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14/05/2015: Richard Burrows – Former Governor, Bank of Ireland

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.

 

Bank of Ireland – Dr. Laurence Crowley and Mr. Richard Burrows

Chairman

I now call the meeting into public session. Is that agreed? And as we’ve a quorum, the Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis is now in public session, and can I remind members, and those in the public gallery, to ensure that their mobile devices are switched off? We begin today with session one, public hearing, discussion with Mr. Laurence Crowley, former governor, Bank of Ireland, and Mr. Richard Burrows, former governor, Bank of Ireland. 13
I would like to welcome everyone to the 26th public hearing of the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis. Today we continue our hearings with senior bank executives who had roles during and before the crisis. This morning we will hear from witnesses from Bank of Ireland, both governor … both former governor, Mr. Laurence Crowley, and Mr. Richard Burrows. Dr. Laurence Crowley was governor, i.e. chairman, of the Bank of Ireland from 2002 to 2005, having previously been deputy governor from 1995 to 1997, and a non-executive director from 1990 to 2000. Previously he was a partner in KPMG Stokes Kennedy Crowley, chartered accountants, where he specialised in corporate structuring and insolvency. Richard Burrows was governor of Bank of Ireland from 2006 to 2009 and a non-executive director from 2000 to 2005. He has held senior positions within the drinks industry, including chief … or co-chief executive of Pernod Ricard and CEO of Irish Distillers Group. Mr. Burrows is currently the chairman of British American Tobacco, a role he has held since 2009. Dr. Crowley, Mr. Burrows, you’re very welcome before the inquiry this morning. 14
Before I engage with the witnesses, I wish to advise the witnesses 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’re 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. 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. 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 a smooth running of the inquiry, we will display certain documents on the screens here in the committee room. For those sitting in the gallery, these documents will be displayed on the screen to your left and right. Members of the public and journalists are reminded that these documents are confidential and should not publish any of the documents so displayed. The witnesses have been directed to attend these meetings of the Joint Committee of Inquiry into the Banking Crisis, you have been furnished with booklets of core documents. These are before the committee, will be relied in the questioning and will form part of the evidence of the inquiry. I will now ask the clerk to administer the oath. 15

The following witnesses were sworn in by the Clerk to the Committee:

Dr. Laurence Crowley, former Governor, Bank of Ireland.

Mr. Richard Burrows, former Governor, Bank of Ireland.

Chairman

Thank you again, Mr. Burrows and Mr. Crowley, and if I can invite, in whichever order you choose, the first of you to speak. Thank you, Mr. Crowley. 18

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Where do I stand? 19

Chairman

We’ll take it from the chair, you can sit down. 20

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Okay, thank you. Mr. Chairman, I have provided a written statement to the inquiry on the topics you raised with me and I would like this morning to make a few general points. 21
The first, and to me the most important point, I would ask the inquiry to bear in mind that my role as non-executive governor or chairman of Bank of Ireland ended in July 2005, just under ten years ago and I have absolutely no involvement with the bank in the intervening decade. Whilst I am anxious to assist the inquiry as much as I can and do not wish to appear in any way unhelpful, the truth is my recollection of events, of meetings and correspondence is significantly impaired by the passage of time. It happens to all of us and I trust the inquiry will understand and accept this. I note that a lot of the documents you have sent me relate to periods after I left the bank and I hope you will appreciate that I am not in a position to comment in any way on these documents. 22
The second point I would like to make concerns the standards of governance and oversight in the bank during my time there. Most of the board, including myself, were non-executive and therefore part-time. It is not the job of non-executives to run the bank nor are they or can they be expected to know everything that is going on in the bank. Their role is an oversight one, to approve strategy and general direction and to be satisfied that there are proper governance structures in place. In looking at historical practices, whether in banking or anywhere else, I believe that these practices should be judged against the standards of best practice which existed at that time. There is no doubt that corporate governance has evolved significantly over the last decade, both generally for public companies and specifically for financial institutions in the light of the financial crisis but in my view, a fair assessment of practice in the past requires them to be judged in the context of standards of best practice at the time concerned. 23
I believe that the structure which was in place in Bank of Ireland during my time there reflected best practice and I have summarised the main control processes which existed in my written statement. I had no cause for concern about the adequacy or appropriateness of the reporting and the accountability structures which we benchmarked against practice at the time, with the help in particular of our internal auditors and our external auditors. 24
In relation to the strategy of the bank approved by the board in 2002, it is clear that this was an ambitious growth strategy. It must be viewed, however, in the context of the economy at the time which was growing rapidly and with all indications pointing to a long period of sustained growth. What is also important to note is that the strategy was not reliant on property lending. My recall is that the growth in the balance sheet was to be achieved through a combination of acquisitions, particularly in life and pensions businesses, and through managing the capital of the bank through share buy-backs and other mechanisms. We were particularly focused on growing the business outside Ireland and that was largely why we recruited a CEO who had been working abroad. My understanding from reading the materials you have sent to me is that, in fact, property lending did not grow in a disproportionate fashion compared to other lending in Bank of Ireland and this would be what I would have expected from my experience there. 25
In my written statement in relation to the subject of property lending, I say that I do not recall any issue of imprudent lending being brought to the board. I understand that this statement by me has been put to one of the other witnesses. I was not intending to suggest that executives were aware at the time of imprudent property lending and chose not to bring it to the board. I’m completely satisfied that this is not the case. There was always open dialogue between the board and the executives and I have no doubt that if there was a material issue relating to property lending, the board would have been informed. Of course, the board were aware that the bank, like all banks, had bad debts and I recall that the bank was conservative in making provisions for bad debts. While some of the bad debts may well have related to property lending, I have no reason to believe that this was a result of imprudent or reckless lending. 26
Finally, in relation to property lending, I’ve seen references to the establishment of a specialist property group in the bank in late 2004, the implication being that this is evidence of a decision to place a particular emphasis on property lending. I don’t believe that the reason for the decision was to significantly increase the level of property lending. It was part of a move towards specialisation, where individual lenders would focus on particular areas, rather than have someone who might be lending to a property developer in the morning and a grocer in the afternoon and I believe that this was a sensible approach. 27
Can I conclude by coming back to what is the role of a director? For as long as I’ve been involved in business, it has always been the case that the primary duty of a director is to act in good faith in what he or she honestly believes is in the best interests of the company involved. I understand that this principle has now been enshrined in legislation in the new Companies Act, recently passed by you and your colleagues in the Oireachtas. I genuinely believe that everything I and other directors of Bank of Ireland did during my time was done in good faith in what we believed was the bank’s best interests. I believe we discharged our responsibilities to the best of our ability. When, as I was leaving … when I was leaving the bank in 2005, it was operating in a very strong economic environment and there were no signs that the bank would do anything but go from strength to strength. If, with the benefit of hindsight, decisions taken during my time later contributed to the problems facing the bank, then this is clearly something I regret. Thank you. 28

Chairman

Thank you very much, Mr. Crowley. Mr. Burrows? 29

Mr. Richard Burrows

Mr. Chairman and members of the joint committee, I welcome this opportunity to meet with you and to assist you with your inquiry into the banking crisis. As requested by you, I submitted a written statement on a number of specific topics identified by you. I do not propose today to repeat all of the points made in my written statement, but I do want to highlight a number of points which I believe are of particular relevance to the business of the inquiry. Looking at events from a number of years ago, it’s important to try and recall and to understand the context in which actions were taken or decisions were made. This is particularly so in circumstances where the banking world has changed so dramatically in the intervening period. Before touching on some of the points made in my written statement, let me make a few brief words about the backdrop against which Bank of Ireland and other banks operated during my time on the board. 30
Peter Nyberg’s evidence to the inquiry described that the global consensus back in the noughties was that financial markets were stable and efficient, a view to which Irish private and public sector decision makers adhered. A number of previous witnesses before the inquiry have referred to the general economic backdrop to the early 2000s, including the strong growth in employment, the extraordinary growth in the Irish population and the consequent huge increase in demand for new housing. 31
The report by Regling and Watson, which forms part of the evidence presented to the inquiry, notes that Ireland’s strong and extended expansion during the previous decade fostered expectations of a continued rise in living standards and in asset values. Regling and Watson also note that in this macroeconomic setting, bank governance and financial supervision faced major challenges and, looking back, I would agree with this observation. They described banks operating in a setting of greatly increased wholesale funding opportunities following the adoption of the euro and banks from abroad beginning to compete strongly in retail mortgage lending. Another factor highlighted by Regling and Watson was that when modern Ireland … was that modern Ireland had never experienced a property crash. As the chief economist of Bank of Ireland set out in his written statement to the inquiry, the fall in house prices in the first half of 2008 was modest and the full effect of the unprecedented collapse of the global credit markets which followed the Lehman bankruptcy in September 2008 was not felt until 2009. So the 2008 crisis was not primarily caused by the property devaluation but by other factors, later exacerbated by the collapse of property values. 32
I was asked to discuss the quality of the business model setting process in Bank of Ireland, which I took to mean the quality and setting of the strategic plans. In my view, a key point to bear in mind when making judgments on a strategy setting process is the backdrop against which the strategy is developed. Bank of Ireland’s strategy was informed by the consensus view on likely economic developments in the countries in which the bank was most exposed to credit risk. While I believe that the process for setting the bank’s strategy was extensive and robust, in hindsight the bank’s strategy, in common with other financial institutions in Ireland and internationally, which assumed continued economic growth in the bank’s main markets, reflecting the consensus view, led the bank to expand in a manner which, as I said at the extraordinary general meeting of the bank in March 2009, was regrettable. The bank’s funding of that growth assumed the continued normal functioning of wholesale interbank markets, which did not happen, and the risk of this funding not being available was not, in light of our perception of future events at that time, fully appreciated. 33
While prudent strategic decisions were made to focus on the bank’s core business, and not to enter into certain business segments, which meant that Bank of Ireland’s position, when compared against many of its peer companies, was less severe overall, this was of little consolation to the bank’s shareholders, who suffered a very serious decline in the value of their shares and through the cancellation of dividends. At the extraordinary general meeting in March 2009, I also acknowledged that the bank’s change of strategy, to a much more defensive position, was not commenced early enough in the cycle of the economic decline. Reports commissioned by the bank in the period following the crisis have noted that while the bank could not have escaped the unusually severe economic downturn, the effects could have been mitigated if corrective action had been taken earlier. 34
As I said at the time and at the AGM in July 2009, I accept responsibility and accountability as governor for the situation in which Bank of Ireland found itself in 2008. I also placed clearly on the record then, my appreciation of the Government actions in 2008 and 2009, which ensured the survival of Bank of Ireland. 35
I’m referring to the guarantee, which stabilised the situation in September of 2008, the capital infusion into Bank of Ireland, since, thankfully, fully repaid and the creation of NAMA and its acquisition of the banks property loans, which allowed Bank of Ireland to become an investable institution and thus allowed new, third-party shareholders to come aboard. This package of support was comprehensive and determined the continued viability of the bank. I have outlined in my written statement, the structures which were in place in Bank of Ireland in relation to risk monitoring. A key issue in my view, is that despite these structures, we the board and management did not fully appreciate nor factor in the risk inherent in the rate of growth of the bank’s core businesses and in particular, while property lending grew broadly in line with other lending, the risks arising from the absolute amount of property lending and from the group’s reliance on wholesale funding. 36
In hindsight, risk should have been a more fundamental driver of the setting of strategy. This would have resulted in a set of constraints around strategy development reflecting the risk appetite being set down by the board. I do not believe that the appetite for property lending in Bank of Ireland was any greater than for lending into other sectors. In particular, Bank of Ireland had a relatively lower appetite for, and by extension, lower relative exposure to, landbank lending than other banks in the Irish market. So, while the growth in property lending was not disproportionate, the amount of the bank’s property and construction book was significant and thus the bank was heavily exposed to the significant downturn in the Irish and UK property markets. 37
I have seen from the previous evidence sought by the inquiry that the members have a strong interest in analysing the decision to introduce the bank guarantee on the night of 29 September 2008. You have asked for my opinion on the appropriateness of that guarantee and in response, I would say that there is no doubt that the Government at the time found itself in an extraordinarily difficult situation, particularly on that night of 29 September, when it became clear that a liquidity default risk facing Anglo Irish Bank could have serious implications for the entire banking system. I am not aware of the range of options considered by the Government at the end of September 2008 and I am not, therefore, in a position to comment on the appropriateness of the guarantee as against those other options. I would say that in my view, the immediate funding requirements of Anglo Irish Bank could have been addressed by guaranteed financial support, which Bank of Ireland and AIB were prepared to make available in the short term to Anglo Irish Bank. Such a decision may have given the Government more time to consider its options. However, the Government chose to go further and to guarantee all financial institutions, which certainly avoided the collapse of Anglo Irish Bank that week. 38
Let me conclude these remarks by repeating that it was a source of great regret to the board of Bank of Ireland, which had served its stakeholders so well for over two centuries, that we required substantial support from the Irish taxpayer and from the State. As I’ve said earlier, that support was comprehensive and ensured the continuing viability of the bank, and for that I remain very grateful. I’ll do my best to answer any questions which you may wish to raise, Chairman. 39

Chairman

Thank you very much, Mr. Burrows, and thank you very much for your earlier comments, Mr. Crowley. Our speakers will commence this morning with Senator Sean Barrett. Senator, you have 25 minutes. 40

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you very much, Chairman, and I echo your welcome to our two ex-governors this morning. Mr. Burrows, let me start with you. Mr. Crowley in his statement said “In particular, I do not recall any issues of imprudent lending being brought to a Board by the Executives of the Bank, the internal auditors or the external auditors.” Did that happen in your term as governor or would you make the same statement as your colleague? 41

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes I would make broadly the same statement. I’d add to it by saying that within Bank of Ireland we had a pretty robust system of control in place which meant that in relation to any lending we relied on the three lines of defence which I think you’ve heard about before. And those three lines of defence were of course the very front office – the person engaged in the lending contact – the credit committee to whom that was referred and then an oversight by the internal audit as to the appropriateness of whether the procedures were being followed properly or not. So, therefore … and that was monitored carefully by the court. So there was a robust system in place, of course there were always debates, I think, but at the same time there wasn’t a situation where a particular case was brought to the attention of the court in my time. 42

Senator Sean D. Barrett

And then the difficulties, if I may refer to … BOI – B1, page 17. 43

Chairman

I’ll put it up there, Senator. 44

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you, Chairman. It should come up on the screen in time. Yes, at paragraph 126 there. 45

Mr. Richard Burrows

Paragraph 126, yes. 46

Senator Sean D. Barrett

You have the advantage, mine hasn’t appeared yet, never mind. “BOI’s issues have revolved around:- 47
[1] the absolute quantum of property lending on its balance sheet; 48
[2] the greater dependence on wholesale markets rather than deposit gathering; 49
[3] the structural defects in financing of mortgage markets leading to greater reliance on securitisation; 50
[4] … [is] … entering … some business lines [where it didn’t have expertise]; 51
[and then the fifth one] increased dependence on funds based income. 52
Did you see, in your terms as governor, these problems developing which the bank is now trying to correct? 53

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think in my opening statement, Senator, I specifically referred to the problems … the absolute quantum of property lending and the reason for it, the greater dependence on wholesale markets. And, as we look back, that undoubtedly was one of the major issues. And I think the other points I would certainly concur with, but I have no further comment on them. 54

Senator Sean D. Barrett

But were there not alarm bells in the bank that … as you said in the introduction, that a bank which had been around since 1783 got into these difficulties against all its traditions of … of conservative banking? 55

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well there were alarm bells of course and those alarm bells started to go off really in 2008. In the process of strategy formulation, when I became governor in 2005, one of the things which we set about as a court with management was to review strategy very considerably, and that was done through 2005-06 by bringing in quite a number of external advisers to talk us through these issues. And it’s certainly fair to say that some of these matters were brought to our attention. At the time, we were still working within the assumption that I mentioned in my opening statement as, I think, in common with most commentators, that whilst there could well be a slowdown, that we were not looking into the kind of catastrophic decline in values which subsequently emerged. 56

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Was the strategy a cause of the subsequent problems? And I have in mind what was perceived as the undermining of the local bank manager who knew his customers, who knew the society, and who had a strong record of solvency, being replaced by the next generation, which brought the bank to Government Buildings and needing a rescue, as you said. 57

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t believe so, Senator. I think … I can’t speak for the earlier period that you’re referring to but … because all the time that I was there the structure on credit control and on lending approval was as I’ve stated it – a very robust structure within the bank with very clear limits being set at each level of authority, and any question of any of those limits being exceeded then meant that that particular matter had to be referred to a higher level of credit committee for resolution. So I think there was a very robust system in place. 58

Senator Sean D. Barrett

And, you know, did that perceived change lead to the problems later? 59

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t believe so. I think the problems later were for the reasons that I identified in my opening statement. 60

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you. I might put one question to Mr. Crowley. And this is core document B2, pages 37-47, Mr. Crowley, and they’ll come up in a while. This was a board decision to allow … to move the earnings multiplier allowing customers to borrow up to 4.5 times their annual income and also to increase the loan-to-value threshold and was made in 2002. Why did the board do that, Mr. Crowley? 61

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Well, I can only think … I don’t recall this, but I can only think that it was doing it in the light of the very healthy economy. And as a result of that they felt … we felt able to increase those ratios and multiples. 62

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Then the next one, if I may, the same volume, pages 63-67, where it states that residential investment property, RIP, lending doubled within Bank of Ireland over 15 months from 2003 to September 2004, and over the next few years there was a relaxation of terms and conditions. Was the risk in doing that understood by the board at the time, given what we said about … that the first reason there, the point to Mr. Burrows, was that the absolute quantum of property lending was the major issue, the first one listed as why Bank of Ireland subsequently got into trouble? 63

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Sorry, I missed that last point. 64

Senator Sean D. Barrett

You … residential investment property lending doubled in a 15-month period and property is, in the previous quotation, the first reason why Bank of Ireland got into trouble. So did the board understand the risk when it doubled residential investment property lending in such a short period? 65

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes. While the board are not expert bankers, they do have the capacity to understand risk, because that’s a fundamental matter in relation to a bank. 66

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Would there be nervousness … as some of the expert witnesses have said here, if anything grows really quickly in banking by huge percentages – 100% in this case – in a short period, there should be alarm bells? It’s a bad sign for a bank if it makes these explosive decisions. 67

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Again, I have lost the point—– 68

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Were you ever worried if an item grew by 100% in 15 months? 69

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Oh yes, we would have been concerned as to why and as to whether or not it was safe and secure. That wouldn’t necessarily … it would be a concern, which we would have expressed to management and they would take that into account and … but the board were not bankers. 70

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Was there an option of a lower rate of increase than 100%, considering at that time—– 71

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I’m sure there was; I don’t recall. 72

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Are the … this is to both, are you aware of any loans or terms offered to borrowers which might be considered outside the normal commercial terms made during your tenure and—– 73

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Any loans made outside of the normal terms? 74

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Outside normal commercial terms. 75

