Inside the world of business
Nama and IBRC have a lot in common. Shoud they merge?
While defending itself against accusations of leaks and not doing enough to prevent leaks of information, the National Asset Management Agency complained yesterday about how it’s far more transparent than other entities.
Nama chief executive Brendan McDonagh appended a one-page table to his presentation to the Oireachtas finance committee, showing that it disclosed more than other commercial State agencies and the guaranteed banks.
They did not have to publish quarterly or preview reports for the following year, and they were not statutorily obliged to appear before the Public Accounts Committee or subjected to a review by the Comptroller Auditor and General, while Nama had to do all that.
“For some reason, however, there seems to be a view that Nama should be subject to a commercially disadvantageous regime of disclosure which does not apply to other commercial State agencies or publicly owned banks,” said McDonagh. Nama’s legislation means that it has to operate the same confidentiality that banks apply, he said.
Even if it didn’t, disclosing information on debtors and their property where Nama is competing with banks heavily deleveraging their property loan books would make the taxpayer “the only certain loser”, he said.
Fianna Fáil TD Seán Fleming later suggested that given that Irish Bank Resolution Corporation, the former Anglo Irish Bank, and Nama carry out similar work and were both State-owned, did it not make sense to merge the two?
There wasn’t much of a response to the idea but it makes sense on a cost basis and, on the transparency side, it would at least make the former Anglo a little more accountable on deals it does.
Fleming also asked whether IBRC and Nama had competing interests at times, citing the sale of loans on the Maybourne hotels in London as an example. McDonagh said that he didn’t believe so. But without full transparency around the deal to sell the loans and the effect on the position of State-owned IBRC, which is owed tens of millions by one of the hotels’ shareholders, it’s hard to know if the taxpayer is losing out.
Report must be just first step in getting to grips with pensions
Pensions are expensive but it is still difficult for the ordinary consumer to ascertain how expensive. That was the fundamental finding of the 290-page report from the Department of Social Protection on the issue of pension charges.
The scale of the problem facing individual pension scheme members was illustrated pointedly in the reported difficulty of two-thirds of pension scheme trustees in sourcing the necessary figures for the report. Trustees are the people legally charged with representing the interests of scheme members; if they cannot get a steer on charges, there’s little chance of anyone else doing so.
For all that, this is a worthwhile report. For the first time, we have proper data rather than anecdote to bolster the argument that we pay too high a price for our pensions, especially given the notoriously poor performance of the sector over the past decade.
We also have evidence that there is a very broad range in the level of charges being applied to very similar pension products. The reduction in yield because of charges imposed on group occupational schemes was anywhere from 0.25 per cent to 1.71 per cent. With the department noting that every quarter percentage point increase in this measure resulting in a 4 per cent hit on the final pension fund, the impact on scheme members was a reduction of from 4 per cent to almost 28 per cent in the value of their fund.
The next step for the authors of the report will be to determine why there is such a divergence in costs and impact; what are people paying for and are they really getting value for money?
The first step will be enforcing transparency and better communication, as well as educating scheme members on what to look for and on their rights.
In the longer term, it is possible that efforts may be made to standardise charges in the sector, much as has already happened with PRSA personal pensions.
The involvement of the Central Bank and the regulator, the Pensions Board, in the exercise alongside the department which is responsible for pension policy gives this report sufficient credibility to drive that process. With so many other pressures on private sector pensions just now, it is important that this report represents a first step rather than a conclusion.
Dunnes’ debt to anonymous source
In her ongoing battles with National Asset Management Agency, Gayle Killilea-Dunne, the wife of property developer Sean Dunne, must be glad of the support she is receiving from an anonymous source.
Someone suspiciously well-informed regarding legal proceedings taking place in Connecticut this week took to the unlikely forum of namawinelake ( namawinelake.wordpress.com) to bemoan the destruction of her reputation, and the squandering of taxpayers' money by Nama as it pursues her husband for €185 million through the US courts.
For the past two years the couple has resided in Greenwich, Connecticut, where they have been buying, renovating, and selling on multimillion-dollar properties.
Lawyers representing both Nama and the Dunnes (nine, in total) piled into a tiny meeting room this week for a “status conference”, during which they argued over when the evidentiary hearings on alleged illegal transfer of assets between the developer and his wife should begin.
Nama had sought to push it to January. According to the namawinelake posting, this is because the state agency has no case and is “hoping to invent a case between now and then”. Judge Douglas Mintz rejected a request by the Dunnes’ lawyers to hold the hearings next week, instead opting to give Nama additional time to access what it needs.
It will be interesting to see how keen the couple’s lawyers are to expedite matters when Nama files a motion for the discovery of additional documents in the coming weeks. They spent the past three months filing objections to deny Nama access to documents it finally secured this week.
Today
A busy day for the tech sector as Microsoft launches its new Windows 8, Apple reveals its fourth-quarter results and Amazon announces its third-quarter results
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