Corporate Governance
Provisions | 31 December 2021 | 31 December 2020 |
Short-term | 406 | 543 |
Long-term | 800 | 835 |
Total provisions | 1 206 | 1 378 |
Movement in provisions in the period ended 31 December 2021 | Beginning of the period | Increase | Utilization | Reversal | Other changes | End of the period |
Provisions for guarantees and sureties given | 555 | 340 | - | -401 | 2 | 496 |
Provision for retirement severance pays | 323 | 32 | -38 | -4 | -46 | 267 |
Provision for disputed claims and potential liabilities | 80 | 34 | -35 | -11 | 1 | 69 |
Provision for potential refunds of borrowing costs | 128 | 75 | -83 | - | - | 120 |
Provision for legal risk pertaining to mortgage loans in Swiss francs | 91 | 43 | - | -2 | - | 132 |
Provision for penalties imposed by the Office of Competition and Consumer Protection | 39 | - | - | - | - | 39 |
Provision for restructuring costs | 93 | 120 | -137 | -48 | - | 28 |
Provision for post-mortem benefits | 32 | 1 | -3 | -4 | -1 | 25 |
Other | 37 | 12 | -10 | -9 | - | 30 |
Total provisions | 1 378 | 657 | -306 | -479 | -44 | 1 206 |
Movement in provisions in the period ended 31 December 2020 | Beginning of the period | Increase | Utilization | Reversal | Other changes | End of the period |
Provisions for guarantees and sureties given | 358 | 512 | - | -318 | 3 | 555 |
Provision for retirement severance pays | 319 | 42 | -31 | -16 | 9 | 323 |
Provision for disputed claims and potential liabilities | 80 | 27 | -18 | -4 | -5 | 80 |
Provision for potential refunds of borrowing costs | 254 | 144 | -270 | - | - | 128 |
Provision for tax risk | - | 4 | - | -89 | 85 | - |
Provision for legal risk pertaining to mortgage loans in Swiss francs | 22 | 77 | - | -8 | - | 91 |
Provision for penalties imposed by the Office of Competition and Consumer Protection | 85 | 11 | - | -57 | - | 39 |
Provision for restructuring costs | 34 | 144 | -85 | - | - | 93 |
Provision for post-mortem benefits | 25 | 5 | - | - | 2 | 32 |
Other | 34 | 21 | -7 | -11 | - | 37 |
Total provisions | 1 211 | 987 | -411 | -503 | 94 | 1 378 |
Provision for potential refunds of borrowing costs
On 11 September 2019, the CJEU judgment in case C-383/18 was published. In its ruling, the CJEU stated that Article 16(1) of Directive 2008/48/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 23 April 2008 on credit agreements for consumers and repealing Council Directive 87/102/EEC should be interpreted as meaning that the consumer’s right to reduce the total cost of credit in the event of an early repayment includes all costs that have been imposed on the consumer.
Based on the legal interpretations in its possession, for the settlement of credit costs with borrowers the PZU Group applied the linear formula whereby a pro rata approach is adopted based on the period between the actual loan repayment date and the repayment date specified in the loan agreement and requires that any non-recurring cost be broken down on a pro rata basis across all payment periods.
In the case of early repayments of consumer and mortgage loans made before the date of the CJEU judgment, the PZU Group estimates the amount of expected disbursements pursuant to IAS 37 and recognizes a provision for this purpose which is charged to other operating expenses.
In 2021, PLN 83 million of the provision was utilized and its amount as at 31 December 2021 was PLN 120 million (PLN 128 million as at 31 December 2020). Its value is the best possible estimate based on the historically observed trend of the amount of loan cost refunds arising from reported complaints and takes into account the scenario of a possible evolution of market practice or the regulator’s views. The estimates required the adoption of expert assumptions and are affected by uncertainty. For this reason, the provision amount will be subject to updates in the next periods, depending on the number of complaints and amounts to be refunded.