Dr. Laurence Crowley

No, I’m not. There was a rate for staff, I know, which was slightly outside the normal commercial terms, but that’s part of the banking industry. 76

Senator Sean D. Barrett

And Mr. Burrows? 77

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I’m not aware of any. 78

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Okay then. Now the … Vol. 2, page 12, on page … Vol. 2, sorry, page 67. In this one, when it appears, the regulator wrote drawing attention to the high level of exceptions to standard criteria, 24% exceptions in loans. How was that happening, and were there concerns about that? 79

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Which letter are … it’s coming up. 80

Senator Sean D. Barrett

It’s a letter of 31 July, 2013 and I think it’s on page 67 of that volume. Mine hasn’t appeared so I can’t be of help to you. Sorry about that, Mr. Crowley. 81

Dr. Laurence Crowley

No, mine hasn’t appeared either. 82

Chairman

Did you say 71, is it? Is this to do with the response of the Financial Regulator on review of sectoral concentration framework, yes? 83

Mr. Richard Burrows

What book is that in? 84

Senator Sean D. Barrett

It is the highlighting of exceptions to standard criteria at 24%. Did that concern you or the other governors or why … how did it happen? 85

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I have a letter here from Ms Burke. 86

Chairman

He’s probably looking at the wrong page number. 87

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Honestly, I can’t recall reacting, you know, with the circumstances that you indicate, nor have I ever noticed that letter to Ms Burke. 88

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Was the board concerned about exceptions, or would 24% be considered normal? 89

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I’m sure the board were concerned about exceptions, but, clearly, no major alarm bell had rung. 90

Senator Sean D. Barrett

And on your watch, Mr. Burrows? Was there a high level of exceptions? 91

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t actually tell you the level of exceptions, but I do know that there would have been quite a lot of exceptions. And the reason for that is that when you establish policies in relation to credit and lending, you’re going to draw the terms of those policies very tightly. And so, therefore, in complex lending situations, it is quite likely that you will find in any particular transaction an exception. An exception doesn’t mean that the policy is being infringed, it just means that it has to be referred to a higher level of credit committee within the bank, within the institution in order to resolve whether it is a genuine exception, as in a deal breaker, or whether it is something that arises because of the tightness of the way that the policy has been drawn. 92

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Can I bring you to the concentration ratios. Were they discussed in either of your terms of office? 93

Mr. Richard Burrows

Concentration ratios were … were considered, yes. 94

Senator Sean D. Barrett

And was there concern about them? 95

Mr. Richard Burrows

There wasn’t … there wasn’t major concern within Bank of Ireland at that time. 96

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Because there’s a letter on, from the Financial Regulator it’s in B2, page 71. 97

Mr. Richard Burrows

Which book are we in now? 98

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Book 2, page 71. 99

Mr. Richard Burrows

Book 2? 100

Chairman

BOI – B2, pages 71 to 86 and the reference there is BOI101640. 101

Senator Sean D. Barrett

If the regulator writes that she is concerned that you don’t risk assets to more than 200% of own funds and the reply says, “Bank of Ireland remains comfortable with the exposure”, to the outsider that’s a strange attitude to the regulator, you know, if the referee draws my attention to fouling somebody and I say, “well I’m quite comfortable with that”. Yes well, the referee’s job was to tell you and you say you’re quite comfortable with breaching the 200% in one sector. 102

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think that is the case. 103

Chairman

Would you care to comment on that Mr. Burrows and elaborate? 104

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t think I can elaborate any further, this was a letter from management. 105

Chairman

And in terms of the appropriate level of reporting to the board on concentration risks and other risks, would this have been on your radar? 106

Mr. Richard Burrows

This particular point? 107

Chairman

Yes, and the broader issue related to it. 108

Mr. Richard Burrows

Which is? 109

Chairman

Which is that the regulator had been expressing concerns with regard to a particular behaviour by the bank. 110

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think at the board we were, we were not aware of regulator’s concerns of such a nature as to cause board intervention in the way management was progressing these things. 111

Chairman

And I’ll return to the question again, does this reflect an appropriate level of reporting to the board or not? 112

Mr. Richard Burrows

In my belief at that time it did, yes. 113

Chairman

Okay, thank you. Senator Barrett. 114

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you Chairman. The loan-to-deposit ratio rising very rapidly, now you said in your presentation in 2009 you attempted to get back a higher rate of deposits. But when it rose very rapidly, 159% instead of the recommended 120% in September 2008, were there alarm bells at that time about the high level of reliance on wholesale funding? 115

Mr. Richard Burrows

Senator, as I mentioned in my opening remarks, our reliance on wholesale funding was something that with hindsight was substantially overdone. From much earlier than 2009, we ought to have been making sure that we had a far better loan-to-deposit ratio than we had. 116

Senator Sean D. Barrett

And going …. your relationship with the regulator in other aspects. He wrote to the Bank of Ireland on 31 July 2013 about the maintenance of lending standards, ongoing monitoring, the management and control of risk in relation to residential mortgages and that correspondence was still in operation the following December. Was there a very slow rate of response and interaction between the regulator and the bank? 117

Mr. Richard Burrows

Senator, I retired in July of 2009. That falls outside the period when I was there; I can’t comment. 118

Senator Sean D. Barrett

In your time, what would you expect to have been the appropriate time to respond to concerns expressed by the regulator? 119

Mr. Richard Burrows

I would say, very rapidly. If we got a letter from the regulator, in your own words, that’s a word from the referee, you have to respond as quickly as you can. 120

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Because again, he reports no evidence of where the balance of funding source was, the purchase price, stress testing not carried out, loan files not containing sufficient information to demonstrate the rationale for the lending decision, valuations of property not completed. And we had a affidavit yesterday, a document submitted from the Construction Industry Federation, requiring NAMA to honour verbal agreements with banks on business that was transferred. So was banking professional enough in its lending practices in the run-up to this crisis? 121

Mr. Richard Burrows

I believe Bank of Ireland was professional in its lending practices, and I think that the evidence for that is that in the transfer of loans which occurred to NAMA in 2009, the number of instances where insufficient or incorrect documentation arose was actually a very, very small percentage of the total, which implied that the vast bulk of all loans were properly documented and properly proceeded with within the bank. 122

Senator Sean D. Barrett

But there was still a 43% discount on what was transferred to NAMA. 123

Mr. Richard Burrows

Senator, I can’t comment on that. That didn’t happen on my watch and that wasn’t a negotiation I was part of; I can’t comment on that. 124

Senator Sean D. Barrett

The 100% mortgages in 2005, July 2005… Were there any concerns at board about the launch of that product? 125

Mr. Richard Burrows

There was discussion at board about the 100% mortgage, which was a response to competitive market activity by other banks in the market. I think the fact is, with the benefit of hindsight, one would not do 100% mortgages today but I’d make two points about that. Firstly, the collapse in property values that occurred in 2008, 2009 and 2010 was of the order of 50% so whether it was a 100% mortgage or a 90% mortgage or an 80% mortgage, it wouldn’t have made any difference. The second thing is that 100% mortgages within Bank of Ireland, even at their peak, were a very low percentage of the total mortgage book, less than 5% of the total mortgage book so I don’t think it was a major factor. 126

Senator Sean D. Barrett

But the Governor has brought that back to 80% maximum mortgage now as part of a macroprudential measure so I think, in retrospect, isn’t it quite plausible that 100% mortgages did cause a lot of the subsequent problems? 127

Mr. Richard Burrows

I really can’t comment on what’s happening today, Senator. The situation is that 100% mortgages at that time were a competitive product in the marketplace, and Bank of Ireland engaged in that, but at a very low level. 128

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Did banks have an approach to where people had borrowed from multiple banks? Did you know the extent of that practice taking place? 129

Mr. Richard Burrows

Are we talking property or what are we talking about? 130

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Yes 131

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m really not qualified to answer that question, but I would suggest that it was covered within the policies which we had in terms of the vetting of any lending. 132

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Was risk regarded as almost mathematical modelling by the banks, rather than looking in what was actually happening in markets, particularly in property? 133

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, if I talk about the period that I was there, Senator, I think one of the features of the staff of Bank of Ireland was that there was a very strong level of practical common-sense applied to lending. It wasn’t just doing it by the numbers; it was, in fact, assessing the risk in a more holistic manner and I would stand over that. 134

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Did the auditors, internal or external, draw your attention to any of the problems which were on their way? 135

Mr. Richard Burrows

Not in the period prior to 2008, no. 136

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Did the bank discuss the Morgan Kelly articles when they were published? 137

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, we did. 138

Senator Sean D. Barrett

And what was the reaction? 139

Mr. Richard Burrows

The reaction was that Professor Kelly had a very interesting angle on what might happen, but the weight of opinion was strongly in a different direction, and that was what we listened to. 140

Senator Sean D. Barrett

In the reforms of the bank that have taken place in the recent past, what are the … could you tell us the items that have been changed compared to the period when the bank got into trouble? 141

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t really, Senator. I can’t comment. 142

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you. 143

Chairman

Both yourself, Mr. Burrows and Mr. Crowley, if I could invite you a bit closer to the microphone, Mr. Crowley, as I have a little bit of difficulty hearing you myself, both of you were, served on the board and, in that role, both of you would actually have served as directors with the responsibility of directors. Am I correct? 144

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 145

Chairman

Could you explain to me what the responsibility of a director is? 146

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I personally referred to that in my statement … now where has it gone … there it is … in my statement at the beginning of the meeting … I can’t find it now. 147

Chairman

Bring maybe your notes. Mr. Burrows, you served as director as well. Maybe you can shed some light to the inquiry as to what the responsibility of a director is? 148

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well the responsibility of a director is very clearly laid out in law. In addition to that, I would say that a director has collective and individual responsibility with the other directors for the oversight of the business and for making sure that everything is done always in the best interest of the stakeholders of the business. Directors have a responsibility to set strategy, to appoint management, to do a list of prescribed things which have to be done by directors, subject always to the control of shareholders to whom directors report annually. 149

Chairman

Is it a part-time or full-time position? 150

Mr. Richard Burrows

It’s a part-time position. 151

Chairman

What’s the remuneration for it? 152

Mr. Richard Burrows

That depends on the institution and depends on the time—– 153

Chairman

Okay, for Bank of Ireland, what was the remuneration for a director? 154

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t remember exactly but I think it was of the order of €80,000 or €90,000 a year. 155

Chairman

Okay. 156

Mr. Richard Burrows

For a non-executive director. 157

Chairman

For a non-executive and both of you served as non-executive directors. I would’ve imagined and or maybe not, that there would be significant time commitments to the bank per annum with that job, even if it were part time. 158

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 159

Chairman

Okay. And part of that role is that you get an information flow from management, yes? 160

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 161

Chairman

Okay. Were you satisfied with the information that was flowing from management to you? 162

Mr. Richard Burrows

Was I personally satisfied—– 163

Chairman

Yes. 164

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–during my time that I was there? 165

Chairman

Yes. 166

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. Yes, I was satisfied with the amount of information I got. 167

Chairman

Okay, right through on … and to the inevitable point where we had a guarantee and we needed to see significant capitalisation going into Bank of Ireland. Going back right through your time with Bank of Ireland, right back to your time as a non-executive director, you were quite happy with the information flow that was coming through to you? 168

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, I think, Chairman, it’s a two-way street. Non-executive directors have the right to receive the information from management as you described. But they also have the responsibility to look for information from management, either individually or collectively, and that happens at board meetings where non-executive directors have a responsibility to challenge management. This happens particularly in the area of strategy or, indeed, tactics from time to time, but also can require management to produce specific reports on situations which arise or to cause external advisers to be brought in if that’s necessary. So it’s a two-way street. 169

Chairman

Okay. And Mr. Crowley, would you concur with Mr. Burrows’s analysis of the role of a director and how it functioned in Bank of Ireland at that time? And would you have been surprised at the information, or would you have been satisfied with the information you would have been receiving as a non-executive director? 170

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes, I am satisfied with the information that was given. One of the problems at boards is that you can suffer an overload of information that the executives can, in a sense, drown you in information and give you hundreds of pages to read and that is not effective. That does not contribute to efficiency in operating as a director. 171
In my opening remarks, I said two things. I re-say that about the role of a director, for as long as I’ve been involved in business, there’s always been the case that the primary duty of a director is to act in good faith in what he or she honestly believes is the best interest of the company involved. I stated: 172
It is not the job of non-executives to run the bank nor are they or can they be expected to know everything that is going on in the bank. Their role is an oversight one, to approve strategy and general direction and to be satisfied that there are proper governance structures in place. 173

Chairman

Okay. Right thank you, just one final question before I move on to Deputy Murphy in that regards, so, is: the loans that went to NAMA were put in place during your tenure, Mr. Burrows. Were you not surprised at the level of discount that came afterwards? 174

Mr. Richard Burrows

As I said earlier, Chairman, I wasn’t involved in the negotiation of that transfer to NAMA. 175

Chairman

I’m aware of that, Mr. Burrows, but the loans initially were put in place during your tenure – the result of those loans was what happened in NAMA, but the establishment and genesis of those loans was during your period. 176

Mr. Richard Burrows

I also said in my opening remarks, Chairman, that I felt the creation of NAMA by the Government was a very important element in the package of measures designed to make sure that the banking system survived. It was inevitable that there was going to be a discount on the loans to be transferred and frankly, I think the power of negotiation lay more with NAMA than with the banks from which the loans were transferred. 177

Chairman

And I’ll repeat the question again, were you surprised or not surprised by the level of the discount, Mr. Burrows? 178

Mr. Richard Burrows

I really can’t give you a comment on that—– 179

Chairman

Why not? 180

Mr. Richard Burrows

I beg pardon? 181

Chairman

Why can’t you give us a comment? 182

Mr. Richard Burrows

Because I wasn’t directly involved in the negotiation. 183

Chairman

Yes, but I’m asking, you were there at the establishment of the loans, there was quite a significant discount at the end of it. Do you have a view, were they overly discounted, were they not discounted enough, were you surprised by the level of discount? 184

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think, Chairman, we’re going to have to wait until we see how NAMA plays out in relation to the on-sale of these loans, or the redemption of the loans, before we can make that judgment. 185

Chairman

So are you saying or not this morning, that the transference of the cost of these loans to NAMA is not really an issue, we need to look a couple of years down the road and see how this pans out? 186

Mr. Richard Burrows

What I’m saying this morning is that the creation of NAMA was a very important element in the package of measures. It was necessary for Bank of Ireland to get property loans, which had a questionable value, off its balance sheet to NAMA, if it was to become an investable proposition in order to gain third-party capital and so that was done. In terms of how the value of the loans was measured at the time, as I say, that can only be I think reviewed when those loans are either paid back or sold on to somebody else. 187

Chairman

Okay. Deputy Murphy. 188

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Thank you, Chairman, and thank you both, you’re very welcome. Mr. Burrows, I’d like to, before we talk about your time on the board, and Mr. Crowley, I’d like to just go quickly to the night of the guarantee, to get a few things on the record, if I may. Mr. FitzPatrick and Mr. Drumm came to see you on the afternoon of 29 September 2008, looking for help for Anglo Irish Bank, is that correct? 189

Mr. Richard Burrows

That is correct. 190

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

How long did that meeting last? 191

Mr. Richard Burrows

Not very long, I would say that … maybe 30 minutes, 45 minutes. 192

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

In refusing to give assistance to Anglo, did you or Mr. Goggin say that the Bank of Ireland had its own problems and that the bank might also run out of money if things continued as they were? 193

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, we didn’t. We listened to the case that the executives from Anglo had to make, their plea for help. They asked us if we would consider taking over Anglo, if we would consider buying any part of Anglo, they were looking for any kind of assistance at all that we could offer in a situation which was clearly of the utmost severity in terms of that default which they were likely to have the following morning. 194

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So you didn’t give them any information as to your views of your own bank’s own position at the time? 195

Mr. Richard Burrows

The discussion was all about Anglo. 196

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay, thank you; and then you initiated the meeting with the Government, is that correct? 197

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s correct. 198

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And did you do that at Anglo Irish Bank’s request? 199

Mr. Richard Burrows

Absolutely not. 200

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. How did you initiate that meeting? 201

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, if I take you through the subsequent events, we met with Anglo, I had a pre-scheduled meeting with the Governor of the Central Bank to talk about other matters which had to do primarily with wholesale funding and collateral for funding and I took that opportunity, that afternoon, of explaining to Mr. Hurley the visit that I’d had from Anglo and explaining my concern at the very difficult situation which could result from this default the following morning and I asked if there was any plan in place in the Central Bank to deal with this situation. I was somewhat surprised to find out that there was not and it was Mr. Hurley’s guidance to me that if I wanted to take matters further, that I should make an approach to Government. 202

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. And did you make that approach then through him to Government—– 203

Mr. Richard Burrows

No. 204

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

—–or did you make that approach separately? 205

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I didn’t. I went back to Bank of Ireland, I discussed the situation with my chief executive, and we resolved that the right thing to do was to make sure that Government was fully aware of the severity of the situation facing Anglo. We also felt, and there had been a lot of discussion over prior weeks and weekends in the Central Bank, involving both Allied Irish Banks’ executives and our own executives, in relation to other issues in the marketplace and we felt that it could well be that AIB would feel similarly about the severity of the situation and that it therefore might be better if we made a joint approach, rather than an approach on our own. And so I rang Dermot Gleeson, chairman of AIB, and explained the situation as I saw it, explained that we were going to contact Government and invited him to join us in that approach, which he readily agreed to. 206

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. And then you went about setting up the meeting—– 207

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 208

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And was that by making a phone call to the Minister, to the Taoiseach, to the Secretary General? 209

Mr. Richard Burrows

A phone call was made out of our office in Bank of Ireland to the Taoiseach’s Department and as a result of that, the meeting was set up. 210

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. You say in your written opening statement that the immediate funding problems of Anglo could have been dealt with at the time with a guarantee from the Government of the €10 billion in financial support that both you and AIB were willing to give. That was your view at the time. 211

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s right. If I just go back to the sequence of events that evening, the four of us went to Government Buildings and we were eventually shown in to meet with the Taoiseach, the Minister for Finance and quite a number of other people were there, I can’t remember all the names. And I led on behalf of the four of us, to explain to the Taoiseach and the other members who were present, the reason for seeking the meeting, which was to make sure that they were fully aware of the severity of the situation that could unfold the following morning, and the impact that that could have on the banking situation at large. And then my other colleagues on that visit made their own interventions with Government, at which point we were then invited to go into an ante-room, whilst the Taoiseach and Minister and the others present conferred, and eventually we were brought back in to meet with the Taoiseach, and at that point Mr. Hurley, who was present, asked if Anglo Irish’s default could be covered by Bank of Ireland and AIB providing liquidity in the form of €10 million, €10 billion, the following morning. Our response to that, and I think it was Brian Goggin who articulated this, was to say that we would be prepared to go away and consider that, but that, given the severity of the situation, given the difficulties which we were all facing, we would need to be guaranteed by Government on that particular loan – not just guaranteed about the loan, but guaranteed that we would actually get the cash back too, after a specific period of time. 212

