Top Stories

Polish banks team up to create protection scheme

Published by Wanda Rich

Posted on June 8, 2022

2 min read

· Last updated: February 6, 2026

Add as preferred source on Google
Banking partnership in Poland to enhance liquidity and solvency - Global Banking & Finance Review
The image depicts the ING Bank Śląski logo in Warsaw, representing the collaboration among major Polish banks like PKO BP and mBank to establish a liquidity protection scheme. This initiative aims to ensure bank solvency and support the financial sector.
Global Banking & Finance Awards 2026 — Call for Entries

(Reuters) -The biggest commercial banks in Poland have teamed up to create a protection scheme to help ensure their liquidity and solvency, the banks said on Tuesday. Alior Bank, BNP Paribas Bank Polska, ING Bank Śląski, mBank, Bank Millennium, Bank Pekao, PKO BP and Santander Bank Polska have all agreed to join. The scheme – […]

(Reuters) -The biggest commercial banks in Poland have teamed up to create a protection scheme to help ensure their liquidity and solvency, the banks said on Tuesday.

Alior Bank, BNP Paribas Bank Polska, ING Bank Śląski, mBank, Bank Millennium, Bank Pekao, PKO BP and Santander Bank Polska have all agreed to join.

The scheme – which needs to be approved by Poland’s KNF financial regulator – will run in parallel to existing institutional solutions, with banks obliged to make annual payments to the Bank Guarantee Fund (BGF).

Poland’s biggest lender PKO BP estimated that its contribution to the planned fund would be 872 million zlotys ($203.7 million), which will impact its results this year.

However, mBank brokerage analyst Michal Konarski said the initiative should be neutral or even slightly positive for banks’ results, pointing to the likelihood that the BGF will lower the amount each bank will need to chip in to the deposit guarantee scheme.

“To sum up, these funds will balance themselves out and the banks will not lose from it, you could even say that they will benefit from it,” Konarski told Reuters.

The Polish banking index was down about 1% in early trade.

Banks are expected to get a boost this year from rising interest rates, but this could be offset by initiatives to help mortgage payers.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said in April that as part of the plan to help borrowers, a new 3.5 billion zloty aid fund would be created and funded from banks’ profits.

The government has also proposed payment holidays for borrowers, which could cost the sector nearly 30 billion zlotys in 2022-23.

The banks plan to form a joint stock company which will manage the protection scheme and funds they contribute to it.

Each will put in “0.40% of the amount of the guaranteed funds of the given bank covered by the mandatory deposit guarantee scheme,” they said.

($1 = 4.2815 zlotys)

(Reporting by Anna Pruchnicka; editing by Jason Neely and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is liquidity?
Liquidity refers to how easily an asset can be converted into cash without affecting its market price. In banking, it indicates a bank's ability to meet its short-term obligations.
What is solvency?
Solvency is the ability of an entity, such as a bank, to meet its long-term financial obligations. It indicates whether the total assets exceed total liabilities.
What is a deposit guarantee scheme?
A deposit guarantee scheme is a financial safety net that protects depositors by guaranteeing the repayment of deposits up to a certain limit in the event of a bank failure.
What is the Bank Guarantee Fund (BGF)?
The Bank Guarantee Fund (BGF) is an institution that provides insurance for bank deposits, ensuring that depositors are compensated in case of a bank's insolvency.

Tags

Related Articles

More from Top Stories

Explore more articles in the Top Stories category