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Fides Polonia Capital Management · Real Estate

Greenpoint, Brooklyn

We did not discover Greenpoint. We grew up knowing it — and when retiring Polish owners with no succession plans began quietly selling the buildings their families had held for decades, we were the ones they called first.

Real Estate · Greenpoint, Brooklyn, NY 11222 · Little Poland · 30 Units Across 4 Buildings

Long-Term Hold — A Polish Community We Know by Name
30 Units
3 × 8-Unit &
1 × 6-Unit Buildings
$115,720
Median Household
Income (2023)
~$4,489
Average Monthly
Rent, Greenpoint
A−
Crime Score
Below City Average
+25.8%
NW Brooklyn Home
Value Growth
Return to Portfolio Prologue

Little Poland, New York: The Neighbourhood We Have Known for Decades

Manhattan Avenue runs north through Brooklyn's northernmost neighbourhood from the Williamsburg border to Greenpoint's edge, and along its length — between the pierogi restaurants, the Polish bakeries, the Catholic shrines in shop windows, and the weekend flea market on Nassau Avenue — it is possible, even now, to hear Polish spoken on the pavement as naturally as English. Greenpoint is sometimes called Little Poland, and the name is earned. It is reportedly home to the second-largest concentration of Polish Americans in the United States, after Chicago. Polish has been the working language of this neighbourhood for generations, and the faith, the food, the community bonds, and the way of life that came with it have proven more durable than almost any other immigrant neighbourhood culture in New York City.

Fides Polonia's connection to Greenpoint did not begin with a research report or a market analysis. It began the way most things in this neighbourhood begin: through people. Polish families who had owned buildings on these streets for thirty or forty years. Retiring owners with no children willing to take on the work of management. Men and women who built something real in America, who were thinking about moving back to Poland in their final years, and who wanted to sell — quietly, directly, without brokers, to people who knew the streets, knew the tenants, and knew what it meant to be a good steward of a building in a community like this one. We were those people. We still are.

There is a tradition in Catholic Social Teaching that dates to the earliest encyclicals: the idea that property held responsibly is not merely a financial asset but a social one — that the landlord who maintains a building well, keeps rents honest, and treats tenants as neighbours rather than revenue lines is performing a form of genuine service to the community. In Greenpoint, that tradition is not abstract. It is the reason our tenants have stayed for years, the reason we still receive phone calls from neighbourhood friends who watch over the buildings while we are in Kraków, and the reason these thirty units are, in every meaningful sense, part of a community rather than a position in a portfolio. Cf. Rerum Novarum §46 · Pope Leo XIII · "The first and most fundamental principle must be the inviolability of private property, used in accordance with the duties of ownership."
I. The Portfolio

Four Buildings, Thirty Units, One Community

Fides Polonia holds four multifamily residential buildings in Greenpoint: three eight-unit buildings and one six-unit building, totalling thirty residential units. All four properties were acquired directly from retiring Polish owners — men and women who built their livelihoods in America and, in their later years, found themselves without family members willing to take on the responsibilities of landlordship in a rapidly changing city. There were no brokers, no auction processes, no competitive bidding. These were private transactions between people who knew each other through the community, structured to be fair to sellers who had invested their working lives in these properties and fair to the tenants who had trusted those sellers with their homes.

Building One · 8 Units
Pre-war brick multifamily, characteristic of the Greenpoint residential stock built in the 1920s and 1930s. Fully tenanted. Mix of long-term Polish-American residents and young professionals drawn to the neighbourhood's proximity to Williamsburg and the waterfront. Acquired from a retiring Polish owner with no succession plan — a building his family had held for over thirty years.
Fully occupied · Pre-war brick
Building Two · 8 Units
Three-storey walkup on a residential block within walking distance of the G train and Manhattan Avenue commercial strip. Tenants include several individuals placed through the Polish community — relatives of friends working in America, young Poles studying or starting careers in New York who needed a safe, affordable address close to the city. Purchased privately through community introduction.
Fully occupied · Community placed tenants
Building Three · 8 Units
Well-maintained building with stable long-term tenancy. Several units have been occupied by the same families for more than a decade. We have helped friends' children secure apartments here when they relocated to New York for school or work — the kind of placement that turns a transaction into a relationship and a relationship into a community. Building condition maintained to the standard we inherited and improved upon.
Long-term tenancy · Stable income
Building Four · 6 Units
Smaller building on a quieter residential street, originally the tightest of the four acquisitions but consistently the most stable. All six units occupied. The seller — a Polish woman in her late sixties who had managed the property herself for decades — chose us specifically because she knew our families and trusted that we would treat her tenants with the same respect she had. That trust has been repaid. She now lives in Kraków.
6 units · Full occupancy · Community legacy
II. The Neighbourhood