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. At this point in time, then, was the discussion around a possible four-bank guarantee? 213

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, it was nothing to do with four banks, or any number of banks—– 214

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

We hadn’t reached that yet—– 215

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–it just had to do with Anglo, and resolving the situation with Anglo, and so after that discussion we went back to the ante-room, Brian Goggin contacted his colleagues in Bank of Ireland, I imagine Eugene did the same thing. It’s a complex matter to raise that kind of liquidity in the middle of the night but nonetheless, after some time, they managed to do it and at that point we were called back in to the meeting with Government and we said that, subject to that condition about the loan being guaranteed, we could in fact – and I’m talking for Bank of Ireland – come up with €5 billion, not the following morning but the morning after, is the best of my recollection. At that point and AIB confirmed their participation to the same extent … at that point we were informed by the Taoiseach that the Government had decided to introduce a guarantee of all deposits for all the Irish banks, and there wasn’t any question about six or four or anything else, it was for all the Irish banks, and at that point we left. 216

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Can I just clarify on that point then, Mr. Burrows, there was never any discussion of a four-bank guarantee, with Anglo and Nationwide being taken down, to use Mr. Gleeson’s phrase? That was never considered while you were there on the night? 217

Mr. Richard Burrows

There was discussion at the meeting with Government about whether the appropriate thing would be to nationalise Anglo, and that was clearly ruled out by Government in the discussion which we had. 218

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Can I take you, if I may, just to one of the evidence documents, it’s BOI – C3b, pages 9 to 11, and it is a note from that night of the meeting? At the beginning of that note is a list of attendance, and then there’s bullet points, comments attributed to you, Mr. Burrows. I don’t know if you have this note in front of you? 219

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’ve seen the note in the papers, yes. 220

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

You’ve seen the note. There are ten bulleted points attributed to you, but Mr. Gleeson, when he was before us, said that he believed that only the top two lines were comments that you made, and the other eight were his comments. Can you confirm if that’s the case? 221

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can certainly confirm that I talked about the first point, the second point and I talked about Anglo. I’m really not sure about the other points, and I am pretty certain, in fact I’m absolutely certain, that I didn’t, myself, get into any discussion about INBS or any question about any guarantee. 222

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So that bullet point 7 where it says “Reminded action: 2 elements (a) guarantee for surviving (b) troubled patients to be taken out”, you think that was Mr. Gleeson? 223

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can tell you it certainly wasn’t me. 224

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

It’s wasn’t you. Okay. But at that point in the conversation, from your recollection, we were still talking about only a guarantee of the €10 billion that AIB and BOI would provide? 225

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, I really am not sure who made that note, or at what point. If I go back to the sequence of events as I described it to you, in the first meeting which we had we described the general situation, the international and domestic situation, we described the particular threat resulting from Anglo’s precarious position, and there wasn’t any discussion, at that point, about the remedial action to be taken. That happened at a second intervention. 226

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And can you recall any draft document or piece of paper in the possession of Mr. Goggin, with a possible draft of a guarantee, or a list of institutions that a guarantee might cover, in the meeting? 227

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I can’t. We didn’t go in with a solution to propose to Government. We went in to make Government aware of the concerns which we had, and it wasn’t for us to propose anything. It was for us to make Government aware of the seriousness of the situation and then try and respond as best we could. 228

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Do you recall AIB having any such document or piece of paper? 229

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t. 230

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. And did you know that a guarantee of your institution might be on the cards, prior to your arrival at Government Buildings that night? 231

Mr. Richard Burrows

I did not. 232

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Did you know that a system-wide guarantee might be on the cards? 233

Mr. Richard Burrows

I did not. 234

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Well, if we could just go to page 20 of the same document. There was a meeting earlier that day in the bank at which Mr. Goggin informed a small committee, of which Mr. Boucher was a member, about the possibility of a Government guarantee being provided for all borrowings by Irish institutions. So Mr. Goggin, according to these minutes, would appear to have been aware that it was a possibility that the Bank of Ireland could become part of a guarantee before he went to Government Buildings. Did he discuss this with you? 235

Mr. Richard Burrows

I saw this paper in the documents that you provided, and I made my own inquiries, and I … first of all, to your question, I was not aware … not made aware by Brian Goggin, that there was any pre-discussion about a guarantee and subsequently, when I saw this memo, or minute, I inquired, and I’ve established, to my own satisfaction, that that is an incorrect minute, it did not happen. 236

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

The minute is incorrect in its entirety, or—–? 237

Mr. Richard Burrows

The question of any preparation of any guarantee at that point was not discussed. 238

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. But the knowledge as to the possibility of a Government guarantee being provided for all borrowings by Irish institutions, that … was that discussed in that meeting? I know you weren’t present, but—– 239

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t tell you, I—– 240

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

But Mr. Goggin never said anything to you along those lines? 241

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, he didn’t. No. 242

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Thank you. When you were in Government Buildings that night did you know the bank’s borrowings at this point in time, customer deposits, interbank borrowings or debt securities issued, did you have an idea of the exposures? 243

Mr. Richard Burrows

Of Bank of Ireland? 244

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Yes. 245

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, I did. 246

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

You did. And Mr. Goggin? 247

Mr. Richard Burrows

Of course. 248

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And just to clarify then, when did you become aware of this systemic guarantee? It was a second meeting, or a—–? 249

Mr. Richard Burrows

My recollection is that it … when we came back to report to the meeting that we had with AIB, being successful in putting together the €10 billion to resolve the situation with Anglo, it was at that point that we were informed that a guarantee was going to be put in place. I think the Government made reference to the fact that they were going to have to call some kind of a Cabinet meeting in the middle of the night to authorise this, but that it was planned that the creation of the guarantee would be announced first thing the following morning. 250

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And the guarantee for all the six institutions, as it happened? 251

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. Yes. 252

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. My last question, in relation to this area, Mr. Burrows, if you could turn to page 5 of that same document, BOI – C3b, and it’s board minutes from 3 October 2008, and it’s where the events of that night are recounted to the board. 253

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 254

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And it says, “When the decision was conveyed that AIB and BoI were prepared to provide €10bn collectively, the mood of the meeting lifted considerably and the Government side began to focus on the draft Press Release to announce the blanket guarantee with immediate effect.” By “blanket” in that instance, you understand a guarantee of the six institutions? 255

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 256

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Because in the following paragraph it says, “In the event, market developments triggered the Guarantee earlier than expected. In these circumstances, the political judgement was that it had to apply to all banks.” So, is there a change there, between what was agreed, or what you understand to be agreed when you said you could provide the €10 billion, and a blanket guarantee? Could that blanket guarantee refer to the four banks? That’s my question. 257

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t think so, no. I think it always referred to all banks, in my mind. 258

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

But, the following paragraph then, “In the event, market developments triggered the guarantee earlier than expected. In these circumstances [which would seem to indicate different circumstances] the political judgement was that it had to apply to all banks.” There seems to be an inference there that there was a change in the scope of the guarantee. 259

Mr. Richard Burrows

I honestly can’t get into the actual writing of that minute as to … but I do know that we had the board and we, Brian Goggin and I, reported very carefully on what had transpired. I guess the fact of the announcement of the guarantee on the morning, which is a matter of record, means that the guarantee was triggered that night. It was not something which we had asked for. This was a Government decision. 260

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay and just finally then, can you recall any conversation around the inclusion of subordinated liabilities as part of the guarantee? 261

Mr. Richard Burrows

On that night? 262

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Yes. 263

Mr. Richard Burrows

Absolutely not. 264

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

You cannot? 265

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m saying I … it’s not that I can’t recall, I can recall that there was no discussion. 266

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

No discussion. Okay. Thank you. 267
I might return then, if I may, to board oversight of risk policies? Mr. Crowley, the group risk policy committee was set up to assist the board with its risk oversight and governance responsibilities. Did this committee assist with, or assume, the risk oversight and governance responsibilities? 268

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Sorry, I missed the opening. 269

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Did it assist with, or assume, the group risk—–? 270

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Did which? I missed the opening bit. 271

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Sorry, the group risk policy committee. 272

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes. 273

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Which was set up to assist the board with it’s risk oversight and governance responsibilities, did it assist with, or assume, these responsibilities? 274

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Did it assist with—– 275

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Or assume, these responsibilities? 276

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Oh. It was given these responsibilities. 277

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. So it was a … these responsibilities were delegated to the committee? 278

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Well, yes as an added piece of the jigsaw protecting the bank and its credit. 279

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. When Mr. Boucher was before us he was asked if there was insufficient oversight on the part of the board in relation to this committee, and he replied, “Yes I think so.” Can you—– 280

Dr. Laurence Crowley

In relation to? 281

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

This committee – oversight of the group risk policy committee. 282

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes. The risk committee, as I recall, regularly reported to the board at every meeting. 283

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So, you wouldn’t agree that there was insufficient oversight of this committee, by the board? 284

Dr. Laurence Crowley

No. 285

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Mr. Burrows? 286

Mr. Richard Burrows

Hindsight is a great thing in this situation and I would say with hindsight, as I have acknowledged, we would certainly do things differently. At the time, my belief is that there was probably the correct amount of oversight, the correct amount of control, the correct amount of reporting but, certainly in the circumstances that unfolded, a far more rigorous approach would have been justified. 287

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Mr. Burrows, do you think you placed too much trust in senior executives on the board, who were also on these credit and risk committees? 288

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I don’t think so. I think it’s … it’s a fact that to run any business, a bank included, a board has to delegate its responsibilities to management. That’s the way the business gets done and so, therefore, I don’t think that there was any question of any overestimation of the capabilities of the management. 289

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. In July 2003, the Financial Regulator said that “The examination raises questions about the maintenance of lending standards in your institution and about your on-going monitoring management and control of risk in relation to residential mortgage credit.” That’s in BOI – B1, page 67. Do you recall that criticism from the Financial Regulator at the time in relation—– 290

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t. 291

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

You don’t. Mr. Crowley, do you? 292

Dr. Laurence Crowley

No. 293

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Can we bring that up, please? Do you recall concerns being expressed actually by the group risk policy committee itself in 2004? Thank you. It’s there at the bottom, if you like, on your screen, this is from the Financial Regulator, and the quoted paragraph at the bottom “The examination raises questions about the maintenance of lending standards in your institution and about your on-going monitoring management and control of risk in relation to residential mortgage credit.” You don’t recall this letter from your time on the board? 294

Dr. Laurence Crowley

There is a reply to that letter which went on 12 February 2004. Is that a reply to this? 295

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s that one. 296

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes, which is not in the core documents but there is a reply from me to Dr. Liam O’Reilly. 297

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

There is a reply, addressing that concern. 298

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Sorry? 299

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Addressing that particular concern that’s expressed. In your reply, you address that concern. 300

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I addressed, yes, that letter, yes. 301

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Do you remember the actual discussions around this letter at the time on the board? 302

Dr. Laurence Crowley

No, I don’t remember. 303

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Thank you. I’ll move on then, if I may. Mr. Crowley, did you ever feel like the bank was under pressure to change its model or its business, given the apparently rapid success of other banks like Anglo Irish Bank? 304

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I don’t think that by 2005 there was pressure to change the model. 2005 was the fifth year of continuous profit growth and everything looked extremely good. It also was the year in which I … I retired as governor. So I think we believed we were in very good shape at that point. 305

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And then after you retired, do you believe that the culture in the bank or the activities of the bank changed? 306

Dr. Laurence Crowley

No. I think they were changing for a number of years, nothing dramatic but we were changing particularly with the chief executive we had brought in from the external world rather from the bank itself and that was a big contributor to the changing of the culture in the bank. 307

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Mr. Burrows, did you see … in relation to property lending in the bank, did you see your chairmanship as continuing the practices that were already at the bank and at board level or did you break with the past in some way? 308

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I didn’t break with the past. Bear in mind, I had been part of the board up to that point – it wasn’t as if that I arrived new on the scene in 2005. But I think, as I said earlier, in looking at the strategy of the bank with Brian Goggin, who was then a new CEO in position, we did question very thoroughly the strategy which had been put in place by his predecessor and, in doing that, we brought in quite a number of different external advisers to examine all aspects of the bank’s business to make sure that our strategy was robust going forward. So there was … there was a period of intense questioning during this period of growth of the business of the bank. 309

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. Was there confusion in the bank in 2004 about property lending, as Mr. Boucher stated in his appearance before us? 310

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m not aware of any confusion, I don’t know what that word implies. 311

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So, if we could talk about this … this specialised property financing unit that was set up in 2001, the purpose was to write high risk, higher return property transactions and it also had the following objective – to allow business banking to compete more effectively, in particular with Anglo Irish Bank. Is this an example of Bank of Ireland changing its business practice to compete with Anglo, Mr. Burrows? 312

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think the answer to that has been given by my colleague, Laurence Crowley, in that it was necessary, in a more competitive environment, to bring the skills and capabilities of management on property lending in particular into one place rather than have generalists dealing with all forms of lending. So the creation of that was a response to that. It was also in the context, bear in mind, of … of the strong growth that I referred to in my own opening remarks in the economy generally and particularly in the housing and property sector. 313

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

But do you think there was, you know, a particular focus on Anglo Irish Bank and its activities? 314

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I don’t think there was a particular focus on Anglo Irish Bank but we were and are a publicly quoted company and so, therefore, we have to have regard to what our institutional shareholders and personal shareholders are saying about us and the fact of the matter was that in a very fast growing market, Bank of Ireland was underperforming the other Irish institutions in terms of growth, and so that always led to a discussion of whether or not we were taking the right measures in the promotion of the business of the bank. 315

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Did you increase your risk appetite then for property lending because of what your competitors were doing? 316

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I don’t believe we did. I think, if anything, we probably tightened … and I referred to specifically our attitude with respect to landbank. 317

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Even though the rationale for setting up the specialised property finance unit was to facilitate in writing higher risk, higher return property transactions? 318

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, that was back in, as you said, in 2002—– 319

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

2001. 320

Mr. Richard Burrows

2001? 321

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And then in 2004 it led to the creation of a dedicated property unit—– 322

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes 323

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

—–and that was set up … responsible for managing relationships with a total group exposure in excess of €30 million and the rationale for that was that, “In the past 5 years we have under performed in this top end market, which has been dominated by Banks with specialist property units, most notably Anglo Irish Bank.” So is the move to a dedicated property unit in 2004, is this an example of—– 324

Chairman

Deputy, one moment. 325

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

—–of Bank of Ireland changing its business practice to compete with Anglo? 326

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think to compete in the marketplace rather than specifically with Anglo, Anglo were certainly the bank that was the most high profile in that area, so it’s natural to make reference to that but it wasn’t just Anglo, there were lots of other banks competing for the same business as well. 327

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Yes, and yet you cite Anglo twice in your minutes over that period of time specifically and … this is in relation to the restructuring of the bank and the establishment of a dedicated property unit … that you do cite Anglo. 328

Mr. Richard Burrows

That may be the way the minutes are written. The fact of the matter is that the bank had to set up a specialist unit with the skills and capabilities which would allow it to do that kind of business in a more efficient way. 329

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Thank you. Thank you, Chair. 330

Chairman

Deputy Murphy, I’ll bring you back again as we conclude proceedings today. Mr. Burrows, if you maybe could just clarify up one matter or maybe just add a bit of detail before we go for a break in around 11 a.m. Earlier when you were speaking to Deputy Murphy in regard to the guarantee, you were talking … you mentioned the requirement of a consideration for short-term funding for Anglo and that Bank of Ireland were discussing this arrangement with Government. Am I correct in saying that? 331

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m not sure just what the context of your question is. 332

Chairman

You were saying that in around the period of the guarantee, there was a consideration for short-term funding for Anglo that would … as being the immediate requirement—– 333

Mr. Richard Burrows

That was the discussion that took place the night of the guarantee in Government Buildings. 334

Chairman

Yes. 335

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, and your question is? 336

Chairman

Was that short-term funding, by your understanding or by your interpretation, to put Anglo indefinitely into the future and look at it again or was it to get it to the weekend and at the weekend either nationalise it or wind it down? What was the purpose of that short-term funding? 337

Mr. Richard Burrows

The request from Mr. Hurley, which we both considered that night, was for short-term funding that would get the problem off the table for the following morning to the next weekend. 338

Chairman

And, at that weekend, was there any indication as to what would be the future of Anglo when it got to the weekend? 339

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, there wasn’t. We sought, as I explained earlier … the fact that if we were to come up with this finance, that it would be guaranteed by the Government, not just the loan guarantee but that we’d also get a guarantee that we’d get the cash back. 340

Chairman

Okay, and was there any indication to you that Anglo would be wound down, or would be nationalised, or liquidated, or anything else by the weekend? 341

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, there wasn’t. 342

Chairman

Okay, thank you very much. So, with that said, I now propose that we take a break until 11.15 a. m. The witnesses are reminded that, once they begin giving evidence, they should not confer with any person other than their legal team in relation to their evidence or matters that are being discussed before the committee. With that in mind, I now suspend that the meeting … will be suspended until 11.15 a.m. and remind the witnesses that they are still under oath when we resume. Thank you. 343

Sitting suspended at 11.01 a.m. and resumed at 11.22 a.m.

