R
1 - no, the amount increased to 87 mn. Whether it varied or started at that amount is unclear.Could somebody here clarify this whole senario in simple terms for one who does not fully understand accounting or banking terms. I have a number of questions and I'll list them in 'my' order of importance.
1. Am I right in thinking the Fitzpatrick took €87 mil out of Anglo coffers
each year for 8 years?
2. Did he lodge this money on deposit with F.Nationwide for 11 odd
months each year 'till just before the annual audit?
3. Did he personally gain the interest on this huge deposit?
4. If the above is not the case, how did he or Anglo gain anything from
transactions that were at best 'shady'?
No.Am I the only one who sees this amount being written off, particularly if it was used to finance share purchases, and Fitzpatrick walking away scot free?
I can only guess that he got an 'opportunity' to make money that was too good to pass on to his bank, inappropriate for his bank or too good to miss out on. But short of an explanation from the man himself, his motives must remain the subject of speculation.I'm still groping for a reason or excuse as to why such a highly respected and personable man would do anything to endanger his profile with his peers or shareholders?
His name didn't appear on the audited reports as having a loan for €87 mn from the bank that he is supposed to be chief watchdog of.You say in reply to Q2........ no, he took it out of Anglo a week before the audited results and put it back into Anglo a week afterwards.
Why, why why? what could he possibly gain from this?
Yes.Where was the money for this ONE week?
I presume it was in Ir. Nationwide?
You're still thinking backwards - he moved his loan from Anglo to INBS, that is, instead of owing 87 mn to Anglo, he owed 87 mn to INBS. He would have been paying the interest, not getting it. It was worth his while to pay money to INBS so he didn't have to appear in the annual report (which goes to shareholders, the people who own the company). (Assuming he did pay interest to INBS and it wasn't just some gentleman's agreement).A week's interest on €87mil would amount to a tidy holiday fund?
I realise there is more heat than light in my post, but I am dumb-founded by the breadth and scale of what is now surfacing and I wonder is this the end of something or just the beginning.
This is just the beginning. The word on the street is that Anglo will be Nationalised on January 4th, and its good bye to the fat cats who thought they were indispensable.
This is just the beginning. The word on the street is that Anglo will be Nationalised on January 4th, and its good bye to the fat cats who thought they were indispensable.
Separately, The Irish Times understands that Mr FitzPatrick moved personal funds from Anglo to Bank of Ireland in advance of the Government's emergency decision in September to guarantee deposits and debts at the Irish-owned banks.
How on earth could Irish Nationwide have got adequete security on €87 million on a short-term basis? Surely the process of getting security for a sum of this size would take months in itself?
If either of these things are true, in particular, if a) is true, then does that not mean that the loan continued to be Anglo's "property" (for want of a better word) with the result that it should have appeared on the accounts? In short, fraud? Since there was no fraud, there must be some other explanation!Would you believe quite the contrary - I don't know what the security was, but it was probably either ...
a) a bank guarantee from Anglo to INBS (with Anglo continuing to rely on whatever security they hold) or
b) a solicitor's undertaking to transfer (hold in trust) whatever security had previously been pledged to Anglo for INBS - on the basis that all parties probably knew these transfers would never take place, as the loan was going to find it's way back quickly to its 'rightful home'!
Regards,
BM
I suppose we better be careful but Jim Power in today's Indo also expresses amazement that this action is legal. It was designed to mislead - no doubt about that. People who bought Anglo shares over the last few years could argue that they did so on the basis of the accounts and that if they knew about these shenanigans they would never have invested and lost so much money. As Jim Power says, clear case for a class action in some other jurisdictions.- I believe this to be fraud -
I would question the "nothing illegal" bit. If Fitzpatrick had declared his borrowings a few years ago ......... it would clearly have stopped the meteoric rise in share price. So, by hiding this, he directly kept the price at an ramped level. This misled the investors ....... full stop. Illegal or not?Apparently he has had €87m in loans from the bank which were never disclosed in the accounts.
Each year before the audit, he repaid the loans with borrowings from another financial institution, and reborrowed after the audit was finished.
There was nothing illegal in what he did, but it was inappropriate.
Brendan
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