way INBS are the patsy, the fall guy for everybody else? 1943

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I suppose INBS and Anglo, as the institutions which no longer exist, probably resonate with people in regard to the crash. 1944

Senator Marc MacSharry

Do you see that as fair and accurate? I am finished then, Chairman. 1945

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I don’t see it fully fair, no. 1946

Senator Marc MacSharry

Thank you. 1947

Chairman

Would you care to expand upon that or is that sufficient? 1948

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I mean, other people had losses as well. I mean there was a … yes, it was in the documentation … there was a NAMA … a report from NAMA … an extract from the NAMA annual report, which showed the discount. The discount on the loans taken over from Anglo-Irish Nationwide wasn’t all that much difference from, say, AIB and EBS. 1949

Chairman

Okay. Thank you. Senator Michael D’Arcy. Senator. 1950

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Purcell, you’re welcome. During the period ‘01 to ‘03, INBS increased its level of commercial lending by over 60%. This was a source of concern for the regulator that the society did not have the appropriate skill sets or controls to place … in place to effectively manage this level of exposure and this level of increase. By September ‘08, 80% of INBS’s loan book was in commercial property and 81% of its land and exposure was in speculative property activities. Do you think this was an appropriate lending strategy for INBS as a building society? 1951

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, INBS at that stage, although it was a building society, was moving towards seeking to have legislation that would allow it demutualise and engage in trade sale. So, it wasn’t the sort of a situation whereby for years we were always going to be a pure mutual. We were moving in certain direction. We were in a market that was very competitive. I think as people have referred earlier, that the home loans market got very competitive in 1999 and it had been competitive before that. Banks, both foreign and domestic, were vying strongly for residential business. INBS had moved gradually away from dependency on residential so we were in the commercial market. We had worked with clients over a number years. Many of those had expanded with the market and we had expanded with them. So, at the time, there was probably a surge in lending generally anyway from what was before. So, we were a part of that. 1952

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Was it appropriate? 1953

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I feel it was not inappropriate in the circumstances. 1954

Senator Michael D’Arcy

It was “not inappropriate”. 1955

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, no. It was proper lending. 1956

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And the level of growth … Mr. Bill Black – I am not sure if you heard it – when he attended here some months ago said that anything over 20% was dangerous per annum growth. 1957

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, I heard that mentioned. Yes. 1958

Senator Michael D’Arcy

A lot of institutions were pushing closer to 30%. 1959

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. At the time, generally, it wasn’t felt that that was excessive. 1960

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Did you feel it was excessive? 1961

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, I didn’t feel it was excessive. 1962

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Were you aware of the risks that were attached to that level of growth? 1963

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, I was aware that, obviously, the society was growing and that it involved us in challenges, obviously, in funding the society and the requirements of keeping within certain ratios. So, I was aware of that. 1964

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Did you keep within those ratios? 1965

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Generally, we did, yes. Occasionally, there might have been a slip but—– 1966

Senator Michael D’Arcy

The land and development sectors ratios? 1967

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Oh, no. The sectoral … there was breaches of the sectoral limits over the years. 1968

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Many? 1969

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I think INBS, and from what I understand a lot … as well as other institutions … that those ratios were exceeded somewhat over a period of time. 1970

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And did you understand that they were not guidelines? 1971

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, and there was correspondence with the Central Bank about it. 1972

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And you still proceeded to exceed them. 1973

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, we had discussions with them about it. I think the discussions were maybe that they might be done on a different basis and that maybe there was something that should have been revised but the thing just petered out. 1974

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Was that a sufficient way to do business? 1975

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, we were probably restricted in keeping to sectoral limits because those sectoral limits were probably devised for full service banks that would be lending to all areas of an economy and that would be in every business. By our very nature, we were focused on property. 1976

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Purcell, if we could bring up the document, Vol. 1, page 125, the NAMA annual report please? The NAMA discount or the famous or infamous haircut. INBS, the institution you represented, amounted to 61%, the highest of all institutions. Could you offer an explanation why INBS was the highest? 1977

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well I think we shared the 61% with Anglo. Well, I mean, I didn’t take part in the work that was engaged in while those loans were being transferred. I left around that time so I don’t have any insight into the thought processes and why those loans attracted that discount rate, so I can’t comment on exactly why—– 1978

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Were you … were you surprised at the discount, the extent of it? 1979

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I was. I was surprised and I felt that, as I said there, that the UK loans were somewhat undervalued. And I felt that maybe from, you know, things I heard later and that, a lot of those loans were repaid in full, despite a large discount. 1980

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Purcell, KPMG’s annual statutory duty confirmation letters to the Financial Regulator for each of the years ‘04, ‘05, ‘06 and ‘07 note instances of breaches and errors in each sectoral return, prudential returns and large exposure reports made by INBS to the regulator. Why did these breaches and errors occur? 1981

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, when we were preparing those reports, I mean, we took every care to make sure there was no errors. Generally, they were prepared by a competent person, reviewed by another and subject to further review. We were conscious that we were at all times trying to do everything perfectly as regards regulatory returns and we were disappointed whenever any error occurred. Now some of the errors were larger, some of them were smaller. But the errors occurred because we’d a fairly tight timetable. After we had done the returns we continued checking and a lot of that checking would have brought up something that was not found earlier, and we would immediately adjust the return and we would inform the regulator of every mistake, every adjustment, every error, be it large or small. Some of the errors occurred due to mistakes, maybe a coding error in loans which we copped when we did further checking. Some of them were … there was a lot of volume, maybe, happening and something slipped through or else there was some classification that wasn’t clear and that we maybe went to the regulator or the regulator went to us about it. But we did take every precaution to ensure that they were done to the highest standard, and it was disappointing for me and the people working with me who were doing those returns that errors occurred. But it wasn’t for the want of effort, changing systems and reviews. 1982

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Purcell, those errors occurred, re-occurred, over a number of years. 1983

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

They did. I, that is correct, Deputy, they did and as I said, I was very disappointed at the time. And I think there is a mention there in the … I think it’s either 2.6, item 2.6 in the KPMG management letter of 2008, where there is a response to the fact that those errors occurred. 1984

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And were the systems just incapable of rectifying the matter? 1985

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, we changed systems. We brought in additional checking. All I can say is that some errors kept … persisted. But some of those errors were small; some of them were caught by us but we reported every error, be it large or small, immediately, and I think KPMG acknowledge that in the letter. 1986

