Polish banks haunted by Swiss franc mortgages in European court

By Marcin Goclowski

WARSAW (Reuters) - Europe's highest court will rule next week whether a bank in Poland broke the law by selling homeowners a Swiss franc mortgage, potentially unleashing lawsuits which could wipe out Polish banking profits for years to come.

It is nearly two decades since 700,000 Poles, attracted by interest rates far lower than those available in their zloty currency, took out mortgages denominated in Swiss francs.

Such foreign currency loans now total 124 billion zloty ($31 billion), almost one third of all Polish mortgages, but many homeowners are having to pay far bigger instalments than they expected due to a sharp rise in the value of the Swiss franc.

Although similar mortgage deals became a problem in other European countries, including Hungary, Romania and Croatia, Poland has been slower to resolve the plight of its borrowers.

Anna Wojtowicz-Bartlomiejczuk said she was left with huge debts when the franc jumped as she was preparing to move and pay off her previous foreign currency loan on a two-bedroom flat.

"It's like I have thrown the cash out the window," said the 39-year-old mother of two from Gdansk.

Since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008 the Swiss franc has risen 85% from 2.18 zloty to 4.04 zloty, while this year alone it appreciated by 6% against the Polish currency.

The most painful year for Poles was 2015, when the franc skyrocketed as the Swiss central bank removed a currency cap.

Many borrowers have since turned to the courts, encouraged by a cut in the cost of taking action, in what has become the worst crisis to hit Poland's banks since the end of communism.

And the European Court of Justice (ECJ) is now due to rule on Oct. 3 whether it was legal for Raiffeisen Bank to grant foreign currency-denominated mortgages, as Polish banks face increasing pressure to compensate thousands of borrowers.

The ECJ was asked by a Polish judge whether such contracts broke European law. The number of new cases in Polish courts in the first six months of 2019 rise by 39% to 2,021, justice ministry data shows.

"The (ECJ) judgment will cause an avalanche of lawsuits," Janusz Szewczak, a lawmaker for Poland's ruling nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party, said.

PROFIT IN PERIL

The ZBP banking lobby estimates that the total cost could hit 60 billion zloty ($15 billion) if all those with such a loan were to succeed in court, four times more than the 2018 net profit of Poland's banks.

Legal actions against the banks claim their contracts abused the rights of borrowers, with one estimate of more than 11,000 pending cases in Polish courts.