Significant assumptions applied for the estimation of the provision include the change in the rate of decline in the refunded amounts.
Impact of the change in the rate of decline in the amounts of refunds on the value of the provision | 31 December 2021 | 31 December 2020 |
10% | -5 | -15 |
-10% | 6 | 18 |
Provision for legal risk pertaining to FX mortgage loans in Swiss francs
On 3 October 2019, CJEU issued a ruling regarding the effects of possible abusiveness of the provisions of an individual agreement on a CHF-indexed loan granted by one of the banks. CJEU interpreted the provisions of Council Directive 93/13/EEC of 5 April 1993 on unfair terms in consumer contracts in the context of the Swiss franc-indexed loan agreement. CJEU specified the effects of declaring the possible abusiveness of the conversion clauses by the national court, without analyzing at all the possible abusiveness of the contractual provisions. CJEU did not rule that if the national court deems a clause abusive, then it should automatically declare the entire agreement invalid. An assessment in this respect is up to the national court, however CJEU did not rule out the possibility of supplementing the gap resulting from the abusiveness of the conversion clauses using national supplementary provisions.
The CJEU ruling provides general guidance for Polish ordinary courts. The ultimate resolutions made by Polish courts will be based on EU regulations interpreted in accordance with the CJEU judgment, taking into consideration the national laws and analysis of the individual circumstances of each case. At the same time, there is still no established line of rulings in cases involving mortgage loans in Swiss francs, an observation that is often corroborated by mutually exclusive judgments issued by ordinary courts and requests for a preliminary ruling sent by ordinary courts to the CJEU and the Supreme Court to resolve their legal doubts. One should highlight the application submitted on 29 January 2021 by the First President of the Supreme Court to the full composition of the Supreme Court’s Civil Chamber regarding the question of resolution of the legal issues associated with CHF mortgage loans regarding, in particular, the following aspects:
In the opinion of the PZU Group, the Supreme Court ruling in the above issues may have significant impact on the further line of court rulings in this respect. However, it is uncertain whether and when the full panel of the Civil Chamber will adopt a resolution on these legal questions.
As at 31 December 2021, 1,623 individual court cases were pending against the PZU Group over foreign currency mortgage loans in Swiss francs, which were granted in previous years with the total disputed amount of PLN 470 million (as at 31 December 2020 there were 592 cases pending with the value of PLN 160 million). The main cause of the litigation specified by plaintiffs pertains to challenging the provisions of the loan agreement as regards the application by the PZU Group of the exchange rates and results in claims to declare the loan agreements partially or fully invalid.
In 2021, the PZU Group received 125 unfavorable court judgments in cases filed by borrowers, including 20 final judgments, and 11 favorable judgments, including 4 final judgments (in 2020: 36 unfavorable court judgments in cases filed by borrowers, including 3 final judgments declaring the loan agreement invalid, and 13 favorable court judgments, including 2 final judgments dismissing the claim for declaring the loan agreement invalid).
The following tables present the amounts of provisions for individual court cases in which the PZU Group is a party and a portfolio provision for the remaining FX mortgage loans in Swiss francs which are exposed to legal risk associated with the nature of these agreements.
Consolidated statement of financial position line items | 31 December 2021 | 31 December 2020 |
Impairment losses for loan receivables from clients | 516 | 345 |
individual provision | 220 | 65 |
portfolio provision | 296 | 280 |
Other provisions | 132 | 91 |
individual provision | 52 | 11 |
portfolio provision | 80 | 80 |
Total | 648 | 436 |
Consolidated profit and loss account line items | 1 January – 31 December 2021 | 1 January – 31 December 2020 |
Movement in allowances for expected credit losses and impairment losses on financial instruments | -172 | -309 |
Other operating expenses | -42 | -68 |
Total | -214 | -377 |
As regards the portfolio provision, as at 31 December 2021, the PZU Group based the calculations on 3 possible scenarios, to reflect best in the estimates of the portfolio provision the various possible solutions regarding CHF mortgage loans which may occur, given the current situation in the banking sector.