Greenpoint by the Numbers: A Safe, High-Income Polish Community in Prime New York

Greenpoint is not a neighbourhood most institutional real estate investors know well. It does not have the marketing cachet of the West Village or the recent press of Bushwick. What it has instead is something more durable: a genuinely stable, high-income, low-crime residential community with deep roots, strong tenant demand, and a location — at the northernmost point of Brooklyn, directly across the East River from Long Island City and a short commute from Midtown Manhattan — that is simply irreplaceable. The data confirms what decades of walking these streets already showed us.

Neighbourhood MetricGreenpoint / WilliamsburgContext
Median Household Income$115,720 (2023)46% above NYC citywide median of $79,480
Household Income Bracket (Largest)$100,001–$250,00034% of households — an affluent, professional population
Average Monthly Rent~$4,48910th most expensive rental market of NYC's 59 neighbourhoods
Rental Vacancy Rate2.0% (2023)One of the tightest rental markets in New York City
Rent Growth (2006–2023)+107.3%Real median gross rent doubled over seventeen years
Serious Crime Rate (2024)13.0 per 1,000 residentsBelow NYC citywide rate of 13.6 · Crime score rated A−
Population~41,400 (Greenpoint alone)Dense, stable urban neighbourhood with multi-generational roots
Renter-Occupied Households82%A neighbourhood built on renting — landlord demand is structural
Median Age34Young professional demographic with stable income and low mobility
Home Value Growth (NW Brooklyn)+25.8%Median townhouse values reached ~$1.55M in 2025
Median Home Sale Price (Greenpoint)~$1.8M (2025)+33.8% year-over-year · One of Brooklyn's highest appreciation markets
The Investment Coming Our Way: Greenpoint and Williamsburg together represent one of the most actively developing waterfront corridors in New York City. The Greenpoint waterfront alone has seen hundreds of millions of dollars of investment in new residential towers, waterfront parks, and commercial infrastructure over the past decade. The 40-storey Greenpoint Tower on the East River brought hundreds of new market-rate rental and condo units to the neighbourhood. Williamsburg, directly to the south, consistently commands some of the highest rents in Brooklyn — average monthly rents exceeding $5,500. This investment does not threaten the value of our holdings. It compounds it: the desirability of the surrounding neighbourhood drives up rents and property values in the quieter residential blocks where our buildings sit, while our pre-war brick stock — low-rise, characterful, and impossible to replicate — attracts exactly the tenants who come to Greenpoint specifically to escape the glass-and-steel developments on the waterfront.
III. The Polish Community

Little Poland: The Community Foundation That No Institutional Investor Can Buy

What separates Fides Polonia's position in Greenpoint from any institutional real estate fund that might acquire buildings in this neighbourhood is something that cannot be purchased at closing: relationships. We have friends and family members who have owned investment properties in Greenpoint for years. We still receive informal phone calls from neighbourhood friends who keep watch on our buildings — the retired Polish landlord two streets over who notices a maintenance issue before it becomes a problem, the church acquaintance who mentions that a ground-floor tenant has been ill and needs a quiet word of support. These are not management relationships. They are community relationships, sustained by trust and the shared bonds of a diaspora that takes care of its own.