Chairman

We’re all back and present and all mobile devices are in appropriate mode, I assume. So with that said, I now bring the committee back into public session and in doing so I’ll be inviting Deputy Doherty. Deputy Doherty you have ten minutes. 344

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Go raibh maith agat, a Chathaoirligh, agus fáilte roimh an bheirt agaibh chuig an coiste. 345
Just … you’ve mentioned to the Chairperson that you were satisfied with all of the relevant information that you were getting from … in relation to risks and exposures. So that being the case, how would you explain the issues highlighted in the report … in the Boston Consulting Group report and it’s available in BOI 102-106 and its on … there’s an exhibit on page 10 … Exhibit 8 on page 10, which gives a summation of the concerns that were raised in relation to some of the risks that the bank were taking. It’s BOI – B1, page 10. Page 9 also … if you’re waiting it to come up … also talks about … “There were four areas where there were gaps between BOI credit risk capabilities and peer [practice review]” and they identified risk appetite framework, court risk committee, risk function organisation structure and credit MI. 346

Mr. Richard Burrows

Deputy, this report came after my time. So I had no opportunity of discussing it whilst I was governor. It … it was I think, subsequent. 347

Deputy Pearse Doherty

But did it review the period that you were … as governor of the bank? 348

Mr. Richard Burrows

Oh, I’m sure it did, yes. 349

Deputy Pearse Doherty

So you were familiar with all of the risks that … that you were taking. So how do you stand over the fact that a report identified that there were these areas, these gaps? 350

Mr. Richard Burrows

But in my opening remarks I … I identified the areas where I felt we had made mistakes. And in one of them was the … the amount of lending which we engaged in. The … the absolute amount of lending in relation to property was one of our weaknesses, there is no doubt … when … when the property crash occurred. That was … that was a fact. 351

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Can I ask you, Mr. Burrows, how much time was allocated in the agenda of the board … the board … the court to the strategy and developing the business model and its ongoing monitoring and reviewing? 352

Mr. Richard Burrows

I will. If I go back to a kind of normal period, in other words … years before 2008, I would say that we devoted quite an amount of time, probably of the order of … of 20% or one fifth of our board time would have been devoted to strategy and strategy matters and reviewing how we were doing against strategy. Of course, in 2008 and after that the agenda changed very much to … to a survival mode and so, therefore, it wasn’t so much about strategy as it was about day-to-day issues. 353

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Mr. Crowley, in 2002 the court approved the proposal to take over Abbey National. You were quoted inThe Irish Times on 26 October 2002 saying that it was, “A once in a lifetime deal’’. Why was Bank of Ireland interested in taking over Abbey National at the time? 354

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Well, because it seemed to the bank as a very good fit. It was in a market that we understood and had a large presence in already. It was part of our expansion plan to grow and to grow sensibly and safely in an environment in which … we understood and already were doing a huge amount of business. So it ticked all these boxes. 355

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. And, Mr. Burrows, in 2005, in your opening statement you say when … on your appointment as chairperson in 2005 … the bank developed a new strategy and you go on to say that its “correct geographical footprint for Bank of Ireland was Ireland and the UK and these should be the areas of focus for growth and we also recognised that Bank of Ireland did not have a rating that would allow us to undertake mergers or acquisitions and therefore, we would have to rely on organic growth in existing markets which [we were also] … were also expanding markets.” What does that mean for the bank in 2005 … that it didn’t have the rating to undertake mergers and acquisitions? 356

Mr. Richard Burrows

What it meant was that by … by virtue of the slower rate of growth which Bank of Ireland was experiencing and reporting compared to other banks, our price earnings ratio was at a lower level than the other banks. And that meant that our firepower in terms of … of being able to make realistic approaches to any overseas bank that might have been attractive to us from an acquisition point of view, just wasn’t there. And so, therefore, we had to rely on … on organic growth. In other words, growing the business which we were already in. 357

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Yes, and that was, as you say, in 2005. Was commercial property, landbank and residential property seen as, or not seen as, a way of compensating in terms of growth for the lack of opportunities in mergers and acquisitions? 358

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well … I … the statement stands on its own, I think, and that is we … we looked to organic growth in all of the businesses which we were in as a means of … of growing the business of the bank overall. And … and, therefore, we had to … we had to rely on organic growth being realistic about the lack of opportunity that there would be for us to grow by acquisition. That would have included property. 359

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Property. Mr. Burrows, were you concerned at the time of the guarantee at the end of September 2008, of the issue of bad debts, future bad debts and the issue of capital within your bank? 360

Mr. Richard Burrows

Not at that point. 361

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay. Can I ask you … and I’m just going to refer to Bank of Ireland C3b and it’s on page 30 and it goes on for a number of pages. And this is a telephone conversation that was recorded in the trading room of Bank of Ireland and a transcript of it has been provided to the committee. It’s between a Mr. Tilson and a “Mick” and it was on the morning of 30 September 2008 at quarter past nine. Can you inform the committee who Mr. Tilson is … in … in Bank of Ireland? 362

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t, I’m afraid. I … I’m familiar with the document. I saw it there. He was unknown to me. That doesn’t mean he wasn’t a very important person in Bank of Ireland but I can’t tell you what his role was. 363

Deputy Pearse Doherty

The head of global markets at the time would have been? 364

Mr. Richard Burrows

Could have been—– 365

Deputy Pearse Doherty

But … sorry, who was the head of global markets at the time? 366

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t know. I can’t tell you now. 367

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Right. Okay. Okay, can I just say …say to you … so this is the response … this is the conversation that taking place within the bank at the time between Mr. Tilson and Mick and it says: 368
MR. TILSON: Good morning Mick. 369
MICK [replies]: Well it’s all over. 370
MR. TILSON: Absolutely. 371
MICK: Its all sorted. 372
Mr. TILSON: All done. Magic wand. 373
MICK: I mean, Jesus I would nearly feel like issuing a bit of capital myself. Everybody bar the equity holder has been sorted [out]. 374
Is that your view at the time of—– 375

Mr. Richard Burrows

Most certainly not. That morning all that had happened was the announcement of the guarantee, which certainly had the desired effect of stabilising things – albeit on a short-term basis. And in my opening remarks I … I made the point and I … I just reinforce it, that the guarantee on its own was not a magic wand. Given the severity of the situation which was unfolding, it was necessary for recapitalisation and NAMA as component parts. 376

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Okay, I’ll ask you now just because … this was immediately, as I said, on the morning of the guarantee. 377
Mr. Tilson goes on to say: 378
Never mind anything with a Government guarantee. 379
MICK: Yes, but [even if you were to] … even if you get the — let us say you get out and you take billions. 380
MR. TILSON: Yes. 381
MICK: Right, and it’s … it is Government guaranteed etc., etc., like all that is doing is essentially shoring up an overly geared balance sheet. 382
MR. TILSON: Absolutely. 383
MICK: So it is giving you money, wholesale money for two and three years, issuing capital, whatever? 384
MR. TILSON: Yes. 385
[MICK]: But you are still left with a balancesheet and we know with bad debts. 386
MR. TILSON: Right. 387
MICK: That are going to come against us. 388
MR. TILSON: Yes, absolutely. 389
MICK: Like, that is kind of almost like a zombie bank. 390
MR. TILSON: Yes, no absolutely. 391
MICK: And it is not dealing with the real issue, as he said, which is capital and bad debts. 392
MR. TILSON: Yes. 393
MICK: [And they are both … ] And they are both inextricably linked? 394
MR. TILSON: They are. 395
How come that senior people in Bank of Ireland, on the morning of the guarantee, were talking about the issue that this wasn’t dealing with the real issue, which is capital and bad debts within the bank, but you as governor, as you mentioned earlier on, were not concerned about those two areas at that time? 396

Mr. Richard Burrows

If I’ve given you the impression that we weren’t concerned about those issues, then I have, I have misled you. I refer to the fact that in July of that year, for example, the board took the decision that we should pass on our interim dividend and that was a very tangible expression of the fact that we were concerned about capital, we were concerned about worsening bad debts, but not at that point, to anything like the degree that subsequently transpired. 397

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Finally Mr. Burrows, on the night of the guarantee it has been suggested in the evidence here, through a note that Mr. Sheehy, I believe, dictated, but it’s been suggested in evidence here that there was a draft statement prepared by Government which had an attestation from the Financial Regulator that all the financial institutions were solvent and the system was solvent, and that was deleted as a result of an intervention by AIB at that point in time. Were you familiar with that conversation? Can you recount to the committee your knowledge of issues around a statement in a draft guarantee of the financial institutions being solvent, and how it was led to be deleted? 398

Mr. Richard Burrows

Are you referring to a statement that was produced on the night of the guarantee? 399

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Yes. A draft statement that was going to contain a formula of words attesting to the solvency of the financial system and the financial institutions which was … which AIB had raised concerns about. 400

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, I can’t comment on the particular draft press release because I don’t have a recollection of it. And I can only speak from the point of view of Bank of Ireland. On the night of the guarantee, as far as we were concerned, we were an entirely solvent institution. Now we would admit that we had great concerns about liquidity for the reasons that I mentioned to you – the closing of the wholesale funding markets. But on the night of the guarantee, we had some 60 days at least of visibility in relation to our funding position, but at no time at that point were we concerned about solvency. 401

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Sorry, that was … I appreciate that but that wasn’t the question. The question I have for you is: were you party to any discussions in relation to a statement that Government were suggesting that would include a statement saying that the financial … all the financial institutions were solvent and that AIB raised issues with this, and the statement was deleted? 402

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t say that I was party to it but I’m quite sure that discussions would have come up about our view of solvency and I would have given the same answer as I have just given you in respect of Bank of Ireland, but we weren’t part of a discussion about it. 403

Deputy Pearse Doherty

And did you only give … did you only give a view in relation to the solvency of Bank of Ireland or did you offer a view in relation to the solvency of other financial institutions on that night? 404

Mr. Richard Burrows

The meeting was called because of the liquidity concerns that we had with respect to Anglo, and, as far I was concerned, that was the particular issue that triggered that meeting. It wasn’t a question about the solvency of Anglo, although we may well have had our concerns about that, but that wasn’t on the agenda nor was the question of solvency in relation to any other institution on our agenda that night. 405

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Is that a “No”? Just can I clarify if that was a “No”? 406

Chairman

Sure. 407

Deputy Pearse Doherty

So, is that a “No” to the question I asked, that you did not offer an opinion on the solvency of any other financial institution on the night? 408

Mr. Richard Burrows

To the best of my relection … recollection, that is the case. 409

Deputy Pearse Doherty

Thank you. 410

Chairman

Thank you very much, Deputy. Just on a related matter before I bring in Senator D’Arcy, Mr. Burrows. Earlier you stated that you were aware of the bank’s position going into the meeting with the Government, i.e. Bank of Ireland’s position, and you kind of made reference to it as well in your discussions there with Deputy Doherty. Could you please clarify this, as Mr. Goggin informed the committee that he was not aware of maturing borrowings, etc., within the bank in his earlier testimony to us? And … we would hope that in your role as part-time chair, you’re now indicating that you knew the position of the bank. How would the CEO maybe not have known about it? How do you reconcile that? 411

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t reconcile it, Mr. Chairman, because the information that I had would have come directly from the CEO. This was something on which I was briefed by the CEO on a very regular basis as you can imagine in the circumstances that pertained in those days. So, therefore, I was .. I was very well aware, as was he, of the maturity of wholesale funding, of our difficulty in terms of rolling over of wholesale funding, of the runway, as I referred to it earlier, that we had at any particular time so it was something which was absolutely necessary to know and I am mystified by his evidence. I can’t explain it. 412

Chairman

And the call on subordinated debt and other matters. So you would have … would there have been … let’s … to kind of add a bit of imagery to it … would there have been a desk or a table in Bank of Ireland that night where all these figures would have been there, or would there have been somebody in front of a computer running all these figures that would have had you informed going over to Government Buildings that night, as to what the extent of liability, exposure and so forth, that Bank of Ireland would be cognisant of in their engagement with Government that night? 413

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think, Mr. Chairman, that’s overstating it to suggest there was somebody sort of having a kind of a war room and a plotter, but we were well aware on a daily basis of just what was happening in respect of each of those items. 414

Chairman

And just to be on the record, are you saying there is an incongruence between what you are saying today and what Mr. Goggin said to us? 415

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m saying that I’m mystified at his remark and I can’t explain it. 416

Chairman

Thank you very much. Senator D’Arcy. 417

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Thank you, Chairman. Mr. Crowley, in the opening statement from Mr. Burrows, on page 2, strategy ‘01 to ‘06, strategy ‘02 to ‘07, strategy ‘03 to ‘08 – were they taken in your time as chairman of the board of directors? 418

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I haven’t got—– 419

Mr. Richard Burrows

We’ve got them up here. 420

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Page 2 of the opening statement. 421

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Page 2 of the opening statement. I certainly should be able to find that. Is that the one I read out? 422

Senator Michael D’Arcy

No, it’s Mr. Burrows opening statement. That is your opening statement. 423

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes, I have that now. 424

Mr. Richard Burrows

The opening statement as in the one I —– 425

Senator Michael D’Arcy

The full written copy. 426

Mr. Richard Burrows

The one which was supplied to the inquiry? Here we go. 427

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Strategy ‘01 to ‘06 presented by Maurice Keane in October ‘01, strategy ‘0—– 428

Dr. Laurence Crowley

What page—– 429

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Strategy ‘02 to ‘07, as presented by Michael Soden, October ‘02. And then ‘03 to ‘08 strategy presented October ‘03. Were you chairman of Bank of Ireland or governor of the board at that stage? 430

Dr. Laurence Crowley

What was the date? 431

Senator Michael D’Arcy

October ‘01, October ‘02 and October ‘03. 432

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I was governor until July ‘03 … ‘05, I’m sorry, ‘05. 433

Senator Michael D’Arcy

So is it the case that you were the governor during these periods when these strategies were formalised? 434

Dr. Laurence Crowley

That these challenges … where are the challenges? 435

Senator Michael D’Arcy

These strategies. 436

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Strategy … strategy. I’m not clear. 437

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Yes, there was the CEOs made a presentation to the board in October ‘01, October ‘02—– 438

Dr. Laurence Crowley

And where’s ‘01? That’s the strategy 2001-2006 presented by Maurice Keane. And the question you’re asking me is? 439

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Yes. Were you the governor of the board? 440

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes is the answer to that. 441

Senator Michael D’Arcy

During those three strategies. 442

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I was. 443

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You were. And does the board take ownership of those strategies? 444

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I would assume so, yes. 445

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And Mr. Burrows, you were deputy governor? 446

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, for part of that period. 447

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And does the board take ownership of those strategies? 448

Mr. Richard Burrows

Of course. 449

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And the growth, the level of growth from ‘01 to ‘08 was, for Bank of Ireland, 30% of the balance sheet. Do you take ownership of those … of that also? 450

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, I’m taking … it’s your figure, but, yes … I mean, obviously. 451

Senator Michael D’Arcy

The rate of growth – did that rate of growth ultimately lead to the downfall of Bank of Ireland? 452

Mr. Richard Burrows

You’re asking the question to me. I don’t believe so. I think the rate of growth was occasioned by the very fast economic growth in the markets in which we were participating, namely, in Ireland and in the UK. Where we got it wrong, of course, was that we were fuelling the growth of the balance sheet by over-reliance on wholesale funding and that was something that I referred to in my opening remarks. 453

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Yes. Did your strategy not move away from a previous strategy in terms of deposit ratios versus lending, which were much more stable than the wholesale … the dependence on the wholesale markets? And that was the strategy of the board? 454

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, it did. The strategy changed. As we referred to it earlier, the strategy presented by Mr. Soden when … after he had been recruited, was for much more ambitious growth than had been the case before and so therefore there was a step change, and that was in response to a feeling that Bank of Ireland was underperforming in terms of the expectations of our shareholders and that’s why that strategy was developed and pursued. 455

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Have you read Simon Carswell’s book,Anglo Republic? 456

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I haven’t. 457

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You haven’t. Mr. Carswell was here previously. He gave evidence. And part of that evidence that I put to him was a quotation attributed to Mr. Soden that … it was page 55, that if a liquidity crisis occurs, that Anglo were gone. So Mr. Soden certainly must have known something about liquidity. And could you comment on the fact that Mr. Soden commented upon liquidity for Anglo and you continued down the path of wholesale equip … or wholesale bank lending? 458

Chairman

Could you just give us an indication of the timeline you’re referring to there? 459

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Well, Mr. Soden left Bank of Ireland in May 2004, so it was during Mr. Crowley’s period as governor and yourself, Mr. Burrows, as deputy governor. Did Mr. Soden ever mention anything about liquidity to the board, Mr. Burrows, during your time on the board, that liquidity could be … potentially become a problem if there was a liquidity crisis? 460

Mr. Richard Burrows

My recollection is that he did not draw our specific attention to a risk on liquidity. Of course, liquidity was something which he would, as chief executive, have been continuously reporting on to the board. So it would have been a natural topic at probably every board meeting, which we would have discussed but I can’t recall any warning in the way that you’re phrasing it. 461

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And in terms of the ‘01 to ‘05 period … and the reason I’m questioning you in relation to this period is because Mr. Buckley, CEO of AIB, when he gave evidence, also was satisfied … and I’m going read the quotation to you, Mr. Burrows, that … I questioned Mr. Sheehy and I said to him, “Mr. Sheehy, you made the point that the bank took too much risk [in that ‘01 to ‘05 period.]” And Mr. Sheehy said, “I did yes.” I put the same question to Mr. Buckley: “Did the bank take too much risk in your time [the ‘01 to ‘05 period]?” And Mr. Buckley’s answer was, “No. In my view.” Can I ask you, Mr. Burrows, did the bank take too much risk in the ‘01 to ‘05 period? 462

Mr. Richard Burrows

The fact of the matter is that Bank of Ireland found itself, in 2008, in a very difficult situation and as I explained earlier in relation to the—– 463

Senator Michael D’Arcy

I’m asking about the ‘01 to ‘05 period. 464

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, I’m going to get to that in a moment. In relation to the property lending, that was the big factor that caused us enormous difficulty within Bank of Ireland, which required the Government intervention that we did get. The fact is that that lending, not all of it would have been put in place in 2008 or anything like that. It would have been something that would have been built up over the period of time, probably from 2001, because the nature of this lending is that it’s going to be there for some time. So there would have been a build-up of lending through the period that you’re referring to and the progression would have continued beyond 2005. So I don’t know whether that answers your question or not but—– 465

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Not really. Senator Barrett made the point about a substantial increase in residential investment property risk doubling … or investment doubling over a 15-month period. Mr. Burrows, you said that risk should have been the fundamental driver of strategy, this morning. 466

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 467

Senator Michael D’Arcy

At what stage did you … at what stage did you realise that that should have been in place prior to your leaving the bank, or did you? 468

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think I had a growing realisation about that through 2008. 469

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Can I ask Mr. Burrows also—– 470

Chairman

Ask the question now, Senator. 471

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Well … can I ask Mr. Burrows, in terms of the … there’s seems to be a conflict of evidence between yourself and Mr. Goggin. Mr. Goggin also stated to the committee that it was … he met with the Central Bank on the morning, the Monday morning, the 29th, and he was asked would he consider … would Bank of Ireland consider taking over IL&P. Were you aware of that request by the Central Bank on that morning, during that day? 472

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, he made me aware of that. 473

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You were. Okay. In terms of your conversation subsequently with Governor Hurley … and the term that Mr. Goggin used was “virtually certain” that Anglo would default the next day. 474

Mr. Richard Burrows

What was the term used? 475

Senator Michael D’Arcy

“Virtually certain”. 476

Mr. Richard Burrows

That was Mr. Goggin’s term. 477

Senator Michael D’Arcy

That was the term that he used, yes. 478

Chairman

In his testimony before this inquiry. 479

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Yes. Yes. 480

Mr. Richard Burrows

At what point? 481

Senator Michael D’Arcy

On the day of Monday, the 29th. 482

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 483

Senator Michael D’Arcy

That the next morning … the next day it was virtually certain that Anglo Irish Bank would default. 484

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 485

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Were you aware that Anglo Irish Bank were also virtually certain to default or was that term used with you by Mr. Goggin? 486

Mr. Richard Burrows

I was completely aware, because I refer to the fact that we had a visit from the chairman and chief executive of Anglo, who had their hands in the air – they were in serious trouble. And it was perfectly obvious from what they were saying that they were in imminent danger of collapse the following morning. 487

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And my final question to you, Mr. Burrows: there was a meeting between AIB and Bank of Ireland organised – who instigated that meeting? 488

Mr. Richard Burrows

We did. 489

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You did. 490

Mr. Richard Burrows

Are you talking about on the 29th? 491

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Yes. 492

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 493

Senator Michael D’Arcy

When you went to Government Buildings. 494

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 495

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And you understood, from what you’ve given evidence this morning, that there would be a six-bank guarantee. Did you speak with AIB officials? There was only four of you between both sides. Did you speak with them? Did you discuss the matter of the six-bank guarantee or the four-bank guarantee, because also, in previous evidence, AIB officials told us they understood it was a four-bank guarantee? 496