Senator Michael D’Arcy

In the 2005 report, the review of effectiveness of internal audit, KPMG stated the existing internal audit … this is Vol. 2, page 93, Chair: 1987
The existing internal audit function is not [the] best practice. … In particular it lacks the depth of experience necessary to challenge the areas of key risk, which includes Treasury and Commercial Lending. 1988
In the 2008 management letter, KPMG stated, “the Society’s Internal Audit department needs to build up its experience and training in order to perform reviews of key risk areas which are currently outsourced to a third party service provider”. 1989
Similar concerns were raised in ‘04, with the Financial Regulator concluding: 1990
The level of resources in this area are deemed to be inadequate … The FSR has concerns with regard to the level of expertise and experience which exists in the IA function. 1991
The Financial Regulator concerns expressed in ‘07 echo this sentiment. Can you explain why no apparent effort was made to address the concerns raised by both your auditors and the Financial Regulator over a period … over a number of years? 1992

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

In 2004 we arranged with KPMG to commission a report on the effectiveness of our internal audit. We were conscious that work had to be done. We had a new acting internal auditor and we were conscious that we needed to review that area, and we asked KPMG to produce a report and to work with us. And KPMG produced that report. As a result of it, there was … they were involved in mentoring the internal auditor. They also conducted workshops with the internal audit committee and the … we would have increased the staffing level, we would’ve increased training internal audit and we would’ve purchased systems for them. In addition to that, we brought in Deloitte to do a number of audits there – treasury, IT and commercial lending. So we were working, during that time, to bring internal audit to a higher level. 1993

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Chairman, if you could go to Vol. 1, page 31. I’ll just move on, Mr. Purcell. In KPMG’s corporate governance review in ‘08 it states: 1994
Board packs are very detailed and at times lack clarity and structure. For example, there is little market and operational overview and salient financial commentary provided. 1995
Were you satisfied, as a member of the board of INBS, you were receiving a full and accurate picture of the financial situation of the society at all times? 1996

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, there was a detailed set of accounts provided to every board meeting and, generally, when the accounts were considered by the directors, I would be asked for comments on them. Sometimes I was able to maybe put a paper in about something beforehand but generally I gave a verbal report on the accounts. There was a lot of information provided to the board and the board pack grew over the years because what would happen is somebody would say, “Well, you know, I want a report on something” … “Well, you know, do it every quarter, do it every month.” So there was a sort of a growth in it that people were used to. They didn’t … sometimes didn’t want me to excise reports, you know, they wanted it left there and maybe, after a while, there was a lot of stuff there. But the board members were able to work through it, and probably it was a good recommendation at the time that the thing be looked at again. 1997

Senator Michael D’Arcy

As the commercial lending business, in particular, grew, were the levels of impairment and the changes in accounting rules clearly articulated to the board, to fully appreciate the risk? 1998

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

The levels of impairment were, yes. Sorry, is this the new rules as well? 1999

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Yes, IFRS. 2000

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. The introduction of IFRS, I think it was around 2005, it resulted in us writing back. I think we had a bad debts provision of about €100 million and under those rules we had to write much … much of that back. 2001

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Purcell, the INBS section of the Nyberg report, did you read that? 2002

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I did. 2003

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Were you surprised at the content of that? 2004

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I can’t say. I mean, I read it, kind of, a while back and … I see what was said there, yes. 2005

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Did you agree with it? 2006

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Probably not with everything. But he probably made some points, yes. 2007

Senator Michael D’Arcy

In the main, did you agree with it? Was it accurate of the institution that you served in? 2008

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I thought, you know, I thought it was a bit hard on certain areas. I thought, maybe, you know, it regarded our lending in a poorer light than actually was the case. 2009

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Purcell, if you could just clarify a matter. Have you seen or heard Mr. Fingleton’s and Mr. Walsh’s evidence earlier today? 2010

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I’ve heard some of it – not all of it but I heard some of it. 2011

Senator Michael D’Arcy

If I could just clarify, please, because I put both … this question to both gentlemen earlier today. I am speaking in relation to the change of lending policy in December ‘07 where the board previously had approval of €1 million-plus loans and subsequent to that the board no longer had approval of it, that it went to the board … the commercial loan applications … the board no longer required consent. You are aware of that? 2012

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 2013

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Mr. Fingleton certainly seemed to indicate that was a board matter and Mr. Walsh indicated that it came from the executive. Could I ask you your understanding of whether it came from the board or from the executive? 2014

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I think at that time the question of having the credit committee approve loans and that the loans then would be notified to the board … It was discussed at the board and, I mean, it was a board decision to do it that way and I think the proposal came from … it probably came from myself. You know, this is my best recollection. I was discussing the matter with the internal auditor and I think we concluded that the way Irish Nationwide was doing it wasn’t the way everyone else was doing it and that maybe … it was time, maybe, to change the system. And it was a good time to do it because we weren’t lending anew, we were trying to cut back on lending. If there was lending, it … there wouldn’t be much; it would be in relation to maybe stuff already committed and that it would be done on low volumes and that maybe it was moving towards the practice that was used in other institutions. 2015

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Could you clarify then, Mr. Purcell, was it a decision by the executive, accepted by the board? 2016

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, it was a proposal by the executive, I’d put it that way, that would have been brought to the board and would have been discussed and agreed. There was probably a good bit of discussion about it. 2017

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Was Mr. Fingleton in agreement with that prior to it going to the board? 2018

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

At this stage I mean, I would regard it, maybe … After a lot of discussion, it was a unanimous decision but … that’s my best recollection 2019

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And again, to conclude, Mr. Purcell, please, the relaxation in the lending criteria, was that appropriate given the Financial Regulator’s ongoing concerns in relation to commercial property lending and the risk management within the society? 2020

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, in relation to having the credit committee approve loans, I think it was appropriate because the board would still be notified of the loans, we would still review them … especially, you know, for a long while after we would look at them. It was also at a time where lending was decreasing and we were moving towards, maybe, a practice that was more normal with other banks. 2021

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Thank you. 2022

Chairman

Thank you very much. Okay. I now invite Deputy Kieran O’Donnell. Deputy. 2023

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Thanks, Chairman. Welcome, it being such a late hour, Mr. Purcell. Mr. Purcell, can I just clarify a number of points? Mr. Fingleton occupied the role as both CEO and head of lending. Am I correct? 2024

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

That’s correct. 2025

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

A dual role. Would every single loan be … end up on Mr. Fingleton’s desk? 2026

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I wouldn’t think so, no. No, not every loan would end up on his desk at all. No, loans would be dealt with by the department. They would probably wind up on the desk of the head of commercial lending or people who worked with him. 2027