Faith Anchors
Saint Stanislaus Kostka Roman Catholic Church (1896) on Humboldt Street — a Polish Catholic shrine that has served the community for over 130 years and remains the spiritual centre of Greenpoint's Polish-American population. Saint Anthony of Padua on Manhattan Avenue. Saint Cecilia's on Monitor Street. The Russian Orthodox Cathedral on North 12th Street. Churches that have outlasted every political and economic upheaval the neighbourhood has seen.
Polish Businesses
Karczma, Lomzynianka, and Krolewskie — authentic Polish restaurants with devoted local followings. Polish delis, bakeries, and butcher shops lining Manhattan Avenue. Polish-language newspapers and community notice boards. A dozen establishments where the menu, the staff, and the conversation are in Polish as naturally as anywhere in Kraków or Poznań. The commercial presence of the community on Manhattan Avenue is not a nostalgia exhibit — it is a living, functioning Polish neighbourhood economy.
Community Networks
Greenpoint is described by Wikipedia as home to the second-largest concentration of Polish Americans in the United States. It is common to find three generations of the same family living within the neighbourhood. We have placed relatives from Poland working in America in our buildings — people who needed a trusted address in New York and found it through the same network that sold us the properties in the first place. The community looks after itself, and it looks after us.

The tenure and loyalty of our tenant base reflects this community embeddedness directly. Several of our units have been occupied by the same tenants for more than a decade. We have helped friends' children — young Poles moving to New York for university or their first professional jobs — find apartments close to the city in buildings where the landlord knows their parents and the neighbourhood feels, if not like home, then at least like an honest extension of it. These are not marketing narratives. They are the actual relationships that make a multifamily portfolio in an immigrant community qualitatively different from an equivalent portfolio of anonymous units in a building managed by software.

IV. The Rehabilitation Strategy

From Tired to Transformed: Gut Renovation and the Path to Free Market

The buildings Fides Polonia acquires in Greenpoint are not pristine assets. They are pre-war walkups that have been held by the same families for decades — sometimes lovingly maintained, sometimes deferred, often carrying decades of accumulated wear in their boilers, rooflines, hallways, and apartment interiors. The retiring Polish owners who sell to us are not selling a finished product. They are selling the foundation: the location, the permits, the legal standing, the community trust. It is our job — and our investment — to do what the previous owners could no longer justify or afford: a comprehensive, structural gut renovation that restores each building to a condition that the original architects, had they seen the technology and materials available today, would be proud of.

The scope of each renovation is total. We replace roofs, boilers, and all mechanical systems. We gut each apartment: new kitchens, new bathrooms, new flooring, new windows, new electrical, new plumbing. We renovate all common areas, hallways, staircases, and façades. We do not patch and paint. We do not perform the minimum necessary to pass inspection. We start from a blank canvas — the same philosophy we apply to our auto collision centre acquisitions — and we rebuild each building to a standard that justifies the rent the Greenpoint market now commands.

Understanding NYC Rent Stabilisation After 2019: The majority of pre-war multifamily buildings in Greenpoint are subject to New York City's rent stabilisation system, which regulates the rents that can be charged and the allowable annual increases. Before June 14, 2019, landlords had several paths to deregulate units: a 20% vacancy bonus when a tenant moved out, and automatic decontrol when rents exceeded a threshold of $2,774. The Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019 (HSTPA), signed into law by Governor Cuomo, eliminated both of these pathways. Under current law, no rent-stabilised apartment can leave stabilisation simply because it becomes vacant or its rent increases above any threshold. Stabilised units remain stabilised indefinitely unless an owner qualifies for one of the remaining legal exemptions. Annual rent increases are set by the New York City Rent Guidelines Board — 3% for one-year leases and 4.5% for two-year leases for 2025–26 — and individual apartment improvement cost recovery is capped at $15,000 per unit per 15-year period, adding a maximum of $89 per month in permitted rent increase per renovation. The economics of investing in a stabilised building under these constraints are materially different from what they were before 2019.

The one remaining legal pathway to full deregulation under New York State law is Substantial Rehabilitation — and it is the pathway that the Fides Polonia acquisition strategy is structured around. Under the Rent Stabilisation Code, a building may be permanently exempted from rent regulation if at least 75% of its major building-wide systems are completely replaced, and the building is at least 80% vacant at the time construction begins. A building meeting this standard is, in legal terms, a substantially rehabilitated building — and its units, once vacant and renovated, may be rented at free-market rates to new tenants without any stabilisation restriction. The qualifying building-wide systems include structural elements, roofing, plumbing, heating, electrical, fire escapes, windows, kitchens, bathrooms, pointing and exterior surfaces, and common area finishes.