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think I’m going to repeat what I’ve already said, but going into that meeting, which—– 497

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Subsequent to the meeting, after your being informed that it would be a six-bank guarantee, did you have a conversation with AIB after you were informed by Government officials that it was a six-bank guarantee? 498

Mr. Richard Burrows

We were all informed at the same time in the same meeting. 499

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Yes. But I’m asking did you discuss that with AIB afterwards? 500

Chairman

You’re over time now, Senator. 501

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, we went home. We—– 502

Senator Michael D’Arcy

You didn’t discuss it at all? 503

Mr. Richard Burrows

It was the middle of the night. We didn’t discuss anything further. Once the position had been outlined to us as to what was going to happen—– 504

Senator Michael D’Arcy

And finally—– 505

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–we went home. 506

Senator Michael D’Arcy

Okay. And finally, can you understand how people who were at the same meeting as you took a different view? I think it’s a fair question, Chairman. 507

Mr. Richard Burrows

Look, I can only remember what I can remember, and I’m pretty clear about it. If other people have a different recollection then you should ask them. 508

Chairman

Can you just clarify now the situation, Mr. Burrows – over the course of the whole evening in Government Buildings, were AIB and yourselves in the same room or in separate rooms? 509

Mr. Richard Burrows

In the same room. 510

Chairman

You were in the same room all evening? 511

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 512

Chairman

And … with the Government joining you at different stages during the evening? 513

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, the other way around. With us going—– 514

Chairman

Yes, I—– 515

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–called into Government. 516

Chairman

Okay so you were collectively together and then you left at the end of that? 517

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 518

Chairman

Okay, thank you. Deputy Joe Higgins. Ten minutes. 519

Deputy Joe Higgins

Yes, thank you. Mr. Burrows it is long considered that a prudent loan-to-deposit ratio for banks should be of the order of 120% or lower. Why was this target so severely breached in the … up to 2008, when it reached 176%? 520

Mr. Richard Burrows

My answer to that is that it was the availability of wholesale funding which largely replaced the reliance on deposits which had been there before. And this was not a situation which was peculiar to Bank of Ireland, this was something which was happening, not just in Ireland but right across the euro-land as banks were availing of wholesale funding in order to engage in their business of lending. 521

Deputy Joe Higgins

Mr. Burrows, witnesses from Bank of Ireland have fairly consistently, some people might feel, have tried to diminish the extent of the losses or the mistakes by reference to competitors who fared much worse in the crash. Is that what you have just done now again? 522

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t think I made any reference to competitors, I simply said that wholesale funding was something which banks were generally availing of, as we were. 523

Deputy Joe Higgins

And was that a factor generally that led to so much crisis around the world? 524

Mr. Richard Burrows

Undoubtedly. As I said in my opening statement, one of the big factors was the drying up of wholesale markets in light of the collapse of Lehman Brothers, but there were many other financial institutions which came down in that period. And that led to a closing of the wholesale markets which meant that that liquidity which had been available, was no longer available. And that was what happened to us and I guess by extension it happened to quite a lot of others too. 525

Deputy Joe Higgins

But does that beg the question Mr. Burrows whether … was it appropriate to have reached that huge level of 176%? Was that appropriate? 526

Mr. Richard Burrows

With the benefit of hindsight, it was not. 527

Deputy Joe Higgins

But the bank … can you explain why the bank and, apparently from the documentation we have, your advisers at the time didn’t see the danger that was looming here? Can you explain why that was the case? 528

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I can’t explain. I’m not sure which advisers you are referring to, but I can’t explain why somebody didn’t see the problem. We didn’t see the problem, I take my share of responsibility for that. We had over-reliance on wholesale funding, as evidenced by the numbers which we have been quoting and we make no bones about that. 529

Deputy Joe Higgins

The Governor of the Central Bank, Patrick Honohan, said in an article, summer 2009, inThe Economic and Social Review: 530
A very simple warning sign used by most regulators to identify a bank exposed to increased risk is rapid balance sheet growth. An annual real growth rate of 20% is often taken as the trigger. 531
And that growth rate and greater would have been appropriate or what Bank of Ireland recorded 2004, 2005, 2006. Were you not aware of the danger of growth levels of that magnitude? 532

Mr. Richard Burrows

We weren’t. We weren’t paying attention to the risk that attached to those growth levels, and bear in mind, what I said in my opening remarks which was that we were operating in an economy which was itself growing very quickly. We were operating in a situation of rising employment, rising population and a huge demand for housing. That was what was occasioning the opportunity to grow the size of the balance sheet. 533

Deputy Joe Higgins

Yes, but the economy wasn’t growing by anything like 20%, Mr. Burrows. 534

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, of course not. But when you bring it back down to the precise instruments, the lending instruments that we were engaged in, that is what produced the growth rate. 535

Deputy Joe Higgins

A former US regulator, Bill Black, gave evidence to the inquiry, are you familiar with Mr. Black? 536

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m not. 537

Deputy Joe Higgins

Okay. Mr. Black, who was a regulator and has a huge amount of experience in regulation and in dealing with bank crashes from the late 1980s and 1990s on, but he said a number of ingredients could be guaranteed in a banking system to cause catastrophic loses. Among those is grow like crazy, make terrible quality loans and employ extreme leverage. He said that these ingredients would inevitably lead to record profits. He further said, “Under modern executive compensation the senior leadership [of the banks, that is] will promptly be made wealthy”, and then it will result in catastrophic losses. Do you recognise Bank of Ireland in that scenario which Mr. Black outlines? 538

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think he’s saying, in more colourful language, what I said in my opening remarks. 539

Deputy Joe Higgins

But Mr. Black and others would have been warning about this for even decades previous to what happened in Ireland. How come, Bank of Ireland, with the huge resources, research capacity, etc., wouldn’t be aware of the dangers of this excessive drive for growth? 540

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, I can only go back Deputy to the process we engaged in in 2005-06 where in questioning the sense of our own strategy we brought in quite a number of different advisers to talk to us about these very things. And, I have to tell you, and I haven’t got the full list of people that we brought in, but we had a very eminent range of advisers coming to talk to us and they did not point to the particular point that you are now talking about, and we didn’t have Mr. Black either. 541

Deputy Joe Higgins

Mr. Burrows, Mr. Black’s implication is that a drive, a greed for profit has led many banks to perdition and also huge remuneration for bank leadership like chairpeople and CEOs. Was greed for profit a factor in the huge drive for growth and in the downfall then of Bank of Ireland? 542

Mr. Richard Burrows

If I go back to the strategy which we talked about earlier, identified by Mr. Soden, that was, as we have described it, an aggressive strategy to grow the business of Bank of Ireland. That was something which our shareholders were expecting us to do. In fact, as I mentioned to you earlier, the rate of growth within Bank of Ireland was causing us to be rated less by the market than our peer group, which was cutting off certain options from us. So there was built into what we were doing, a need for us to grow the business. And by growing the business that meant, in banking terms of course, growing the balance sheet and thereby growing the profit and loss account. 543

Deputy Joe Higgins

Yes but—– 544

Mr. Richard Burrows

Those were things which were fundamental to the strategy. 545

Deputy Joe Higgins

The peer group that you were trying to emulate, Mr. Burrows—– 546

Chairman

Time. 547

Deputy Joe Higgins

—–as we know, finished in disaster many of them. Therefore, is it a defence of any kind by Bank of Ireland to say, “We had to emulate these in a rush for profit”? 548

Mr. Richard Burrows

Deputy, I’m not offering any of these remarks as a defence, I think I have been as open as I can be about the mistakes which we made and the pitfalls which we overcame. So I am not offering it as a defence, I am simply offering it as, to the best of my recollection, the explanation of what happened. 549

Deputy Joe Higgins

A witness to the inquiry Mr. Burrows, David McWilliams, in a “Prime Time” interview in October 2003 said the following—– 550

Chairman

Final question now, Deputy. 551

Deputy Joe Higgins

—–said the following: 552
The Irish housing market is a scam. It is an enormous financial swindle that could potentially confine an entire generation of young Irish workers to years of bad debt. Far from being a reflection of economic vitality and fundamental demand the housing bubble is, in the main, a vacuous financial confidence trick that has been foisted on us by an alliance of banks and landowners. 553
Today, in Ireland, the price of the average house is close to ten times the average wage. This represents an economic failure on the monumental scale. Behind this nonsense is excessive and irresponsible lending from our financial institutions. The situation would be laughable if it were not so serious. 554
In 2003, a full four or five years before the bubble finally burst, did Mr. McWilliams get it absolutely right, and should Bank of Ireland and other banks not have seen the same factors? 555

Chairman

Final question now, that’s it, Deputy, thank you. Mr. Burrows. 556

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can only reiterate what I’ve said which was that we took the best advice that we could find when fashioning our strategy and we acted on that. 557

Deputy Joe Higgins

Just the very last question. It’s noted in the core documents BOI – B1 – you don’t need to go there, Mr. Burrows – page 73 to 93, just a general observation that the quality of management information reports and data available to board members may not have been as strong as they should have been. Do you think the directors were aware of this and do they accept deficiencies in management information systems? 558

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think with the benefit of hindsight again, it is pretty obvious that in the run-up to 2008 there could have been better reporting to the board. However, I have to tell you that, as a board, we were entirely satisfied with what we were getting. At times there were calls from the board to management for additional information, for reports on various things, but there was not a level of dissatisfaction at all at that time. Now subsequently, of course … the reporting has been moderated or modified. I haven’t been involved since 2009 so I can’t comment on it today. But that’s what I would expect, that after the horse has bolted you slam the stable door and … and you improve the processes that you have. But at the time, as far as the board was concerned, I felt that we were getting the information that we required. 559

Chairman

Thank you very much, Deputy Higgins. Mr. Crowley, if I can just return to yourself for a moment and ask if it was Mr. Michael Soden who was the external CEO you referred to earlier as moving the bank away from what had been considered the traditional banking model. 560

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I referred to that? 561

Chairman

Yes. Can I just get clarity on that? Was that what you indicated and said to the inquiry earlier? 562

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I’m not clear what the question was. 563

Chairman

Okay. Can I ask you … and maybe put the question so to you to get clarity … can I confirm that Michael Soden was an external CEO to the bank? 564

Dr. Laurence Crowley

He joined us from another bank, National Australia, I think. 565

Chairman

Okay. And, as has been mentioned a couple of times this morning, Bank of Ireland is a bank that has been in existence for almost two centuries. Did you imply to the inquiry or give evidence to the inquiry that … you are saying that Mr. Soden reshaped the banking model that was being used by Bank of Ireland and moved it away from the traditional approach that it had? 566

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I don’t think, Chairman, that anybody in the 260 odd years has reshaped the model of the Bank of Ireland. It is what it is. It’s … of course changes are brought in, moving with the times in corporate governance and other areas, but the model … and of course the market and technology bring in changes. But, otherwise, nobody has made fundamental changes. 567

Chairman

That would then bring me onto my next question, Mr. Crowley. As … between 2001 and 2005 it would appear that the business model of the bank moved towards a more sales-orientated approach to its historical model. Would I be correct or incorrect in assuming that? 568

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Moved towards a? 569

Chairman

A more sales-orientated approach. 570

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes, that’s not a change in culture—– 571

Chairman

Is it a change in practice? 572

Dr. Laurence Crowley

It’s a change in emphasis. 573

Chairman

What’s the difference? 574

Dr. Laurence Crowley

It—– 575

Chairman

What’s the difference? 576

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Between culture and emphasis? 577

Chairman

On the balance sheet, what’s the difference? 578

Dr. Laurence Crowley

There’s no difference on the balance sheet. The culture isn’t on the balance sheet. 579

Chairman

Okay, but does the culture not … is the balance sheet not influencing the culture? 580

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Is the balance sheet? 581

Chairman

Not influencing the culture of the bank? 582

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I don’t think so. I think the culture may be influencing the balance sheet. 583

Chairman

Well, let me give you one example of that so Mr. Crowley. 584

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes. 585

Chairman

Whether you felt it was ambitious … or whether you felt the ambitious profit before tax and earnings per share growth levels targeted by Bank of Ireland in this period … do you consider that was a mistake or not and did you feel it would continue to go well into the future and that there was no such risk in such a strategy? 586

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Well, a lot of opinion from the experts in the field of economics had predicted … at the time predicted that this was a new phase in Ireland in terms of economic growth and they could see no particular end time to that. 587

Chairman

Okay. I don’t … I have you in the inquiry this morning, Mr. Crowley … we can talk about experts and we’ve had plenty of them in before us. I’m asking you, did you see a risk in such a strategy? 588

Dr. Laurence Crowley

No, but it needed to be kept under control. 589

Chairman

You did not see such a risk in such a strategy? 590

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Not happening imminently. 591

Chairman

Okay. Thank you. Deputy Kieran O’Donnell. 592

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Thank you, Chairman. Mr. Burrows and Mr. Crowley, welcome. Can I go to document Bank of Ireland – Vol. 1, B2, and the page I’m looking at is page 89. It’s effectively to do with stress testing. It’s dated 3 April 2006, addressed to Mr. Liam Barron, who was with the Central Bank. And the question I suppose I want to ask is that your sensitivity analysis appears to have very much revolved around mortgages versus non-mortgages. Did ye look at different type of stress testing … the correlation between property being … the type of property, whether it was commercial development land, speculative landbanks, and how it was being financed? And when you’re dealing with that, Mr. Burrows, could you also address that on page 90 you speak about the projected … when you’re looking at the general … that your sensitivity analysis … the projections assume capital raising in the years ‘06-’07, ‘07-’08 and ‘08-’09 of the order of about €4.3 billion. And you said … if the funding was not raised with “Shock 1 Scenario” that you basically would just be meeting your minimum regulatory capital requirements. Did ye raise any of that money by way of capital? And, just the sensitivity analysis … it doesn’t appear to have gone into any great depth. And what type of reduction in falling property values did ye factor into your sensitivity analysis, in worst case scenario? 593

Mr. Richard Burrows

First of all, during that period we were heavily engaged in the implementation of the Basel II regulations, which were the new regulations that required us to have a different approach to assessing the amount of capital required to be appropriately capitalised for the business which we were doing. And in that … in that calculation, the mortgage loans were actually the least risky under the Basel II methodology, whereas other loans carried various rates. So that would have been the background to a lot of the work which was being done in assessing the comparative risk of different elements of the balance sheet. 594
If I … if I go to the second part of your question, we didn’t raise fresh capital during the period but of course we were generating capital through the ordinary profit and loss of the … of the business. That’s the way businesses generally do generate capital where your … you’re earning profits after tax, you’re paying part of that as dividend to your shareholders and the remainder you’re adding to your capital base within the business. So when the profitability of the bank improves, so also does your flow of fresh capital. 595

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

I suppose reading the document, Mr. Burrows, the document speaks about fresh raising of capital and not about—– 596

Mr. Richard Burrows

We didn’t engage in that. 597

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay, ye didn’t. Why not? 598

Mr. Richard Burrows

We didn’t deem it necessary. 599

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay. And what … in the worst case scenarios, what level of … of, we’ll say, deterioration in the price of property would ye have looked at? 600

Mr. Richard Burrows

In stress testing, the … I can’t recall the exact assumptions that would have been made. But I can tell you in hindsight that they were clearly insufficient. 601

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay. And do you feel you stressed up across a number of … broad range of the type of loans and also factoring in how you were financing it through increasingly wholesale funding? 602

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, I think that would have been very much part of the stress testing. 603

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I just go back …. on the area around the guarantee and I want to just go to Vol. 1, BOI …1 … CB … C3b … and, more particularly … which is new evidence today, which is that you had a meeting with the former Governor of Central Bank, John Hurley, on the day before the guarantee. When did that meeting actually take place, Mr. Burrows? 604

Mr. Richard Burrows

It took place on the afternoon of that … of that day. 605

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

That was pre-arranged to look at—– 606

Mr. Richard Burrows

That had been pre-arranged. 607

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

On the basis, you made reference in the documentation that it was about collateral from the ECB, the type of collateral. Did you have concerns around liquidity, was that the reason for the meeting? 608

Mr. Richard Burrows

No. This was part of a continuing discussion which we were having with the Central Bank in relation to the very point that I was talking about before and the need for us to be able to collateralise our balance sheet, and therefore avail of funding from the ECB. What we were concerned about was that we would have the support of the Central Bank in making sure that that was going to continue to be available to us. 609

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Mr. Hurley, in his note to you, page 4 of this document, says that he had done all he could to achieve a change in the ECB rules. The question is had you problems with liquidity, was that the specific reason for that particular meeting with Mr. Hurley? 610

Mr. Richard Burrows

It was not the reason for that particular meeting but at that time, as I have already said, we were having difficulties with liquidity. 611

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

When you broached the issue of Anglo with Mr. Hurley, can you just give me what his response was and how did you view his response? 612

Mr. Richard Burrows

I cannot give you in precise terms, but I know that my impression was that he was surprised at the information that I gave him that we’d had this call and this visit by the chairman and chief executive of Anglo and the state of desperation which they had reached on that morning. 613

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Had he any knowledge of the Anglo situation? 614

Mr. Richard Burrows

I cannot tell you whether he had or not, he did not tell me whether he had or not. 615

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

What exactly did he tell you, Mr. Burrows? 616

Mr. Richard Burrows

What he told me was, when I asked what was he going to do about it, he said there was nothing that he could do and that we should take the matter to Government. 617

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

When he said there was nothing he could do, why did he say there was nothing he could do? 618

Mr. Richard Burrows

I presume because that’s what his situation was, I can’t get into his head. 619

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So were you surprised with the response, Mr. Burrows? 620

Mr. Richard Burrows

I was surprised, yes. 621

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Do you think that, in your view, what else could have been discussed with Mr. Hurley that Mr. Hurley could have … what approach would you have expected Mr. Hurley to proceed with? 622

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, we were looking at a situation which I felt was extremely serious, not just for Bank of Ireland but for the Irish banking establishment as a whole. Therefore, I felt that remedial action of some kind was going to be necessary. I was not sure what to expect frankly. But when I got the response that I got, and the recommendation from Mr. Hurley that we should talk to Government, that’s what we determined we should do. 623

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

That’s what triggered your approach to Government? 624

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 625

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

And your approach to AIB? 626

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 627

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Can I just go to the minutes of 29 September, page 19. These minutes were prepared by an L. Clooney. Can you just clarify one thing for me, would these minutes have been circulated Mr. Burrows? 628

Mr. Richard Burrows

Let me just get out the document. 629

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Page 19. What I am more interested in Mr. Burrows, is paragraph 3 – Government Guarantee and AOB, any other business. So the question is would these minutes have been circulated? 630

Mr. Richard Burrows

I am sure they would have been circulated to the people who were at the meeting. They certainly were not circulated to me. 631

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

They were not circulated to you. Even though you were at the meeting? 632

Mr. Richard Burrows

Sorry. Maybe I am looking at the wrong meeting then. What meeting are you referring to? 633