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

When would they … What would be the level at which loans would end up on Mr. Fingleton’s desk? 2028

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Now, I think he would have been in contact with the commercial lenders. I don’t know when … I think … if there was loans that they felt he had an input in, they may well have—– 2029

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And you made reference earlier that 50% of the loans that went into NAMA were outside of Ireland. 2030

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, I think so. Yes. 2031

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

How many of those would have been with Irish developers? 2032

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

There would have been an amount with Irish developers in London—– 2033

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

The majority? 2034

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I wouldn’t say … I’d say a good lot but not the majority. They would be … the developers that we … the Irish developers that we dealt with in London, there would be people that we were dealing with for a long time. Some of them were probably more versed in London than Dublin so they would have been at home in both markets. 2035

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And can I ask you, in your role as financial controller of Irish Nationwide Building Society, do you believe on the night of the guarantee that Irish Nationwide Building Society was solvent? 2036

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, I do. 2037

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And what do you base your assessment on that, considering that €5.4 billion of taxpayers’ money ended up, to date, going into Irish Nationwide Building Society? 2038

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I believe … and probably my belief was borne out by subsequent events … I mean, we had a very detailed audit at the end of 2008 on the accounts. We also … we had a solvency certificate which involved a good bit of work, both legal and by accountancy. The review of impaired loans in early 2009 was extensive. It involved the provisioning committee a lot of time … a lot of meetings. KPMG spent a lot of time with it. I think it even delayed the production of our accounts, there was so much work done on the area. 2039

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Is your basic contention, along with the two previous witnesses from Irish Nationwide Building Society, Mr. Fingleton and Mr. Walsh, that the haircut that was applied to the NAMA loans, you believe was excessive? 2040

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I believe it was excessive. To the extent of its excessiveness, I mean I’m … you know, I don’t have—– 2041

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And what do you believe the discount should have been? It was 61%. What do you feel would’ve been a reasonable discount? 2042

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I find it hard to give a figure, but I feel that the … especially loans in London … a lot of those loans turned out to actually pay back the full amount. 2043

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And can you just elaborate on … were you facing a funding cliff in 2009? You had roughly about €2.3 billion, my understanding is, of debt to be rolled over in 2009. 2044

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

That’s correct. I think there was … there was a figure of that nature, yes. 2045

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And effectively, I think, €1 billion of that was due in May ‘09. How were you set up to deal with that funding cliff? 2046

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, in 2008 we had reduced our loan book considerably. We had raised a lot of money on … from retail deposits. We had brought in a mortgage-backed promissory note programme. We were working on its securitisation. And, in September, even though things were very fraught, there was an increase in the deposit guarantee amount around 20 September. So we were looking at the credit crunch probably would persist for a while, but people’s perspective wasn’t that it would go for as long and as deep. So we expected that we would be able to return to the markets in 2009. 2047

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And did … so do you believe … well, first of all, two quick questions. Do you believe that Irish Nationwide Building Society needed the blanket guarantee to be covered by it? And do you believe if that guarantee wasn’t there … do you believe … and NAMA wasn’t put in place … do you believe Irish Nationwide would be operating today? 2048

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It’s very hard to be definitive about that, but what I would say is that it would depend on how the world markets … how the money markets went after September; it would depend on whether the credit crunch ameliorated; it would depend on a whole load of factors. But where we were at the end of September was we did have a good amount of liquidity. We had probably over €3 billion. When the deposit protection scheme was increased, it did reduce outflows. I mean I think that’s mentioned in some reports as well. So it was hard to know what way things were going. I mean, things could’ve turned well in October. Things could have—– 2049

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

But you were looking for fair weather. 2050

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, yes, we were looking for a situation whereby there would be an increase in stability and there would be less worry and less turbulence in the market. 2051

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

You weren’t, as such, set up for a … for shocks. 2052

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, we were … I mean, if the—– 2053

Chairman

—–making a statement. 2054

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Sorry, were you set up for shocks? 2055

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

We were set up that we could, let’s say, exist for a while longer in … in a very fraught market. If the market returned to a more stable situation, we felt we could maybe raise money on the wholesale again. 2056

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay. Thank you, Chairman. 2057

Chairman

Thank you very much, Deputy O’Donnell. Deputy Michael McGrath. 2058

Deputy Michael McGrath

Thank you very much, Chair. Good evening, Mr. Purcell. 2059

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Good evening, Deputy. 2060

Deputy Michael McGrath

Can I start by asking you … that following the delegation of authority to the credit committee in December 2007 … as you know, internal audit carried out two reviews of the operation of the credit committee and the evidence is in the core booklets, Vol. 2. One review in July 2008 covering the period of January to June ‘08 and the second in January ‘09 covering the period July to December 2008. And the internal audit’s findings note that the frequency of meetings declined as the year went on to the point where, in the opinion of internal audit, the credit committee is not meeting with enough frequency to fulfil all of its duties. Can you comment on that? Is that just a function of the reduction in lending activity at that time or is it indicative of a weakness in the systems at INBS? 2061

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, a factor would have been the reduction in lending activity, yes, because our new lending was curtailed very significantly after December 2007 so that would have been a function, so—– 2062

Deputy Michael McGrath

So is the primary reason that they didn’t really have a purpose to meet? 2063

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I would reckon there was less business and they weren’t meeting as often. 2064

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. And is it your view that the credit committee was functioning properly during that key period throughout 2008 and was … or was it indicative of further weaknesses? 2065

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, as far as I was aware, it was functioning correctly but I mean I’m cognisant that certain recommendations were made by internal audit. 2066

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, can I take you Mr. Purcell to the meeting on 7 September 2008 with the regulator, which you say was organised at short notice and you reference it in page 3 of your witness statement? Can you confirm who attended that meeting? I take it that AIB and Bank of Ireland were represented. 2067

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 2068

Deputy Michael McGrath

And were you accompanied on behalf of INBS? 2069

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I was at that meeting along with our treasurer and our financial controller. 2070

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, and the meeting was organised by the Financial Regulator? 2071

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, I got a phone call, I think I got it from our chairman, late on Friday … or late on Saturday night—– 2072

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 2073

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–to say they would be meeting probably sometime 11 or 12 o’clock on Sunday and that we would be meeting AIB and Bank of Ireland and I think it was to discuss the question of them providing us with a standby facility. 2074

Deputy Michael McGrath

And this was on foot of the report carried by Reuters? 2075

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, it was —– 2076

Deputy Michael McGrath

Is that what raised concerns? 2077

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, I think the Central Bank were acting in the light of that report and they were looking at the idea that maybe Bank of Ireland and AIB could provide us with a standby facility. 2078