The calculation of the provision carried out as at 31 December 2021 was based on the following scenarios:
Under the baseline scenario, as at 31 December 2021, the current situation in the macroeconomic environment is taken into account, including the current trends in judicial decisions regarding FX mortgage loans and the existing own and market history of lawsuits. Moreover, the probability of legal defeats and the probabilities of possible solutions in the event of a dispute were estimated based on an updated opinion of an external law firm.
An additional element of the estimates in the base scenario is the distribution of the probability of the possible resolution of the disputable case which is associated with a specific level of loss. The biggest share in possible resolution scenarios – 80% (70% as at 31 December 2020) was assigned to invalidating the loan agreement. No out-of-court settlements with customers are assumed in this scenario;
Although the subject matter of legal risk related to the portfolio of foreign currency mortgage loans has been one of the key topics in the banking sector in recent years, there is still no stabilized history of data on the scale of lawsuits (in particular with regard to final non-appealable judgments) or regarding the line of judicial decisions in this area. All of the foregoing means that the process of determining the amount of the provision each time requires the adoption of a number of expert assumptions based on professional judgment.
New rulings and possible sectoral solutions which will appear in the Polish market for CHF mortgage loans may have impact on the amount of the provision established by the PZU Group and necessitate a change of individual assumptions adopted in the calculations. In connection with this uncertainty it is possible that the provision amount will change in the future.
The PZU Group carried out a sensitivity analysis for the major assumptions of provision calculations, where a change of the level of individual parameters would have the following impact on the provision amount for the legal risk of CHF mortgage loans.
Parameter | Scenario | Impact on the amount of the provision 31 December 2021 | Impact on the amount of the provision 31 December 2020 |
Number of cases brought to court | +20% | 97 | 34 |
-20% | -73 | -34 | |
Probability of losing the case | +10 p.p.(in 2021: no more than 100%) | 61 | 26 |
-10 p.p. | -47 | -26 | |
Probability of the agreement invalidation scenario | +10 p.p. (in 2021: no more than 100%) | 53 | 10 |
-10 p.p. | -37 | -10 |
Provisions for guarantees and sureties given
This item includes provisions recognized by banks for the potential loss of economic benefits resulting from off-balance sheet exposures (e.g. granted guarantees or credit exposures).
Provision for penalties imposed by the Office of Competition and Consumer Protection
The amount of 28 million pertains to a penalty returned by the Office of Competition and Consumer Protection to Pekao. Due to the potential risk of outflow of resources in connection with this case, the PZU Group maintains a provision to cover this risk.
The amount of PLN 11 million pertains to the penalty imposed by the President of the Office of Competition and Consumer Protection as a result of the decision in which he deemed that the clause used by Pekao in annexes to agreements on the rules for setting foreign exchange rates is an impermissible contractual clause. Pekao intends to submit an appeal to the court against the decision made by the President of UOKiK.
Provision for restructuring costs
The Pekao Management Board reported that on 3 March 2021, in accordance with the provisions of the Act on the Rules for Terminating Employment Relationships it adopted a resolution concerning the intention of conducting group layoffs and commencing the consultation procedure on group layoffs.
The total costs related to the termination of employment contracts and to the modification of the employment conditions of Pekao employees under group layoffs has been estimated at PLN 120 million and the restructuring provision in this amount has been established for this purpose. As at 31 December 2021, the value of the provision was PLN 17 million and pertained to disbursements to be made in 2022.
The remaining balance is made up of:
e-mail: IR@pzu.pl
Magdalena Komaracka, IR Director, tel. +48 (22) 582 22 93
Piotr Wiśniewski, IR Manager, tel. +48 (22) 582 26 23
Aleksandra Jakima-Moskwa, tel. +48 (22) 582 26 17
Aleksandra Dachowska, tel. +48 (22) 582 43 92
Piotr Wąsiewicz, tel. +48 (22) 582 41 95