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

29th. Sorry, you weren’t present at that meeting. 634

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I wasn’t present at that meeting. 635

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

So you wouldn’t have been circulated then with that. 636

Mr. Richard Burrows

No. 637

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Okay. You are of the view there was no guarantee, any form of draft guarantee, provided by Bank of Ireland to, even though in the minutes here they state that, “The committee prepared a draft of such a guarantee and the list of institutions that it should cover for use by BJG [Brian Goggin] in his meeting later than evening.” 638

Mr. Richard Burrows

As I—– 639

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

I suppose, in the last minute I have, you believe there was no guarantee, you took no guarantee of any form, any outline guarantee to Government on the night? 640

Mr. Richard Burrows

No we didn’t. 641

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Your recollection is, Mr. Goggin was in before us, he said that Bank of Ireland looked for a guarantee for subordinated debt. Your recollection is that was not the case. 642

Mr. Richard Burrows

That is my recollection. 643

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

No discussion whatsoever on it? 644

Mr. Richard Burrows

That night. Yes that is my recollection. 645

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Finally, Mr. Goggin informed us that he had no idea of what the exposure was for the bank. You would take issue with that? 646

Mr. Richard Burrows

As I explained earlier, I thought I had a pretty good picture of what our exposures were and the source of my information was Mr. Goggin. 647

Deputy Kieran O’Donnell

Finally, my last question, do you believe Mr. Burrows, on the night of the guarantee, was Anglo Irish and Irish Nationwide Building Society, were they solvent or insolvent? 648

Mr. Richard Burrows

I have no idea. 649

Chairman

Just in general, Mr. Burrows, in your experience with minutes of meetings, generally accurate at Bank of Ireland? 650

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes they were. 651

Chairman

Okay, thank you. I want to move on to the issue of Project Atlas for a moment there with you, Mr. Burrows. It will just be coming up on the screen there in a moment. This was during your tenure. The Project Atlas report in summary would demonstrate that large exposures and mothballing of developments and landbanks were highlighted in this report. It shows them as issues for Bank of Ireland, showing that the ongoing need for the bank to support such clients in the face of loan to values, interest roll-over and availability of further security. What is your view on PwC’s output on this? Would you agree with that? 652

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think they did a forensic job at the time. It was a matter of opinion, of course, as to what value you could attribute to any particular security, because the market was effectively closed. I think they made a reasonable attempt at it. 653

Chairman

Would it be fair or not to say that was a two-sided coin? That when you were actually issued—– 654

Mr. Richard Burrows

I beg your pardon? 655

Chairman

Would it be fair or not to say that was a two-sided coin? That when the loans were actually being issued in the first instance, it was a very subjective valuation process as well. 656

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well it always is a subjective process, except when the loans were issued, there was a free market operating. Properties were being bought and sold, landbanks were being bought and sold, there was a determination of what market value was. In the period that we are referring to here, that market had pretty well come to a complete halt. Therefore, it was extremely difficult, I think, to try and assign value in those circumstances. 657

Chairman

When Mr. Daly was before the inquiry a number of weeks ago, I can pull up his speech and all the rest of it, but just a general summary of what he was making. This is the CEO of NAMA, the biggest real estate agency in the world or asset management agency on the planet. What he was saying is that the model was simply like this, is that a developer or builder would come along, they would get a loan from an institution to develop a project, equity would grow in that project during its lifetime, the builder would go for another loan and because of the equity that was in the existing or the previous loan was providing equity to the new loan, there were 100% loans being more or less given out, because of this notional equity that was inside there. The compound outcome of this practice, of loan upon loan, upon equity growing in the previous loan, upon the previous loan, was this not the inevitable outcome of it? 658

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think the reason for the property collapse was not due to that. The reason for the property collapse was because the market dried up, because funding was no longer available and transactions could no longer be done. As to the issue of how individual developers established their own equity, that’s a subjective manner. 659

Chairman

Is there not an exposure issue here Mr. Burrows, in that context? The concentration of exposures is an area of concern in PwC in this report, showing 39% of total land and development loans coming from the top 70 of loan and development loans in Bank of Ireland. Did this reflect the board’s understanding of such exposures? 660

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t think we learned anything new from the PwC report that we hadn’t already been told internally. 661

Chairman

Okay, and what were you told internally? 662

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, figures which would’ve confirmed that, but the difference being the valuation. 663

Chairman

Okay. And when the figures were told internally, what was the response? 664

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well at that stage, as I’ve said to you before, we were very much in survival mode. That was 2008. Things were extremely difficult. 665

Chairman

Okay. Mr. Boucher was on record here last week as believing that ultimately NAMA was a good idea and indeed, it was something that was a positive construction in regard to getting the property market and all the land sector back into gear. Would you concur or not with that view? 666

Mr. Richard Burrows

I would, Chairman. And as I said in my opening remarks, I think it was a very important element of the comprehensive approach that Government took to resolving the problem of the Irish banks and it couldn’t have worked without NAMA because banks like Bank of Ireland would have been unable to raise fresh capital unless they had been able to transfer the suspect loans in relation to property off their balance sheet. That brought certainty to any new investor and absent that, you wouldn’t have people prepared to put money into a bank. 667

Chairman

Okay, thank you, Mr. Burrows. Senator O’Keeffe, ten minutes. 668

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Thank you, Chair. Mr. Crowley, in the remuneration report for the Bank of Ireland in 2001- 2002, it says you were paid €247,000 for your role as governor. Is that correct? 669

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I don’t recall it but I’m sure—– 670

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

If it’s in here … it’s okay. Mr. Burrows, equally, in 2005-06, it says you were paid €336,000. That’s correct? 671

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m sure it is. 672

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. And again in 2009, €503,000 for your role as governor? 673

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m sure, yes. 674

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. Earlier on, Mr. Burrows, you expressed regret for needing support of taxpayers … that the bank had required that. Would you go as far as to say that … is that an apology? 675

Mr. Richard Burrows

I was very clear at the time, as I recall in my opening remarks, that I had apologised very comprehensively to shareholders, to people within Bank of Ireland and I had … and also to the Irish taxpayer. And again, I put on record at that time, our appreciation of what Government had done in relation to the elements that I’ve described earlier. 676

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

You were asked earlier today about the Morgan Kelly viewpoint at the time and I hope my note is accurate, you said it was “an interesting angle … but the weight of opinion was … in [the opposite] direction, and that’s what we listened to.” And I suppose we’ve had a lot of football analogies, I wondered if perhaps in a sailing analogy, that if you were on board your yacht and the sun was shining and it was a lovely afternoon and you were drinking a cup of tea and someone came up and … one of your crew, and said, “There’s a storm brewing, Mr. Burrows. You know, I think there might be trouble. You know, we need to …” I mean, what would your response be? Because, effectively, Mr. Kelly was doing that … he was saying, “There’s a storm brewing.” 677

Mr. Richard Burrows

My response would be to get on to Met Éireann and check the weather report—– 678

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. 679

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–and see whether that was correct or not. 680

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes, so, when Mr. Kelly gave his view that was opposite to what the prevailing views were, what was your response? 681

Mr. Richard Burrows

Just the same. We checked his view against the other views which we were able to access. 682

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Although there were plenty of other views, I mean, the IMF, the Central Bank … there were lots of … the OECD … there were lots of other reports where, even though there were some, if you like, comfort in them, there were also lots of people saying, in between, “Look, there are problems. And if certain things happen, there may be trouble.” So I’m just wondering why more attention might not have been paid to those remarks? Because if you go back and look, they’re there, very readily to be seen. 683

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think with hindsight, Senator, I would agree with you. We should’ve paid more attention. The fact is that we took the opinion of a lot of other experts and decided that that was what we should listen to. 684

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay. On page … 11, I beg your pardon, of Mr. Boucher’s testimony here to this … he was asked if “there was an appropriate level of reporting to the board on the concentration risk being faced by Bank of Ireland?” And Mr. Boucher said, “No, there was not.” And he reiterated that. And then he went on to say: 685
If I look now at the level of reporting, understanding that the board has, of credit risk development, concentration risks, a wide range of risks … if I compare our ICAAP document of 2013 … to what was provided in the past in the board, the board didn’t seek, and the board was not provided with, a sufficient level of information to make informed decisions on the risks that were being taken. 686
What would you say about that observation that Mr. Boucher made? 687

Mr. Richard Burrows

I would say that I would share that observation and bear in mind that Mr. Boucher, both in 2013 and earlier, was a member of the board. 688

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. 689

Mr. Richard Burrows

So, therefore—– 690

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

As you were. 691

Mr. Richard Burrows

As I was, yes, and I’m talking about myself. But the fact of the matter is, as I have said, with hindsight, we would’ve done things differently. We would’ve looked for more information and it seems to me to be entirely consistent that Mr. Boucher is reporting on a situation where, in the aftermath of what happened in 2008-09, the bank has substantially changed its reporting procedures and structures. And I think that’s wise. And I’m sure he’s right to have done that. 692

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

There were a lot of senior business people around that table … in your court. There were a lot of obviously very experienced bankers working for the Bank of Ireland and yet, between all of you, it’s only now with hindsight that you can see what was wrong. How could that be? Given the level of experience … given the level of business acumen at the table, indeed yourself, Mr. Burrows, appointed, I’m assuming, for that reason … you know, how come everybody didn’t see what was going on at the time? 693

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think, Senator, we did see in 2008, we started to realise, but by then, our opportunity to change course and do something about the situation was a bit late. So it isn’t as if this burst upon us completely afresh, it was something as a growing problem of which we were aware in 2007- 2008, which crystallised in 2008-2009. 694

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

You said earlier, when you were talking about the night of the guarantee, you said, “No [it wasn’t about the four or six-bank guarantee, it was all about resolving the Anglo crisis]” Is that correct? 695

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s what we went to Government—– 696

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Correct. 697

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–about. 698

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Now, you had … in early September there’d been a meeting about INBS and on that … and on the 29th you’d had a meeting about Irish Life & Permanent. So now there were three, if you like … there were three institutions that were obviously stressed. Why is it then that on that night, there was only one that came to the fore? What … where … I mean, clearly there were three that were struggling. 699

Mr. Richard Burrows

The issue that we talked about on that night was a liquidity issue which Anglo faced, which the chairman and chief executive made us aware of on that Monday and that’s what was different about them. 700

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Do you know why Anglo Irish did not go in to see Government? 701

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’ve no idea. 702

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Did you suggest that they might? 703

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I didn’t. 704

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And they didn’t say they were going to go themselves? 705

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, they didn’t. 706

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

The testimony that Mr. Boucher gave here about the weekend of 7 September, and that was the time when he sat down with a colleague and AIB to look at INBS, you will recall this. 707

Mr. Richard Burrows

I remember the note, yes. 708

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Yes. Now, there was … I believe that there was a meeting of the court of directors after that to discuss what had been found. Do you—– 709

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t recall that, but go ahead. 710

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay, right. So … I have the minute of it and the reference is BOI 02010. And it says that a liability review of INBS had been carried out, that there was a funding gap of €4 billion and that a summary balance sheet for INBS was provided to illustrate this point. 711

Mr. Richard Burrows

Mm hm. 712

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Now this meeting was attended by yourself, Mr. Goggin, Mr. Boucher, David Dilger, Heather Ann McSharry, Mr. Kennedy, Mr. McCourt … basically it was a court meeting—– 713

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 714

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

It was an emergency meeting because it was a Sunday. 715

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 716

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So you were all very concerned at that point. 717

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 718

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So can you tell us … that happened on 7 September. Why was it then that there was radio silence between 7 September and thereafter about INBS, given where you … what you were thinking of at this point? 719

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well it wasn’t … it wasn’t a matter of our stewardship and it wasn’t a matter of our management. The problem that you’re referring to was something which was dealt with … being dealt with, as I understood it, by the Central Bank … with them. And that’s how we came to come into it. Having been asked to come into it, we decided that there was nothing we could do and that was the end of it, as far as we were concerned. 720

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

It says at the end the governor and the group chief executive should then assess whether to directly approach the Government to convey the group’s assessment of the situation and explain the reasons why Bank of Ireland couldn’t accede to the Financial Regulator’s request. Did you do that? 721

Mr. Richard Burrows

No. 722

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Did you approach the Government? 723

Mr. Richard Burrows

I didn’t, no. 724

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Why was that? 725

Mr. Richard Burrows

We didn’t feel it necessary. And I can only assume that that was because of continuing discussions which were taking place. 726

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Even though there was funding gap of €4 billion and you’d been asked—– 727

Mr. Richard Burrows

Even though—- 728

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

—–to rescue it? 729

Mr. Richard Burrows

—yes. 730

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

So, you’d been asked to rescue it, and you didn’t then go back to Government and say, “We’re not going to rescue it”. You didn’t think that was appropriate. 731

Mr. Richard Burrows

Our position had been made very clear to the Central Bank, which was the intermediary in all of this. 732

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay. When Mr. Boucher was here, he gave us a document called Financial Market Development and Scenarios, exhibit B3, and, in this document, which was given to the court, and he said himself on page 11 of his own testimony, that this document was written, he wasn’t quite sure, but it was either the first or the second week of September. It was a fairly comprehensive document, in which discussed and laid out available management actions. Are you familiar with this document? 733

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 734

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And one of the available management actions, in the long list, capital raising, to have a rights issue, a one-for-two rights issue at about 40% discount, would raise €1.7 billion post-transaction costs, and add 1.4% to equity tier 1 ratio at March ‘09. Obviously, things … this is a serious option, was it pursued? 735

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, it wasn’t. 736

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And then, were any of the options, do you recall, that were laid out here, pursued? 737

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t recall specific options. If I go to the capital option that you’re talking about, I often reflect back on that period. By the time that that memo was written, it was clear that capital raising in that form or any other form, was going to be pretty nigh impossible, given what had happened with share price, given the unwillingness, I would say, of the market to invest, given the uncertainty of the situation in Bank of Ireland, but was that something we could have looked at much earlier? Probably yes, but we didn’t do that; by the time we came to look at it, clearly, the window had closed. 738

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Do you accept, Mr. Burrows, that this document indicates the very, very serious matters that were going on inside your own bank at that time, and that you were talking about stopping? You were talking about increasing deposits, you were talking about stopping – no, it is the last question – you were talking about stopping lending and so on, that everything that was laid out here would indicate a very serious situation in the bank, and I’m wondering whether then on the night of the conversation with Government, that you brought your own level of seriousness, the immediate actions that you were taking, you were running down all kinds of opportunities, you were running down your loan book and looking to dispose of mortgages and so on. Did you bring that level of concern to the table when you went in, given that you’d had this document pulled together for you? 739

Mr. Richard Burrows

I believe I did, Senator, as I’ve said to you earlier. We were in survival mode at that point, and looking very seriously at the things that we could do, and that’s one of the reasons why, when Anglo came to us in that early morning, we determined very quickly that there was nothing that we could do independently, and so yes, I think in reporting to Government that night on the situation that pertained, I didn’t spare any blushes in relation to the national-international situation, or our own situation. 740

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

And could I just follow up and say … you didn’t spare blushes, can you recall, Mr. Burrows, whether AIB similarly didn’t spare their blushes, so to speak, and shared their, you know, their own … their internal matters may have been different to yours, but did they share them in the way that you did? 741

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, I’ve no idea what their situation was. 742

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

No, but can you remember if there was equally a conversation, of them saying, “Well we have our own concerns”. 743

Mr. Richard Burrows

Of course there was a conversation, yes. 744

Chairman

….evidence, Senator. 745

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Okay, so you both shared your concerns about your own situation with Government at that time? 746

Mr. Richard Burrows

That was the purpose of the meeting, to bring the seriousness of the situation to Government. 747

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Your own situation, I mean, as well as? 748

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, that was part of the context of why an Anglo credit default the following morning would have had such serious repercussions. 749

Senator Susan O’Keeffe

Thank you. Thank you, Chair. 750

Chairman

To clarify two matters, and I just want to raise one matter with you as well, Mr. Burrows and Mr. Crowley. In the questioning there with Senator O’Keeffe, the Met Éireann response when you said that you would ring Met Éireann, and obviously when you heard of the Morgan Kelly article you reached out and made some calls. Was Dan McLaughlin one of the people you reached out to? 751

Mr. Richard Burrows

He would have been, yes. 752

Chairman

And what was Dan’s view? 753

Mr. Richard Burrows

I beg your pardon? 754

Chairman

What was Mr. McLaughlin’s view? 755

Mr. Richard Burrows

Mr. McLaughlin’s view was that, at that time, whilst the property bubble was, as it were, deflating, we were heading for the soft landing, if I use that term which crept into the lexicon then, rather than into any calamitous decline of property values. 756

Chairman

And was Mr. McLaughlin at any time expressing concerns that were beyond the soft landing interpretation? 757

Mr. Richard Burrows

I honestly can’t remember, put it back in that timeframe. 758

Chairman

Sure. 759

Mr. Richard Burrows

At that timeframe we were definitely thinking of soft landing, as, by the way, were most of our peer companies. 760

Chairman

Was there any time, Mr. Crowley, that you felt, or did you speak to Mr. McLaughlin with regard to getting a temperature reading in examination of concerns or potential concerns in the broader financial market? 761

Dr. Laurence Crowley

We used to have infrequent, but odd – I don’t mean odd in that sense – but different meetings, with Mr. McLaughlin present, meetings of the court, and he used give us an overview, generally speaking, on the market, the economy, in Ireland; and he was pessimistic usually. Nothing dramatic, but—– 762

Chairman

Is this in the pre-2004 period or post-2004? 763

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Pre. 764

Chairman

Pre-2004. 765

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes. 766

Chairman

So, he was pessimistic pre-2004. Okay 767

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes. 768

Chairman

And would he have been optimistic post-2004? 769

Dr. Laurence Crowley

No, no, he was never really—– 770

Chairman

Okay. All right. Okay. I just want to move on to the issue of remuneration before I bring in Deputy McGrath, and just bring a slide upon the screen there, if that’s possible, it’s the top ten payments and options 2004-2008. And it would appear from this document, Mr. Burrows, that the bonus proposals appear to largely measure performance against growth and earnings per share, EPS, and by comparison with the performance of the bank’s peer groups; that’s what the bonus programme there would actually indicate. Can you answer the committee today why there was no effective modifier relating to risk built into the measure used for remuneration and bonuses? 771

Mr. Richard Burrows

Why was no modifier built in? Well, that was just the remuneration policy at the time. Frankly, I don’t know how you’d actually do such a thing, but it didn’t exist at the time. 772

Chairman

Because the spreadsheet above there would indicate that the top ten executive remuneration list were all sales-orientated or business executive management, so in that regard, why did the board not consider the need to remunerate risk and compliance executives to a similar level? I understand in football teams, to use the football analogies that Senator O’Keeffe mentioned, sometimes centre forwards get paid more than centre halfs, but you do pay both, and sometimes there’s bonuses to both. Your bank would seem to be paying the centre forwards, and not giving any remuneration to the defenders. 773