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, can you just inform the committee the nature of that Reuters report at the time? What did it say? 2079

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, the Reuters report in essence said that INBS was making accommodation with its creditors, which wasn’t true. In other words—– 2080

Deputy Michael McGrath

How did you interpret that? What did that mean, “making accommodation”? 2081

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It meant that we would be … we were talking to people who fund us asking them to come to some arrangement of some nature. 2082

Deputy Michael McGrath

And it was untrue? 2083

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It was totally untrue, and Reuters admitted it later. 2084

Deputy Michael McGrath

And did you ever discover the provenance of that report? 2085

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No. 2086

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, and so was the underlying purpose of the meeting on 7 September not valid? 2087

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I mean the fact that—– 2088

Deputy Michael McGrath

Or were there funding pressures facing INBS as well? 2089

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

The Reuters report was utterly unhelpful. I mean, it created a sense of unease and it was going to result in withdrawals so I mean, the regulator was taking precautions and one of the precautions was to see could a standby facility be arranged. 2090

Deputy Michael McGrath

A liquidity support from the Bank of Ireland. 2091

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

A backstop as they call it. 2092

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, and did AIB and Bank of Ireland indicate a willingness to provide such a backup at that meeting? I know no decision was reached but—– 2093

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, they didn’t indicate a willingness. 2094

Deputy Michael McGrath

Is it because it didn’t get that far? 2095

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, we had a discussion. I can’t remember all the details, but there was three of us there and the meeting just petered out. 2096

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, and you weren’t asked to provide any further documentation or anything like that? 2097

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No. 2098

Deputy Michael McGrath

Can I ask, Mr. Purcell … this issue of demutualisation has come up several times today and the expected change in the legislation and this seemed to be the whole strategy really for INBS was to prepare it for demutualisation and a trade sale but, financially, what would that have meant for executives and for directors of INBS? Were there bonus arrangements in place in the event of it happening or was it members were going to benefit? How … what would the financial implications have been? 2099

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

The financial implications … sorry, Deputy, the financial implications is that there would be a windfall for members; in other words, their shares would be bought by whoever bought us and that they would receive an amount of money, just in the same way as people in Irish Permanent did in the early ‘90s and somewhat later in First National. So the members and the borrowing members would have received an amount of money. 2100

Deputy Michael McGrath

What would directors have stood to … to gain? 2101

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

There was nothing agreed that directors would gain anything in particular. 2102

Deputy Michael McGrath

But it could have formed part of the commercial arrangement with a trade buyer. 2103

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It could. It could have. It would depend on a number of factors. 2104

Deputy Michael McGrath

And likely would have. I would imagine that it likely would have formed some aspect of a commercial arrangement if one was entered into. 2105

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It would have been discussed and probably would have, yes. 2106

Deputy Michael McGrath

So there may have been a financial incentive in place or the prospect of one. It wasn’t nailed down but there may have been the prospect of one if a successful demutualisation and trade sale of INBS had … had been executed. 2107

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, there was a prospect that it would benefit staff, as I think it might have also done in the other demutualisations. 2108

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. You were also company secretary. What role did that involve? What specific responsibilities did you have, as secretary, which were additional to your role as finance director? 2109

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I was responsible for—– 2110

Deputy Michael McGrath

Returns. 2111

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

For returns, yes. There was a lot of returns to be done under the Building Societies Act on an ongoing basis. 2112

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay and were you a member of any other … any internal committees within the building society? 2113

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I was a member of the assets and liabilities committee. 2114

Deputy Michael McGrath

What did that do? 2115

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, the main focus of the assets and liabilities committee was the liquidity position of the society, its funding and its managing the mix and the maturities of borrowings raised, and also dealing with stuff like hedge effectiveness, interest rate risk, currency risk – all issues to do with the funding and the liquidity position. 2116

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, and finally—– 2117

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

We also looked at things that were there as well, like the share-deposit ratio. That was something always on our agenda. 2118

Deputy Michael McGrath

Finally, Mr. Purcell, and given the length of time you spent at INBS, you’re probably best placed to answer this question. In your view, looking back now, did Michael Fingleton have excessive influence and control over the operation of INBS? 2119

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, Michael Fingleton was a very focused managing director. He worked extremely hard. He was very interested in demutualisation. He was very keen to sell the society. He felt that was the best outcome for the society. He also was very involved in the lending and he was very … he had … he was very knowledgeable about lending. It was mentioned earlier about economic reports at board. He would be very familiar with the position as regards the economy, the lending market. He was … he was a strong, focused managing director. 2120

Deputy Michael McGrath

But from a governance point of view, do you believe that he had too much influence and control over the organisation? 2121

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

His control was subject to the board and he consulted with the board and at every board meeting he made reports on his activities. 2122

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, thank you. 2123

Chairman

Thank you, Deputy McGrath. Senator Susan O’Keeffe. 2124

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Thanks, Chair. Mr. Purcell, in the Project Harmony report, it would show that the society had a concentration of loans in the higher risk development sector, a concentration of loans in the higher loan-to-value bands, a concentration in its customer base – the top 30 commercial customers, for example, accounted for 53% of the total commercial loan book – and a concentration in sources of supplemental arrangement fees, representing 48% of profit in 2006. Indeed, 73% of those fees came from just nine customers. Did the board ever consider or did they become concerned or did they discuss those levels of concentrations and the correlation between them and whether or not they could increase the risk to the society’s business model? 2125

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

The board were aware of the concentration. The large exposures report would be produced and it would be a board document. The board were also aware of the nature of our business, that we, Irish Nationwide, had repeat business with experienced developers. During my time there the board would have met some of the borrowers and the board was sort of satisfied with the people we were dealing with and the business we were dealing with. 2126

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So, in saying that you were satisfied, therefore you were saying you were not concerned. Is that correct? 2127

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

We always, you know, monitoring stuff. 2128

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Sorry, concerned as in—– 2129

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, we were not, no—– 2130

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

—–as in being anxious—– 2131

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 2132

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

—-rather than—– 2133

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, we weren’t concerned at that level. We felt the business was good. 2134

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

You felt the business was good and that the model was—– 2135

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

The model was working, yes. It was a good model to go into demutualisation with, as described in … in Harmony. 2136

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

The Ernst and Young investigation suggests that Michael Fingleton was given special powers in 1981, and again renewed in 1994 and again in 1997, that allowed him and him alone to set and alter interest rates and fees if he so pleased and to make arrangements with individuals. Is that correct to your knowledge, given the time that you were there? 2137

