Brendan Burgess
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In today's Irish Times, Simon Carswell has an [broken link removed] with Kieran McGowan about the Irish Life and Permanent's board's thoughts during the mortgage boom.
As a non-executive board member of Irish Life Permanent for nine years until 2008, McGowan recalls “a very robust conversation” in its boardroom after rival Ulster Bank introduced 100 per cent mortgages in 2005.
The then chief executive David Went [who is now chairman of The Irish Times] spoke to the Financial Regulator, pressing that authority to intervene. “He telephoned to say that your role is to stop this when Ulster Bank did it. ‘If you don’t want this to get out of hand, you should stop it,’ he said. They said to him: ‘We are a principles-based regulator – we don’t do that.’ That conversation happened,” said McGowan.
But the competitive pressures of the market were too great, and this forced Irish Life Permanent to follow Ulster Bank with 100 per cent mortgages of its own.
“Irish Life Permanent had a certain market share. Market share was a big issue at the board and a big issue at the company, and they said that if we don’t follow, we are going to lose share all over the place to Ulster,” said McGowan.
If the company had failed to respond to Ulster Bank, “all of the various kinds of stakeholders would have been on your back” at the next annual meeting, he said.
Was this now a regret that Irish Life Permanent – the biggest mortgage lender during the boom – did not act differently?
“Ah yes, of course,” he said.
And could he have shouted louder as a director during boardroom discussions to stop it? “Probably . . . in relation to 100 per cent loans, I think we could have.
“I think we should have been more aggressive with the regulator really to say: ‘That is not good enough to say you are a principles-based regulator; this is what is going to happen.’ So I guess that is what should have happened.
“We should have really put our foot down and said, ‘Look, this is not good enough’, and maybe gone to [the Department of] Finance and said, ‘This is what’s going to happen; you need to step in here’.”