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t think that’s the case; I think staff in Bank of Ireland were quite fairly remunerated in the context of what they were doing. 774

Chairman

So was there a remuneration model for risk and compliance executives? 775

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t give you the detail of that, but they would have been entitled to the same kind of measures as anybody else. 776

Chairman

I could maybe stand corrected on this, but our examination of Bank of Ireland records would not indicate that there was such a process in place. 777

Mr. Richard Burrows

Okay, I accept what you say. 778

Chairman

Okay. All right, so if I can just finish up on that. The bonus and pension plans offered to senior executives of the bank were significant. Would you be in acceptance of the term “significant” that they were? 779

Mr. Richard Burrows

I would say that they were competitive, in a pretty competitive marketplace. 780

Chairman

Okay, and, on reflection, do you believe that they were justified and appropriate for an Irish financial institution? 781

Mr. Richard Burrows

At that time I think they were, because we were competing for talent, and the question of having the right people, and retaining the right people, was a constant issue, and you’ve already, you know, touched on other institutions that were behaving rather differently in the market. We were always at the risk of losing good people, hence the need, not just to pay, but to retain the very best people, and that meant adherence to market norms. 782

Chairman

Okay, and given the period of time that those remunerations were issued, and the ultimate position of Bank of Ireland on examination now, and given that the remuneration was tied to a particular growth strategy that had presentable risks to it, do you believe that the remuneration was merited? 783

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think the remuneration at the time was perfectly fair for the reason that I’ve said, in that it was competitive and benchmarked against the peer group of financial institutions, not just here, but in the UK as well because that was the common market. 784

Chairman

We know that, and part of the purpose of this inquiry is looking into the future as much as it is looking into the past, and developing best practice models and so forth. Do you believe that the methodology, and … by how these remuneration packages were issued, were merited? And should … should we need a different type of remuneration project going into the future? 785

Mr. Richard Burrows

Chairman, the one change that I would make if, if I had it to do again, would be that there would be substantial claw-back provisions in respect of any bonusing paid to executives. 786

Chairman

And how would that model work? 787

Mr. Richard Burrows

That model would work on the basis that bonuses would be declared and paid or held in reserve for some period of time, vested in other words, but not paid and that, if subsequent events proved that the profit performance of the bank in a particular period was inflated by lending or other events, which subsequently turned out not to be as good as it was thought at the time, there would be the opportunity for claw-back of, of bonuses. 788

Chairman

And, using such a model, would these bonuses and remunerations be clawed back? 789

Mr. Richard Burrows

Using such a model today? Well I—– 790

Chairman

That you just described to me. 791

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t … I can’t—– 792

Chairman

Would that claw back those bonuses? 793

Mr. Richard Burrows

Are you referring to the … to the ten … the data that I … I really can’t tell you precisely what the terms—– 794

Chairman

Yes. Well you’re quite explicit in the model you’re describing. 795

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 796

Chairman

If that model was in place back then, would those bonuses have been clawed back? 797

Mr. Richard Burrows

But I … I can’t put myself in that position. You asked me my opinion about way , a way to improve the situation. 798

Chairman

But what we’re doing is we’re testing models. There was a model in place at that time that put out that remuneration in which there wasn’t a claw-back. We’re now applying … we hypothetically applied a model that you’re now outlining, and put that framework on that period of time. Would there have been a claw-back? 799

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, anybody whose bonus related to profit earned as a result of lending, for example, to the property sector and the collapse that happened there, would clearly have … have incurred a claw-back, yes. 800

Chairman

And there would have been claw-back in that instance? 801

Mr. Richard Burrows

It would have been—– 802

Chairman

There would have been clawed-back in these instances, then, using that model you described, yes? 803

Mr. Richard Burrows

Oh, yes. That would have been the case. 804

Chairman

Okay. Thank you. Deputy Michael McGrath. 805

Deputy Michael McGrath

Thank you, Chair, and I’d like to welcome Mr. Crowley and Mr. Burrows. Good afternoon. Can I ask the secretariat to open up BOI – Vol. 1, B4, page 21. What I’m referring to there, Mr. Burrows, is extracts from a number of meetings to do with the group risk policy committee, essentially dealing with a review of credit quality, and serious issues were raised regarding … the level of unsatisfactory business manager and senior business manager reviews, doubled, for example, in the year to the end of March 2006. The examples were cited about the management of excesses, drawdown of facilities, reporting of accounts to the business, banking credit etc. Issues are raised about the legal services unit, coding with the bookkeeping system etc. Were these issues brought to the attention of the board over, over the course of those years from 2002 to 2008, these review of credit qualities by that committee and internal audit? 806

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, those are the kinds of things that would have been reported by the chief credit officer to the board, yes. 807

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. And what remedial action would have been taken then, in the event of … of these specific issues being identified, where certain business managers would not have met the standards which were set by the bank? 808

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, in those cases, of course, the matters are resolved before it ever gets anywhere near the … the board. That’s … that’s the process which was in place at the time, with … with the step-up where … where difficulties were incurred … or encountered at one level of credit committee, the matter was then referred to the next highest level in order for resolution. So, it wasn’t a question of waiting until matters got to the board before any remedial action would have been taken. That would have been a matter for management dealing with it as and when it came before them on the agenda. 809

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. Can I ask, Mr. Burrows, as … as a member of the board, would you have access to all documents that you might seek? Would you be able to seek any document, for example, the minutes of any committee meeting from the … within the bank? 810

Mr. Richard Burrows

The protocol on that was, no, that I would not, as chairman of the board, have access, unfettered access to, to any document. For example, any matters to do with clients, anything like that, I would have no access. To minutes of meetings, if I, if I requested the chief executive to give me the minutes of a meeting it would be a very strange thing if he didn’t comply with that. 811

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. And would the board regularly be circulated with, with the minutes of all of the, the internal committees? 812

Mr. Richard Burrows

No. No, there were too many committees. You have to imagine a pyramid structure of, of credit committees. It would have given the board, really, a complete overload of data. But they did get the report from the top committee. 813

Deputy Michael McGrath

Would, would the board have got reports from the group risk policy committee? 814

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. That’s the one. 815

Deputy Michael McGrath

Regularly? 816

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 817

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. And when decisions are, are taken by the board, are … is there collective responsibility? 818

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, there always is. 819

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, so it is … it would be a collective decision, as such. Can I ask the secretariat to move to BOI – Vol. 1, B1, page 95. So … that will come up on the screen, Mr. Burrows. That is a group risk policy committee meeting on 13 December 2007 and I suppose, just to put this in context, you … you have pointed out a number of times today your view that one of the problems was the quantum of lending to the property-related sector, and you don’t believe that it grew disproportionately over the years in which you were governor, is … is that the case? 820

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s … yes, that’s what I’ve said. 821

Deputy Michael McGrath

And you don’t believe that property represented an unhealthy proportion of the bank’s exposure, in terms of its loan book, is that your position? 822

Mr. Richard Burrows

An unhealthy proportion—– 823

Deputy Michael McGrath

Well, too high a proportion. 824

Mr. Richard Burrows

In hindsight it clearly, and I said this in my opening remarks, in its absolute amount it was too much, and that was one of the main reasons why we got ourselves into trouble. 825

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. But you also said it did not grow in a disproportionate fashion. 826

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. It did not, it did not grow, as a sector, within our portfolio of businesses, in a disproportionate way. 827

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. Can I just put a number of, of points to you, from, from this particular meeting, which was December 2007. 828

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 829

Deputy Michael McGrath

It says: 830
Property now accounts for 44% of all non mortgage lending. [44%] The levels of property exposure … within our book are increasing at a faster rate than other sectors. Figure 1 below it shows, our exposure has grown from €29.5 [billion] in March 07 to €33.5 [billion] in September 07 and from 23% of the book to 25%. 831
If you move on to page 97, there’s a reference to Moody’s, the rating agency, looking at the sectoral concentration methodology: 832
Under this measure, property and construction is growing in significance more rapidly than other sectors. … Construction & Property … accounted for 359% of our Tier 1 Capital at the end of September [‘]07, up from 345% three months earlier and 275% at March 06. 833
By any measure, is that not rapid growth? 834

Mr. Richard Burrows

It is rapid growth. Yes, I agree with you. 835

Deputy Michael McGrath

But is there not evidence there that the exposure to that sector was growing in a disproportionate fashion? 836

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, I think if you go back to one of the figures that you quoted there, the … the growth in the total loan book of property from 23% to 25%, yes it is growth. Is it disproportionate? I don’t believe so, given the circumstances that pertained at the time. But, yes, it … it is rapid growth. I, I fully acknowledge that the figures that you have read out illustrate that this business was growing very fast. 837

Deputy Michael McGrath

Sure. And property being 44% of all non-mortgage lending, was that too high? 838

Mr. Richard Burrows

44% of all non-mortgage lending? 839

Deputy Michael McGrath

Of all non-mortgage lending. 840

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, it goes back to either percentage of non-mortgage lending or percentage of total book. That, that didn’t show any enormous deviation or disproportionate deviation over the period of time that we’re referring to. But I have said, and I say again, the absolute amount of property lending, which we had, was one of the reasons we got into trouble, it was too much. 841

Deputy Michael McGrath

The absolute amount? 842

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 843

Deputy Michael McGrath

But not the proportion? 844

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, it was property … the property value was, was … the collapse of property values was one of the big issues which caused the, the whole banking situation. It wasn’t, it wasn’t a deterioration in lending to other sectors that caused the problem. It was primarily lending to the property sector in the broadest sense. 845

Deputy Michael McGrath

But why do you feel it so important to, to emphasise the point that property was not too high a percentage of the bank’s overall lending? What is the essential difference? If you’re saying that we basically lent too much money to the property sector but it didn’t account for too high a proportion of our, of our overall lending, what’s the significance of that? 846

Mr. Richard Burrows

The significance is this, the question is whether property lending grew in a disproportionate way. 847

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. 848

Mr. Richard Burrows

The starting point in terms of percentage of total book wasn’t that different from the finishing point but the absolute amount of lending by then was one of the problems which we had. 849

Deputy Michael McGrath

From 2001 to 2009, lending to property and the construction sector grew by 30% per annum. 850

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 851

Deputy Michael McGrath

Is there any other arm of the bank’s business that grew to the same extent over that period? 852

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, if you look at the way in which the percentage of property lending declined, it declined from about …or increased rather … it increased from about 23% to 26% or 27%, I think, it wasn’t disproportionate; it did increase as a percentage of our total loan book. But the conclusion that you would draw from that immediately is that the other parts of the loan book were also growing quite fast at that time. 853

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes. I mean, page 98 of the same minutes extract is saying, “While the above statements remain valid, the level of concentration within the book is increasing and the committee is asked to consider if the current level is acceptable and a number of options are set out as to how the concentration could be reduced”. Is that not an admission that there was an over-concentration in proportionate terms to the property and construction sector by the bank in its lending portfolio? 854

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, I think it’s the recognition of a problem. There’s no doubt about that. 855

Deputy Michael McGrath

But we’re not agreeing on what the problem is, 856

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, the problem is—– 857

Deputy Michael McGrath

I put it to you that the thrust of these minutes at the end of 2007 is that there was an over-concentration of lending in property and construction and the options for reducing that are set out. 858

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, and were noted very carefully. And that’s why I said to you that as we went through 2007 and into 2008, there was a growing realisation of the difficulties which we were facing and it was a realisation brought about by the very kind of material that you’re describing now. 859

Deputy Michael McGrath

On the issue of the inclusion of subordinated debt in the bank guarantee, just to clarify again your evidence in that regard and I put it to you that your CEO at the time, Mr. Goggin, gave clear evidence to the committee that on the night he requested that dated subordinated debt would be included in the guarantee. Were you present when that request was made? 860

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’ve already stated that I do not recall him making such a request. 861

Deputy Michael McGrath

Were you together at all times during that evening? 862

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, I think we were. 863

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. 864

Chairman

Are you saying you can’t recall or are you saying it didn’t happen, Mr. Burrows? 865

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think I’m already on the record as saying that in my recollection it did not happen. 866

Chairman

Okay, thank you. Deputy McGrath. 867

Deputy Michael McGrath

Was there any—– 868

Mr. Richard Burrows

May I just add to that? If I just go back … the night of the guarantee, there was the announcement of the guarantee and we all went home to bed and got into work pretty early the following morning for the announcement. And in the aftermath of that, then all sorts of questions about how extensive the guarantee was, how long it was going to be in place for, all of these questions that didn’t come up the night before started to surface and I certainly recall in the period of that day or the following day, a discussion about the parameters of the guarantee and as to whether bonds, subordinated debt and so on would have been included. I do remember that, but not on the night and I think the specific question that you’re asking is on the night. 869

Deputy Michael McGrath

Yes, because Mr. Goggin said in response to Deputy O’Donnell: 870
Actually that night I had no idea of the maturity profile of the bond portfolio in Bank of Ireland but what we did offer into the room, when asked for an opinion on what should be covered, it was very clear having had that dialogue with my colleagues over the course of the evening, the Bank of Ireland position was that senior creditors clearly needed to be covered, junior creditors in so far as they were dated instruments and we didn’t feel that undated juniors should be covered… 871
And he went on to explain the rationale behind that position. That didn’t happen on the night is what you’re saying. 872

Mr. Richard Burrows

Not to my recollection. 873

Deputy Michael McGrath

And was there any contact over the course of that evening with HQ as to the profile of the bank’s liabilities? Did you know that the guarantee ended up being €133 billion for Bank of Ireland, that was your share of the guarantee, that €5.2 billion of dated subordinated debt was included in the guarantee in respect of Bank of Ireland? Did you have that detail on the night? 874

Mr. Richard Burrows

Not on that night but to your question, there was a lot of contact between Brian and the Bank of Ireland head office because the task we’d been set was to raise the finance to prevent the Anglo situation going wrong the following morning and so there was a lot of coming and going. I mean, as I said to you, that was a pretty complex thing to put in place at that hour of the night with that kind of urgency. So, yes, there was a lot of contact but that was the focus of what was going on and it wasn’t until after we had satisfied ourselves that we could answer that question to Government along with AIB, that the question of the guarantee ever came on the table as part of the announcement. The response from Government to us that night was that, “Thank you very much, we’re going to, in fact, go for a guarantee”. 875

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay, and you’re aware of the evidence of Mr. Boucher that he was surprised at the inclusion of the dated subordinated debt. 876

Mr. Richard Burrows

I am. 877

Deputy Michael McGrath

Okay. The final question I want to raise is and I’ll take you to BOI – Vol. 1, B2, page 99. I’ll give a moment for that to come up. Just to put it in context again, it’s an extract from a group risk policy committee meeting of 17 April 2008 and I understand you wouldn’t have been at the meeting but I just want to raise the issue with you because the lending limits were clearly set out in respect of the landbank book, for example, which was very, very close to the limit and against the advice of the head of group credit, a decision was taken to increase the lending limit in respect of landbank by €100 million. Now, would that have been brought to the attention of the board, for example? 878

Mr. Richard Burrows

My recollection is that that was reported upon subsequently to the board, yes. And the reason for it, by the way, was simply that we had loans to the owners of these landbanks. They were in development and it was a question of following our original loan with an additional loan to enable whatever work was in progress to take place. So, it wasn’t new lending in that sense. 879

Deputy Michael McGrath

It was one client-related, is it? 880

Mr. Richard Burrows

I can’t remember how many clients were involved. 881

Deputy Michael McGrath

Thanks, Chair. 882

Chairman

Thank you very much. Deputy Phelan. 883

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Thank you, Chair. Good afternoon, gentlemen. I’ve only ten minutes so, thank you. I noticed the questioning times had changed a little and I’d ask you to be as brief as you can maybe in response. All of my references are to core document C3b and I want to start on page 40 which is the last page of that where there are several references to Bank … several references on that page, the end of the third last paragraph, “Bank of Ireland should approach the Government for capital”; the last paragraph, “Consideration was given to an immediate contact with the Government”; but I think that that wasn’t followed up on because in the following sentence it said that the budget, the Exchequer budget, was imminent. On page 16 of the same document – the last sentence on that page – it’s stated that “Mr. Goggin was going to explore a capital injection by the State”. When did Bank of Ireland first explore the idea of a capital injection by the taxpayers? And I might also ask you that at the time, the stated position of the bank publicly, through Mr. Goggin and possibly others, was that no such consideration was happening and that Bank of Ireland did not need taxpayer funding? 884

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, if I may deal with the second part of the question first. In any public statement, if you’re in a situation looking for capital, the last thing you want to do is to start talking about that publicly because that just engenders a great deal of uncertainty and loss of confidence in an institution. It’s like a central banker or Minister for Finance not talking about a devaluation before he does it; he can’t because you almost make the situation worse—– 885

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Mr. Burrows, there’s a difference between not talking about it and actually saying publicly that you weren’t looking for it … not talking for it … or not talking about it is quite a different position. 886

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t think in those circumstances it is, frankly, because the question would come up and if you don’t answer it, you leave uncertainty, so that would have been the situation. In the first question of capitalisation, I can’t recall the exact date but I do remember a meeting with the Minister for Finance at which the topic of capitalisation … recapitalisation came up. 887

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Roughly speaking, do you, would you—— 888

Mr. Richard Burrows

Oh, it would have been in the—– 889

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Before the end of 2008? 890

Mr. Richard Burrows

It would, yes. I can’t remember the exact date, but it would have been in the autumn, late autumn, of 2008. 891

Deputy John Paul Phelan

I want to put the following quote to you. Almost a full month after the previous references that I’ve given, on 19 November 2008, Mr. Cowen, in the Dáil, it’s on the Dáil record, stated that he expected covered institutions to explore the potential for meeting these capital needs through “raising private capital and the disposal of appropriate assets”. He gave no mention of the taxpayer bailout, which was to come in February. Do you believe … well, I suppose you have suggested at least, and … the best of you recollection, that you were having those discussion with him before the end of 2008. Why was he not making reference to it, in light of the fact that that capital injection did come in February? On the record of the Dáil, he said something different. 892

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, in the first instance, Mr. Cowen was stating the fact and certainly, as far as Bank of Ireland, that was the fact. We were looking for external capital and we had looked at a number of different possible providers of that. We’d engaged—– 893

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Those are all mentioned in those minutes that I’ve referenced earlier—– 894

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, I’m sure they are. 895

Deputy John Paul Phelan

—–but also State capital injection is specifically referenced in them too. 896

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, yes, as I’m sure it needed to be because, if I go back to what I was saying earlier, at that early stage, Bank of Ireland would have been a pretty difficult investment case to have made to any external investor absent the later creation of NAMA and the transfer and the certainty to the loan book of what was engaged in in property loans. So that all had to happen before, realistically, you could talk to external investors. Notwithstanding that, there were a number of interested parties moving around who were engaging us in conversations about capital. They came to nothing. 897

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay. Can I turn now to your discussions on the 28th with Mr. Hurley in relation to the impending situation with regard to Anglo and you said … you expressed surprise that he didn’t seem to be aware fully of what … of the €1.5 billion liability that was going to fall due. Did you … can you elaborate on the discussions that you had with him? Did you express that surprise to him—– 898