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, those powers were used by him in a practical way. He would have used them, maybe if, let’s say we were under pressure and we might lose a loan, he would maybe make a decision that we would have to maybe reduce a rate. He would make other decisions in relation to loan matters. 2138

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So he did have those powers. Is it at all the case that he ever used those powers in a less than practical way? In a way that was not, I am not suggesting for personal gain, I am talking about, you know, for … to do a favour for someone, to be good to somebody? 2139

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, I am not aware of any instances of that. 2140

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

You are not aware. Is it also the case that the reporting structure was such that there were 12 people reporting to Mr. Fingleton as the boss, rather than a more pyramid structure where, as you go up, you have fewer people at the top? Is that correct? 2141

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I can’t remember whether it was the number – there was a number of people reporting to him. It is set out in the organisation chart in the Project Harmony document. 2142

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Can you clarify why a lot of savings would have been tied up in term deposits in Isle of Man accounts? Would that be normal procedure? I refer here to the fact that, at a time when the society was under a lot of pressure coming in to September 2008, savers would have had to break their terms in order to withdraw if they were concerned about the state. Why was the Isle of Man used in that way? 2143

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, the Isle of Man was … would market products that would appeal to the people that they felt would put deposits with us and term deposits were a product that was successful for the Isle of Man. People, say for example, were interested in putting a deposit with you for a year because they got a rate they felt was happy – they were happy with. 2144

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So INBS would manage that on … if I was coming to you, you would manage that for me in the Isle of Man. Is that—– 2145

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

The Isle of Man, mainly, role was basically source sterling deposits. 2146

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay. And so how much … would there have been considerable business in that? 2147

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I think the numbers are maybe just between €1 billion and €2 billion. 2148

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And were you the only building society offering that particular? 2149

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, there was a lot of competition in the Isle of Man. I mean—– 2150

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Sure. 2151

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I think Irish Permanent had an operation there and at one stage the EBS had an operation there and there was all the … a number of the Irish banks were there and there also would have been all of the English institutions there. 2152

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And that was all perfectly within the … Going back to Mr. Boucher in relation to the meeting and I know that you said it was difficult to recall all of the detail, he said in his own evidence, he said: 2153
There was a discussion between ourselves and AIB, there was some commentary from the regulator that they felt, well, the haircut on Irish Nationwide’s books would be, I don’t know, a mid-teens per cent. Whether I had a justification to say it, but I do recollect I said, “Well, whatever they say, it’s two or three times that.” 2154
And then he goes on to say: 2155
I felt we should get out of the building. I said, “We can’t support these people. 2156
So, do you recall that at all? 2157

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I don’t recall about—– 2158

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Or knowing about that? 2159

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I was there at the meeting. I don’t recall that particular comment. I don’t … I am not sure was he referring to loans or was he referring to something else? It looked like he was referring to loans. 2160

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

He says also that there had been an “exercise” he describes it, back in 2006 – he can’t remember the exact date – where options were being considered for Irish Nationwide, and he says: 2161
[We sat down with the] chief executive of Irish Nationwide and his company secretary to discuss their business model to get an outline of the type of lending they did … I got an understanding of what I felt the business model was. I went back to the chief executive and said I didn’t feel … there was an opportunity for us and I didn’t recommend we pursue it. 2162
Is that … do you have a memory of that meeting in 2006? 2163

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I do have a memory of it. 2164

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

What happened there? Why was there a meeting? 2165

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I mean, there were a number of institutions we were talking to at the time, with a view that perhaps they may well be interested in buying Irish Nationwide and Bank of Ireland – that indicates – was one of those institutions. 2166

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And did they write back to you after that meeting and say, “Well actually we don’t think you’re a suitable fit”, or did it just end after that meeting? Do you recall? 2167

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I don’t recollect a letter, Deputy, but I know it didn’t progress. 2168

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay, and did you at that time talk to Allied Irish Banks in the same manner that you did with Bank? 2169

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I don’t think discussions were as developed or as, you know, they didn’t, weren’t at that level with AIB. 2170

Chairman

One minute there Senator. 2171

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. Documents that we have seen that obviously we can’t – for 33AK – sort of state precisely what they were, but they show that there was a long-standing difficulty between the INBS and the Financial Regulator, going back to even before the separation of the way they were set up in 2003 and 2004. Given that you were there all that time, would you say that, would you use that expression “long-standing difficulty” to describe or would you have a dispute with that description? 2172

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

There was—– 2173

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

I can give the reference if required, Chair. 2174

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I mean, there was communications with the regulator, IFSRA, the Central Bank, you know, over a period of time but in all our dealings with them they were dealt with on an open basis. 2175

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Sure, no I am not implying that but the suggestion here is that there was always a difficulty, that the regulator always had a struggle to get INBS to respond, to come back, to talk to them, to give the responses that they require to give, the information that they require to get changes through. That’s the evidence here in these documents, so what is your own view given that you were on the board? And we have seen documentation, which I am sure you have been given in the evidence books, that would also show a long-standing difficult, long-standing exchange. 2176

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

There’s a long-standing exchange but when they wrote to us and when they raised any matter, I mean, my approach and our approach was to deal with it as properly and as promptly as possible. 2177

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And you felt you did. 2178

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I felt I did. Sometimes issues took longer. Sometimes it took a while to come back on something because you were trying to put something in place or you were trying to get information or you were trying to go through it with somebody. 2179

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

I have just one last question, Chair, and that relates … and again I am going here now if I may, Mr. Purcell, to the time of the guarantee and to your medium-term note programme, and to the payments that you would have had to make on these. I am referring here to a document actually from Brendan McDonagh to William Beausang and it talks about repayments that you would have to make of €630 million at the end of November and then on into 2009 there would be another €1.5 billion payable, and I’m just wondering how did that arise that those, that there was so much to be repaid? 2180

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well those—– 2181

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And again, I can give you the reference, Chair. 2182

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Those repayments would have arisen as a result of the deals we did a number of years before. Say, for example, we would have raised money, generally in lumps, and at different maturities, so some years you might have a small amount, a relatively small amount, and other you might have chunkier amounts. 2183

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

But was that a difficulty for INBS at that time? Was that now becoming a much more, you know, looming problem than it might have been previously? 2184

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I mean, every year we had EMTN repayments. 2185

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. 2186

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I mean, in 2007 I recollect we had one in February 2008, and we had one later in 2008 at least. 2187