Mr. Richard Burrows

No. 899

Deputy John Paul Phelan

—–that he should have been aware, or have you any other information for the inquiry? 900

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I don’t think I expressed surprise. I said that my reaction was one of surprise. 901

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Why didn’t you express surprise to him? 902

Mr. Richard Burrows

It wasn’t a very long conversation because I had explained the nature of my concern. I’d explained the facts of what had happened that day. 903

Deputy John Paul Phelan

But why didn’t you express your surprise to him? 904

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, I suppose I was expecting Mr. Hurley maybe to react in some other way. I was expecting him to be aware of the situation—– 905

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Do you—– 906

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–and maybe he was aware, I don’t know whether he was aware or not. Central bankers operate to a very high level of confidentiality, so it may well be that he wasn’t prepared to share that with me. I don’t know. 907

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay. 908

Mr. Richard Burrows

All I do know is that, at the end of the conversation, when I ascertained that he didn’t have any plan that he was prepared to share with me for dealing with the situation, he recommended that I talk to Government. 909

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay. I want to turn to page 5 of the same document now; I’ll give it a moment for it to come up on the screen. It’s paragraph one, two, three, four, five, the bottom of it, where there is a direct quotation, page 5 of C3b. I’ll put the quotation to you anyway. It said that “No indication of Anglo’s specific needs was given [this is a court minute again] except that it was due to repay €1.5 [billion] on Tuesday to a German bank and may need a further €4 [billion] later in the week.” First of all, do you recall which German bank was … that liability was due to on the Tuesday? And do you believe it likely, in your experience as a banker, that that particular German bank would have been making the position known to either authorities in Germany or Europe or, dare I say, even potentially Irish authorities, that this potential liability was falling due and might not be met on the Tuesday? 910

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, you’re asking me … first of all, I don’t know the name of the bank. Secondly, you’re asking me to speculate on what they may have been doing and I can’t do that. 911

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay. 912

Mr. Richard Burrows

I just can’t do that. 913

Deputy John Paul Phelan

That’s fair enough. I want to refer, Deputy McGrath spoke about the night of the guarantee and Mr. Goggin having proffered the view here … I think the quote or the phrase that he used when he made the suggestion about subordinated, certain dated subordinated debt, was that there was a potential overlap with senior debt and potentially with sovereign. How was it possible that your chief executive at the time can give evidence to the inquiry to the effect that he made that suggestion on the night on behalf of Bank of Ireland and its shareholders and everyone concerned and that you, as chairman, say that that suggestion didn’t happen or you’ve no recollection of that suggestion? 914

Mr. Richard Burrows

I’m telling you what I remember. 915

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay, no, I won’t go further into that. My final question is again in relation to the evidence given by Mr. Goggin to the inquiry. In answer to a question from me, he said: 916
You’ll recall that when I was describing the events of 29 September, a few days earlier than this, the governor of the Bank of Ireland [yourself] met with the Governor of the Central Bank to assist me in my unsuccessful attempts to have the ECB collateral rules expanded. The Governor of the Central Bank told the governor of the Bank of Ireland at that meeting that there was nothing further he could do. 917
I want you to talk about those unsuccessful attempts, or any discussions you had with Mr. Hurley, who was the then Governor of the Central Bank, in relation to his attempts either to gain additional funding for the Irish banking sector or to change the collateral rules of the ECB at the time. And do you believe that if those collateral rules had to have been changed, and they were changed two weeks subsequent to the guarantee, that the guarantee may not have been, as constituted, necessary, if the changes had occurred before its announcement? 918

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think we’re mixing up two things here. The guarantee was primarily to stop a deposit run the following day. The wholesale funding or the ECB funding on collateralised security was a different thing entirely. Let me say this: I don’t remember the exact detail of the conversations which we had with Mr. Hurley about that but I can tell you that we always found in Mr. Hurley a very sympathetic ear in terms of taking the issues as we saw them in Ireland to the ECB and so therefore I’m quite sure that he explored every possible avenue to give us what we wanted, but clearly was up against the authority of the ECB and that’s what he was reporting to us. 919

Deputy John Paul Phelan

You don’t have any more detail as to what he—– 920

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I don’t. 921

Deputy John Paul Phelan

—–what he was saying about the changes or looking for changes to collateral rules? 922

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I honestly cannot recall them, no. 923

Deputy John Paul Phelan

Okay, thank you. 924

Chairman

Okay, maybe just to finalise on that, do you have a current view as to the appropriateness of the guarantee, Mr. Burrows? 925

Mr. Richard Burrows

A current view? In my statement, at the beginning … I mean, this is something you asked me to—– 926

Chairman

Sure. 927

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–focus on, I said that I wasn’t aware of all of the issues and all of the things that Government was party to on that night; I was just looking at it from Bank of Ireland point of view. And, from my point of view, it seemed that, in the situation where we could come up, with AIB, with the funds necessary to prevent a default by Anglo the following day, that that could have built time into the system to at least allow a few more days of consideration of the implications of all of that. That said, I believe a guarantee was necessary and was an absolutely integral part of the package of measures which Government put into place. 928

Chairman

Okay. And when you say the guarantee was necessary, was it the explicit guarantee that was put in place or a guarantee of sorts? 929

Mr. Richard Burrows

A guarantee of? 930

Chairman

When you say that … you’re categorical in regards to the requirement of a guarantee. 931

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 932

Chairman

Was the guarantee, in its ultimate shape, the type of guarantee that you would have seen as the one necessary, or would you have preferred, or have seen an alternative that may have worked better? 933

Mr. Richard Burrows

Oh no, I think we were perfectly satisfied with the guarantee as it turned out, so the only issue, Chairman, just to be absolutely clear—– 934

Chairman

Sure. 935

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–is that I thought that there might have been a matter of timing, just to give a little breathing space for everybody to consider the options. 936

Chairman

Okay. 937

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s all. 938

Chairman

Okay. Just one other matter before that, before we move to the wrap-up to Deputy Murphy and Senator Barrett. Earlier you were saying that, just to clarify this, Irish Life & Permanent was offered to Bank of Ireland on the morning of 29 September 2008. Was that the case, was it? 939

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s … I wasn’t present at that meeting, but that’s what Brian Goggin reported, yes. 940

Chairman

Okay. So who was in the … who was making the offer? Was it the Central Bank or the Government? 941

Mr. Richard Burrows

That was Central Bank. 942

Chairman

Central Bank, okay. Could you maybe then, if this was on the agenda and certainly there as an item of discussion, can you not, or can you explain why it did not form part of the conversation that night if Irish Nation … if Irish Life & Permanent was on the space of being pushed into Bank of Ireland, or taking over Bank of Ireland, what happened between the morning and that night that that wasn’t a part of the conversation? 943

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, because the focus that night was on a single issue, and that was the liquidity crisis which Anglo Irish was facing. 944

Chairman

Yes. 945

Mr. Richard Burrows

And that was the sole purpose of the meeting. It wasn’t to have a discussion with Government about consolidation within the banking sector or anything like that. It was simply to make sure that Government were aware of our viewpoint in Bank of Ireland about the seriousness of the situation with regard to the liquidity of Anglo. 946

Chairman

Okay. Would that not have been peculiar, given that it was in explicit discussion that took place that morning, and now you were into a far, far more evolved situation, that Irish Life & Permanent wasn’t part of the agenda or the discussion that evening for Bank of Ireland? 947

Mr. Richard Burrows

Bear in mind that the meeting that took place in the evening was between us and AIB. 948

Chairman

Yes. 949

Mr. Richard Burrows

With Government. 950

Chairman

Sure. 951

Mr. Richard Burrows

It would have been quite inappropriate, in my view—– 952

Chairman

Okay. 953

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–to have any kind of discussion like that with a competitor in the room. 954

Chairman

Okay. And in regard to INBS, do you have any view as to why no action was taken in regard to them that evening? 955

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I haven’t. 956

Chairman

Okay, thank you. Deputy Murphy. Or, sorry, Senator Barrett, my apologies. 957

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you, Chairman, and I just want to put some questions to our visitors, Chairman. Just the … your … paragraph 12 of your remarks, Mr. Burrows, strategy 2000-2007, to go from €12 billion capitalisation to €30 billion, and then €40 billion; that was a … by 2007. That was a board decision, was the … to adopt that? Was it? 958

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s correct. 959

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you. Now, could I ask that CIF, page 99, Vol. 1, be put on the screen, please? Now, it’s from the presentation of Mr. Simon Carswell, Chairman, on 26 February, and the third paragraph on page 99 reads: 960
In 2006 the Financial Regulator started to consider the introduction of compliance statements for directors of banks. This would allow the regulator to force the management and the boards of banks to stick by assurances they gave, for example agreeing to reduce their lending into one particular area, and would give the regulator an important tool to exert greater control over the activities of banks. After intensive lobbying by the financial services industry the Department of Finance asked the Financial Regulator to drop the process of consultation, and it was shelved. 961
Was Bank of Ireland part of that lobby? 962

Mr. Richard Burrows

I honestly can’t tell you; I have no recollection of that. 963

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Yes. Because, you know, there’s part of the earlier matter that we discussed, the letter of 2 April 2007 to the regulator saying the Bank of Ireland was comfortable exceeding the 200% limit. It looks like the regulator tried to do something about it, and the industry lobbied, but not the Bank of Ireland; is that …? 964

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I’m not saying that Bank of Ireland didn’t participate; I’m saying I’m unaware of whether we did or not. 965

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Was there a board discussion of the matter? 966

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, there wasn’t, not to my recollection. 967

Senator Sean D. Barrett

I see. Could I also say in relation to regulation, if we bring up document R3b? And this was … it’s the minutes, it’s page 7, it’s the minutes, Chairman, of a meeting of the group risk policy committee where they were asked by the regulator to address failures to adequately verify the income or the source of the borrower deposit. That was the regulator’s concern. And the reply is on the following page 8. They say that they would only do so, the Bank of Ireland would only do so in exceptional defined circumstances. And they’d already written to the Central Bank twice in 2001 and 2002 to notify them of that. And then they go on and say, “…we were fully compliant with our stated procedures…”. In other words, they didn’t want to do the degree of income verification that the regulator had recommended, but they found 21 instances in which there was an insufficient or no evidence of the balance of the funding. So, as well as on the asset issue that we discussed, it seemed like you didn’t want to comply with income verification either when requested by the regulator? You were more or less told, “We told you already two years ago that we don’t do it.” And, you know, this was a situation which led to €64 billion, you know, being required of taxpayers because banks, you know, have this reluctance, I suppose, to comply with the regulator. 968

Chairman

We should question rather than maybe an implied conclusion, Senator. It would be helpful. 969

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Yes. Does it not indicate that, to say the least, you were a hard company to regulate in the attitude to the regulator, or do you say you maybe … perhaps you were an easy company to regulate? But it does seem strange that not verifying the income of the borrowers should become an issue between the regulator and the bank. 970

Chairman

I think Mr. Crowley would like to comment upon that as well, Mr. Burrows, when you’ve finished. 971

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, Chairman, I really don’t have any comment to make. I think the situation is laid out there very clearly, and I’ve nothing to add to it. 972

Chairman

Mr. Burrows? Or Mr. Crowley? 973

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes, I’m in a similar … similar position. I don’t even recall this, actually. 974

Chairman

Okay. Senator Barrett, one final question. 975

Senator Sean D. Barrett

There’s just one other that there’s … in volume B4 on page 30 976

Chairman

Okay, Senator. 977

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you. There’s a … this is from the regulator to the bank: “[Bank of Ireland] is to advise the Financial Regulator as to whether it is satisfied that the concerns expressed at the Group Credit Committee meeting on 30 August 2007 have been addressed.” And that communication is dated March 2008, so there appears that something that arose in 2007 had not been satisfactorily replied to, Chairman, by the following March 2008. Again, what … just to ask our visitors: why does there seem to be such delays in dealing with regulatory issues? 978

Mr. Richard Burrows

I really can’t comment, Chairman. The facts are as stated there. If there were delays, it’s regrettable, but there must have been some good reason for it. I can’t comment. 979

Senator Sean D. Barrett

Thank you, gentlemen. Thank you, Chairman. 980

Chairman

Deputy Murphy. 981

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Thank you, Chairman, and thank you to you both. Just two broad areas I want to just briefly touch upon, if I may, and the evidence document is BOI – B2, page 56, for the first area, and it’s regarding exceptions to credit policy on lending. This is a document that we got back from the Bank of Ireland actually, looking at the period 2004 to 2008. The average exception rate for buy-to-let mortgages was 17%, almost one in five. And when we look at what went to NAMA from Bank of Ireland, 191 connections were transferred, and policy exceptions were identified in 73% of those connections. Mr Burrows, would you regard those exception rates as high? 982

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I wouldn’t, and I think I covered the matter earlier in relation to the way in which credit policy and lending policies were drawn within Bank of Ireland, which was to draw them very tightly, so that that, in any ordinary course of business, would give rise to exceptions. That’s the purpose of drawing a very tight perimeter, that exceptions are forced into a situation where there has to be consultation with a higher authority, whether that’s a more superior credit committee or a senior executive before being resolved. So I think it’s not unusual, in my opinion. 983

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So just to clarify then, a high level of exceptions like we see there means that there is greater scrutiny of what’s going on with each of those lending decisions? 984

Mr. Richard Burrows

It means that people are operating the policies to the letter and making sure that anything that is outside of the policy is recorded as an exception and is then dealt with properly. 985

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Yes. So there isn’t a correlation the between, say 73% of those connections in terms of what was transferred to NAMA and the write-down in NAMA loans? 986

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t think there is any connection whatsoever. We are talking about administrative exceptions. We are not talking about exceptions as to whether the loan should have been made or not. 987

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay, thank you. The other area I want to touch upon is just briefly, going back to the night of the guarantee because it’s just something I don’t understand myself, if I may? On the night itself, yourself and AIB were together in the room at all times. The two banks and no one else, except for when you were with Government officials, is that correct? 988

Mr. Richard Burrows

That’s correct, yes. 989

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So, when Mr. Goggin would have been making phone calls to Mr. Boucher, back in Bank of Ireland, he was doing that in front of you and in front of AIB. 990

Mr. Richard Burrows

He was making phone calls to lots of people, as was Mr. Sheehy for AIB. 991

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And this is in the context of them trying to see if they could secure this €5 billion—– 992

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 993

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

—–each in funding. And did you make any phone calls yourself? 994

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I didn’t . 995

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. And did you have any contacts with anyone else in Government Buildings that evening? 996

Mr. Richard Burrows

Any contacts? I do remember Mr. Doyle met us and showed us in and there was some chit-chat with him. And I think from time to time we met people in the corridor. But there was no substantive discussion or meeting with anybody else. 997

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Okay. And just finally then, to clarify. You go back in to meet with the Government, I take it with the Taoiseach and the Minister for Finance, is that correct? 998

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, and others. 999

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And others. And you were saying to them that you can provide the €10 billion that was needed for Anglo Irish Bank? 1000

Mr. Richard Burrows

€10 billion, yes. 1001

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And they say to you that they are going to provide a guarantee? 1002

Mr. Richard Burrows

Correct. 1003

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

In that same instance. 1004

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. 1005

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

And at that point then, is the €10 billion no longer needed for Anglo Irish Bank? 1006

Mr. Richard Burrows

Well, I’m not sure that that was the case because we were left on the basis that the €10 billion could well be required and everything was in place for it to be available the following morning. The subsequent thing that happened was that it was not required. And I am not clear as to how AI … how Anglo sorted itself out. But it didn’t come back to us for the money that had been put in place. 1007

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

So, just to clarify. You left Government Buildings, your understanding was that €10 billion was still required and that a guarantee of the six banks was coming into effect the next morning. 1008

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes. The guarantee was for a different purpose. The guarantee was to guarantee deposits to stop chaos in the marketplace. The funding was to deal with the specific liquidity problem of Anglo. 1009

Deputy Eoghan Murphy

Thank you. Thank you, Chair. 1010

Chairman

Thank you very much. Just to wrap one thing, just to clarify, Mr. Burrows, can you clarify and inform the inquiry as to the date Bank of Ireland was seeking State capital? 1011

Mr. Richard Burrows

No, I can’t give you a date on that. 1012

Chairman

Okay, well a period. Was it—– 1013

Mr. Richard Burrows

It … the discussions took place over the period leading up to Christmas of that year and into January —– 1014

Chairman

Of 2008 is it? 1015

Mr. Richard Burrows

Of 2008 and into 2009, yes. 1016

Chairman

Okay, so there was a discussion between Bank of Ireland and the State at that time that there would need be a capital provision for Bank of Ireland or were you exploring it? 1017

Mr. Richard Burrows

I think it’s fair to say, Chairman, that in that period immediately after the September guarantee—– 1018

Chairman

Sure. 1019

Mr. Richard Burrows

—–I kept the Minister for Finance pretty well informed as to how we were progressing in relation to trying to find third party funds to supplement our capital base. And so he was well aware and we had quite a number of discussions about how that was progressing. And indeed, I think his officials had with Brian Goggin and with others in the Bank of Ireland. So there was a continuing dialogue about that. 1020

Chairman

So we know the conclusion of that dialogue ended with a capital … with a State capitalisation into Bank of Ireland. But are you saying to the committee today that in the period after the guarantee in 2008, that Bank of Ireland was discussing the necessity and the requirement for capitalisation from the State? 1021

Mr. Richard Burrows

Yes, up to the point where the capital actually was injected. 1022

Chairman

Thank you very much. I’m going to bring matters to a conclusion. Mr. Crowley and Mr. Burrows, is there anything finally, or further you would like to add before we wrap up? 1023

Mr. Richard Burrows

I don’t think so, Chairman. I would just like to thank you and the members of your committee for the courtesy with which you have received us this morning. And if I may just also put on the record my thanks, seeing as I left Bank of Ireland in 2009, I’ve relied enormously upon the support of former colleagues there in order to prepare for today. So thank you to all of them. And if I may, just one final word. There is a bunch of people in …. watching all of this in Malahide, Clontarf, London, Miami. Thank you to them. 1024

Chairman

I didn’t know you were broadcast that far, Mr. Burrows, thank you very much. Mr. Crowley —– 1025

Dr. Laurence Crowley

Yes, I’m very happy —– 1026

Chairman

—–maybe you could go a bit further geographically. 1027

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I’m very happy to endorse what Richard has just said. 1028

Chairman

A bit of order, please. I’m just getting order, Mr. Crowley. 1029

Dr. Laurence Crowley

I really have nothing to add to that. I wish you well with your important work and we will, of course, continue to offer you our co-operation if and when you require it. 1030

Chairman

With that said, thank you both, Mr. Crowley and Mr. Burrows. I would like to thank the both of you for your participation here today and with your engagement with the inquiry. I now state that the witnesses are excused and that we suspend until 2.45 p.m. at which time we will resume to hear from KPMG. Is that agreed? Agreed. 1031

Sitting suspended at 1.26 p.m. and resumed at 2.45 p.m.