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. 2188

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

In 2009 we had more. The funding and the repayment of those would depend on the state of the markets. It would depend on whether we could raise funds. 2189

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So if the markets were poor, you were struggling. 2190

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, yes, that would have always applied, yes. 2191

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Of course. Thank you. 2192

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Unless you could raise money elsewhere through retail—– 2193

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And you were struggling to do that. 2194

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, in September there was a lot of issues with a lot of institutions as regards funding. 2195

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And raising funds wasn’t—– 2196

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Raising funds was obviously—– 2197

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Thank you. Thank you, Chair. 2198

Chairman

Deputy Joe Higgins. 2199

Deputy Joe Higgins

First, if I can allude again to the meeting on 7 September 2008, and Mr. Boucher, in one of his statements to this investigation, stated the purpose of the meeting was to discuss potential liquidity support for Irish Nationwide. Now, leaving the Reuters issue aside, Mr. Purcell, why was there such concern in many quarters about the viability of INBS or the need for liquidity support because both Mr. Fingleton and Mr. Walsh in their opening statements stressed that INBS had sufficient liquidity at that time? 2200

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, at that time we had between €3.5 billion and €4 billion in liquid assets and our liquid assets were liquid. I mean, they were readily available. They were short-term deposits with large European banks. However, the initiative as regards the stand-by: it came from the Financial Regulator and the Financial Regulator came up with the idea, probably in the light of the threat to liquidity and the threat of maybe increased withdrawals as a result of the Reuters report. 2201

Deputy Joe Higgins

But were there concerns before that, Mr. Purcell? Because, for example, the Department of Finance had secretly or quietly put on the stocks legislation for the nationalisation of an institution like yours. 2202

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I wasn’t aware … I heard that, yes, earlier in … from the inquiry. Well, I mean, there was – how would I put it – there was a lot of concern probably in the summer of 2008. 2203

Deputy Joe Higgins

Can I go over again the question of whether INBS was solvent in September 2008? And if I could refer to the Goldman Sachs report that was done into INBS. This is in documentation that has been many times in front of the committee but we have it up in front of us there, Mr. Purcell. And if you see that line of the total loan book, €11.7 billion, and then their mark-to-market analysis going from 69 … best mark 69% of the loan book to the worst mark 42%, which equates to €8.1 billion or €4.7 billion worst. Quite clearly on those figures, INBS was not solvent. 2204
And if I might then refer to a similar diagram from Merrill Lynch, presentation to the National Treasury Management Agency, 26 September 2008, and then on the right … top right-hand side, Mr. Purcell, you’ll see their summary is INBS has €11.7 billion of loans, “Writedowns of 30% – 60% results in an impairment of €3.6 bn – €7 bn”. In other words, figures remarkably similar to Goldman Sachs’. And then the very next line is the liquidity of €3 billion to the end of 2008. On that basis, INBS is not solvent. Now how can you square these figures, plus the concerns that emerged about the liquidity, as opposed to what Mr. Fingleton and Mr. Walsh have assured us? 2205

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, this scenario I’m looking at here is Merrill Lynch setting out a scenario of what possibly would happen. You know, they would be setting out best case, worst case, medium cases. At that time all options and all eventualities were being explored. It was people looking at what might happen. 2206

Deputy Joe Higgins

Were you concerned … were you worried at that time that INBS was insolvent, or not? 2207

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I wasn’t worried that INBS was insolvent at that stage. The main concern at that stage was liquidity and the ability to raise funds. 2208

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay. Thank you, Mr. Purcell. 2209

Chairman

Thank you very much. We’ll move on so to Deputy Pearse Doherty, please. 2210

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Yes. The Financial Regulator sent a letter in December 2004 noting its ongoing concerns with the level of resources at senior and executive management level within Nationwide. These concerns were repeated in a further letter in March 2008. Can you explain why the regulator’s concerns were not addressed and no apparent effort was made to strengthen the board of the senior management to the satisfaction of the regulator over the period stretching at least six years? 2211

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, in relation to some of the concerns raised in 2004 in relation to senior management, there were … it was mentioned there that there had been people recruited. There was … and I think it was also dealt with by Michael Walsh and Michael Fingleton, there was a difficulty in recruiting extra non-executive directors around that time. They have mentioned that a number of people were approached and the situation that INBS was going to demutualise and sell, it meant we were not a very attractive … as I understand. 2212

Deputy Pearse Doherty

In view of the concerns over resources levels in senior management, why did the building society continue to expand its loan book – and this is the years that it dramatically expanded its loan book and, in particular, its commercial lending throughout that period – given the resource level in terms of senior management? 2213

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

INBS, you know, continued doing the sort of business it felt it had a capacity to do. It felt it was doing good business with experienced people, much of it repeat business and, as a background to that, we were recruiting people in relation to aspects of loan. We set up around that time a credit risk department. We were preparing the loan book for the mutualisation, for Basel II, and for credit grading a number of things. So we were working in areas that needed attention. 2214

Deputy Pearse Doherty

In your opening statement, you mention in page 3, you say “By September 2008 INBS’s liquidity was coming under pressure due to […] credit rating downgrade and an inaccurate report […] by Reuters.” Mr. Purcell, did your bank have access to ECB funding in September 2008? 2215

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

In … during 2008, we raised funds by a mortgage … a mortgage-backed promissory note programme. 2216

Deputy Pearse Doherty

From the ECB? 2217

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, it was raised in banks. 2218

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Yes, but the question is, I’m not asking you about that. 2219

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, I know. You asked me about—– 2220

Deputy Pearse Doherty

The question is—– 2221

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I will just come to that—– 2222

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–did you have access to ECB funding? 2223

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

We had … We were working on a securitisation. 2224

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Did you have access to ECB funding? 2225

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, we didn’t have access at that stage. 2226

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Did you have access to funding from the money markets? Did you have access to the European medium-term notes at this time? 2227

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, the … around September 2008, the markets were not accessible—– 2228

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. 2229

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–probably to us and … not to us and to others. 2230

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Well, you were shut out from the markets and shut out from the ECB at that stage. When did Nationwide … when were Nationwide shut out from the money markets? 2231

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, probably, I mean, I can’t get an exact date on it, but probably some … in … in 2008, as the credit crunch—– 2232

Deputy Pearse Doherty

We’ve seen details, or I’ve seen details, that suggest that it would have been in the first quarter of 2008. Would that be in line with your view? 2233

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It possibly could be, you know. In early 2008, we were raising a lot of money on retail funding—– 2234

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Given the fact—– 2235

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–and we were raising … we were reducing our book at the same time. 2236

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Given the fact that you were shut out to the money markets from about September or, sorry, from about March 2008 ‘til this period I’m talking about now, in September, and you mentioned that liquidity was a serious problem, you know that in the next 12 months, in 2009, there was about €4.8 billion of a roll-over on the markets. How were you going to cope? 2237

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well we, like a lot of other institutions, were faced with a credit crunch. It was difficult for others also to raise money on the money markets. I mean, the credit crunch had started in 2007, and was getting worse. There was very little lending. In 2008, we were trying to reduce our loan book and we have … we had reduced our loan book by a lot. We were still raising retail funding and the market was in a stage where people were optimistic maybe it would improve next year. 2238

Deputy Pearse Doherty

You were the only Irish bank that were shut out from the money markets and the ECB at that time, just for the record. 2239

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I, I, yes, I don’t know that, but, I mean, I, yes. 2240

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Do you believe that that might have been what prompted the Government to start preparing legislation to nationalise the building society around that period? 2241

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I can’t say. I can’t say, Deputy—– 2242

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. 2243

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–but, I mean, we were, we were still raising money and we, we still had a lot of liquidity in September. 2244

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay but, yes, that was the major risk and the Financial Regulator understood … accepted that as well. Can I ask … you mentioned in your statement that you were also involved in IT systems and development of IT systems and this is an area that came under criticism from the internal audit report, I believe. There is mention in terms of the IT systems. Can you just clarify this for once and for all? Did the CEO of Nationwide have access to a computer in his office? Did he run a €16 billion business without access to a computer? 2245

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I mean, I think there was … he definitely had access to a computer. His secretary would have a computer and he would have access through that. I’m not … can’t … he … he probably had one on his desk as well. 2246

Deputy Pearse Doherty

But, like, I’m thinking … I’m sure you’ve been in with like his office on many occasions. It’s usually …. one of the most notable things you will see on anybody’s desk is a computer. But in terms of a bank, and you’re looking at the reports, and you’re looking at all of the stuff, obviously, you’re looking at it on a screen. Was there … you know, you were, sorry, you were the person in charge with the IT systems in the institution. Did the CEO have access to a computer in his personal office? 2247

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I’m not sure. I don’t think he did, but he had access to one, and his secretary would have one, but he also operated in terms that reports were brought to him. In other words, he wouldn’t be focusing on trying to figure things on a screen. There would be regular reports. 2248

Deputy Pearse Doherty

We’re not talking about a corner shop here. 2249

Chairman

Deputy, just let me in there for one second. Was there any device on Mr. Fingleton’s desk? 2250

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I can’t recollect whether he had a computer or not, at what stage. 2251

Chairman

Any electrical device? 2252

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

But I would say, Deputy and Chairman, that he was well informed of everything in relation to the areas he was looking after. 2253

Chairman

Okay, back to yourself, Deputy Doherty. 2254

Deputy Pearse Doherty

The point I’m making is, in terms of the systems – and this may seem a bit trivial and all that but I actually think it’s not. Right – in terms of the systems, because you mention you were in charge—– 2255

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 2256

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–of IT systems. 2257

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, the IT. Now—– 2258

Deputy Pearse Doherty

We’re not talking, as I was saying, about the wee corner shop, you know, that’s selling a couple of loaves of bread and a couple of pints of milk at the weekend. It is a €16 billion enterprise, where Mr. Fingleton … report after report is saying – we know he was the chief lender – but report after report is how he was heavily involved in all aspects of the bank. Can you explain to me, as somebody who was responsible for the systems, how the CEO didn’t have access to a computer, given in banking everything is computerised, is it not, or were you still running around with post-it notes and paper clips and reports? 2259

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I mean, he had access to a computer. I mean, if he didn’t use a computer a lot himself, he had access if he wanted to, to use a computer. You know, there was, he could sit down with somebody and go through stuff on computer. 2260

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Mr. Purcell, what do you say to those who accuse you of being Mr. Fingleton’s “Yes” man? 2261

Chairman

Wrap up, Deputy. 2262

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I don’t agree. 2263

Deputy Pearse Doherty

You don’t agree. In your view—– 2264

Chairman

Last question. 2265

Deputy Pearse Doherty

—–and in your knowledge, from being there, from being secretary, from being chief financial officer, was … had … did Mr. Fingleton ever sanction a loan or ask somebody to provide a loan to an individual without it first going through the credit committee approval process or the board? 2266

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I’m not aware. I don’t recollect a loan in that case. 2267

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Are you aware, as we’ve seen in the Deloitte report, an internal report, where loan applications were actually made after loans were advanced to the customers? 2268

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

In Deloitte internal audit reports, that is what you’re referring to? 2269

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Yes. 2270

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, I mean, there were findings of that regard and they were followed up. 2271

Chairman

——wrap it up actually. 2272

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Could I just ask this because you sat on the board? So one of the findings was, in Deloitte, that Mr. Fingleton was the individual who extended Stg£10 million of a loan on his own say, nobody else, and this was also backed up in terms of the independent internal review. 2273

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 2274

Deputy Pearse Doherty

When those findings were made, did the board investigate these findings and clarify whether that was the case or not, or did you just say, “That was a nice read and let’s move on to the next item on the agenda”? 2275

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, no, no. 2276

Chairman

Right, Deputy. 2277

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It would have been explained to the board and action would have been taken so that—– 2278

Deputy Pearse Doherty

What explanation did you receive? 2279

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I can’t recollect the explanation on that but I know it would have been dealt with. 2280

Chairman

Thank you. Mr. Purcell, I’m going to bring matters to a conclusion. I just have a couple of questions myself to ask and I just need to wrap up, and I’ll also be inviting yourself to make any closing comments or remarks that you might wish to make. 2281
Mr. Purcell, this was, kind of, touched upon earlier. I just need to get a bit further clarification on it. What was the limit of the MD’s authority to issue loans? What was the sum of money? What was the lending limit? 2282

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, the lending limit, there was a lending limit of stuff, of €635,000, that could be dealt with—– 2283

Chairman

Okay. 2284

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–in the loans department without coming to the board. 2285

Chairman

Okay. With an earlier question there that I put to Mr. Walsh when he was in earlier – and I can pull up the document again – I think that figure of €635,000 you mention seems to ring a familiarity with … that the sum should have been £0.5 million but … the … in a report by the regulator, there was actually a comment about a sum of that size. So was that sum actually beyond the scope? Is that the same sum that’s being discussed? 2286

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes, I think this figure of 600 and … it was … actually, it represented the old £500,000. 2287

Chairman

Okay. So it is the £500,000 instead of €600,000. All right. So once it went beyond the old £500,000 – £0.5 million – he would then need board approval, yes? 2288

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 2289

Chairman

Okay. Did he ever issue loan cheques to borrowers and later seek board approval retrospectively? 2290

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

There may well have been some of those – I can’t recollect an example. 2291

Chairman

Are you aware of any cases? 2292

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, I can’t recollect any particular case at the moment. 2293

Chairman

Okay. Did the board reject loans which were submitted to it by the credit committee? 2294

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

It did. 2295

Chairman

Okay. Can you … maybe without getting into the specifics of customer transactions and customer confidentiality, could you maybe give us a general example? 2296

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I can’t think of any particular examples. I know there was cases of that and also there would have been cases of loans, kind of, sent back. You know, maybe the board wanted more work done on them. 2297

Chairman

So, in that regard—– 2298

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

They mightn’t have been rejected out of hand, a lot of them, but they would’ve been put back into the system. 2299

Chairman

So, are you also saying that there were situations so where the board seek … or sought additional information from the credit committee before approving loans? 2300

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Yes. 2301

Chairman

Okay. 2302

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Or the approval was subject to things being done. 2303

Chairman

To the suggestion … to maybe just to get your own comment and opinion on … to the suggestion that credit committees can be rubber stamps and … was there ever … that never would … that never go against management … a managing director’s decisions to grant loans? Would that be a fair or unfair description of the credit committee in INBS? 2304

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, I was not a member of the credit committee. 2305

Chairman

Okay. But by your own observations? 2306

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No. By my own observations, that … you know, the loans were underwritten in a proper way. 2307

Chairman

Okay. And at a board level, did anyone on the board every challenge the overall lending strategy? In particular, did anybody on the board ever challenge the practice of taking equity stakes in developments in exchange for 100% funding? 2308

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, in December 2007 the board deliberated and made a decision that we were going to cease new lending, but that was—– 2309

Chairman

Okay. That’s not what I am asking you, though. 2310

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Sorry. 2311

Chairman

There was a particular model that was being operated by Irish Nationwide Building Society. Usually, if somebody went into a bank, they’d get a loan-to-value of 80%, 20%, 60% or whatever, and they would have to come up with some cash themselves. Irish Nationwide, if I’m correct, and you can correct me if I’m wrong, operated on a basis that they gave 100% funding but on the basis that they would get a proportion or a profitability on what they were giving the loan on. It’s that lending model that I am talking about. Did anybody on the board ever challenge that practice of taking equity stakes in developments in exchange for 100% funding? 2312

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Not that I am aware. 2313

Chairman

Okay. On a review of that lending practice, how would you consider that now? 2314

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, probably, in today’s terms it wouldn’t be regarded as maybe interim lending—– 2315

Chairman

Okay. 2316

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–but back then it was based on the fact that we were dealing with experienced people. It was repeat business. We were dealing with people who had been very successful in the past and knew their business. 2317

Chairman

In terms of a recommendation to this committee going into the future, how would you view such a practice? 2318

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well I … in my statement, there, I was asked what regulators might do to ensure that lending markets didn’t overheat in future and I said maybe there should be loan-to-deposit ratios applied, perhaps maybe a balance between residential and commercial lending and that’s … those, sort of … loan-to-values as well, which the Central Bank have applied. 2319

Chairman

In … I concluded with a question to Mr. Walsh earlier, Mr. Purcell, and I’d put the same question to you. And that is, Mr. Purcell, that this inquiry, in preparing for the public hearings, gathered hundreds of thousands of documents. For today’s hearing regarding INBS, documents from the Financial Regulator’s office consistently and repetitively over many years expressed concerns regarding corporate governance, senior management resources, lending expertise appropriate to your business strategy, direction of the society’s overall business model and the associated control framework, issues on the regulatory reporting and control – and, I think, in your own engagement this evening, which, as you admit, were a source of continuing disappointment to you – and also the lack of experience in the quality of internal audited resources. Having listened to your contribution this evening, Mr. Purcell, is it your opinion, as we come to close these proceedings, that these documents are consistently and repetitively wrong? 2320

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Those documents express the concern of the Financial Regulator over years. They brought up concerns following inspections and, in all cases, we worked to resolve the issues. For example, we worked to upgrade internal audit in all aspects of its operation. So, when you look at them all together there is a long list there, but they came up over a number of years and we would have worked to resolve each one as well as we could at the time. And many of them resulted in systems and processes being upgraded to a good standard. Some of them about recruiting directors, there was reasons why it was delayed and for other reasons. 2321

Chairman

You have a far, far greater experience of banking than I have, Mr. Purcell, and I would acknowledge that right from the get-go both in terms of experience, time in the job and all the rest of it. And you may or may not observe things better than I would just in terms of general detail, but … and I am sure, maybe I’m wrong, that you would have maybe observed some of the testimony of the different financial institutions here to date. In quantitative terms in regard to just the volume of correspondence that came from the regulator’s office to financial institutions in this country, where would you rank Irish Nationwide Building Society? 2322

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I don’t know. I wouldn’t have knowledge of what other banks had in dealings with the regulator, but I do know – I recollect it came up – a remark was made to one of our non-executive directors that the dealings that the regulator/Central Bank had with us were just normal issues. 2323

Chairman

That would be your—– 2324

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

That was an observation that was made to—– 2325

Chairman

Yes, but what’s your observation? 2326

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Well, my observation was that I don’t know whether other institutions had more or less than we did. 2327

Chairman

Okay. Is there anything else you’d like to add by means of final comment, Mr. Purcell? 2328

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

No, thank you, Chairman, except to thank the members—– 2329

Chairman

Okay, with that said, I’d like to bring matters to—– 2330

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

—–and I hope I was of assistance. 2331

Chairman

Sorry? 2332

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

I just want to thank the members and hope I was of assistance. 2333

Chairman

Okay, thank you. So, with that said, I would like to bring matters to a conclusion and thank Mr. Purcell for his participation this evening, and for his engagement with the inquiry, and to now formally excuse you. In doing so, I would just like to suspend for a moment to deal with just one point of information before we close this evening and as we prepare for our hearings tomorrow morning. Is that agreed? Agreed. 2334

Mr. John Stanley Purcell

Thank you, Chairman. 2335
The joint committee went into private session at 9.08 p.m. and adjourned at 9.10 p.m. until 9 a.m. on Thursday, 3 September 2015. 2336