The Substantial Rehabilitation Framework — What It Requires: The legal standard, established under Rent Stabilisation Code §2520.11(e) and a 1995 DHCR operational bulletin, requires that at least 75% of the recognised building-wide systems are completely replaced, and that all ceilings, flooring, and wall surfaces in common areas are replaced and apartment surfaces are made as-new. Critically, the building must be at least 80% vacant when work commences — this vacancy threshold creates the legal presumption that the building was substandard or deteriorated. Units that were occupied during the renovation retain their stabilised status; only units that were vacant before and throughout the rehabilitation qualify for the free-market exemption. Before committing capital on any qualifying acquisition, Fides Polonia applies to DHCR for an advisory prior opinion confirming the rehabilitation plan will meet the standard. It is also important to note that DHCR's enforcement of Substantial Rehabilitation has become more rigorous since 2023, and the legal landscape continues to develop. Every acquisition where this pathway applies is reviewed with qualified New York real estate counsel before proceeding.

In practice, this means that the Fides Polonia acquisition model in Greenpoint targets buildings where the retiring owner has already seen significant tenant turnover — where a high proportion of units are naturally vacant — and where the building's condition makes a comprehensive rehabilitation not just justified but necessary. We acquire these buildings, carry out the full gut renovation the Substantial Rehabilitation standard demands, and bring renovated free-market units to a neighbourhood where the average rent is $4,489 per month and rising — rents that stabilisation would never have allowed.

The rehabilitation programme is also, separately from the deregulation question, simply the right thing to do. Many of the buildings being sold by retiring Polish owners have suffered years of deferred maintenance — not from neglect or indifference, but because the economics of rent stabilisation under the post-2019 law make investment in building quality extremely difficult to recoup. A 2025 report by the NYC Rent Guidelines Board found over 50,000 empty but unavailable stabilised units across New York City whose operating or renovation costs could not be recouped through legally allowable rents. These are not slum buildings owned by callous landlords. They are buildings owned by ordinary people whose hands were tied by a law that made investment economically irrational. Fides Polonia buys these buildings, invests the capital that the previous ownership structure prevented, and returns them to the standard that the community deserves.

V. The Investment Thesis

Why We Bought Through the Community — and Why We Are Holding Forever

Fides Polonia acquired all four Greenpoint buildings through the Polish community, not through the market. This distinction is not incidental — it is the source of the investment thesis itself. Retiring Polish owners selling directly to trusted buyers from within the community transact at prices that reflect the seller's desire for a quiet, certain, relationship-based transaction rather than the maximum competitive market clearing price. The sellers got certainty, fairness, and the knowledge that their buildings would be cared for by people who shared their values. We got buildings in one of New York City's most desirable residential neighbourhoods at prices that incorporated a meaningful discount to what a marketed process would have produced.

The Succession Plan Opportunity: The Polish founding generation that built Greenpoint's residential stock in the post-war decades is now in its sixties, seventies, and eighties. Many own buildings that their children — who grew up in the comfort of American prosperity, often in professional careers far from property management — have no interest in taking on. These owners face a choice: go through the market, pay capital gains, deal with brokers and bidding processes, and sell to whoever offers the most; or sell quietly, directly, and at a fair price to someone from the community who will treat the building and its tenants the right way. For Fides Polonia, this demographic reality — the retiring of the Polish-American boomer landlord cohort — is not a one-time opportunity. It is a recurring pipeline that will produce acquisition opportunities in Greenpoint for at least another decade, as more members of this generation reach their seventies and begin the conversation about what comes next.

The hold thesis is equally straightforward. Greenpoint is not a neighbourhood we will exit when a price target is reached. It is a community we intend to remain part of indefinitely. The rental vacancy rate of 2% means that finding a tenant for a vacated unit is a matter of days, not months. The median household income of $115,720 — 46% above the New York City average — means our tenants are creditworthy and financially resilient. The neighbourhood's crime score of A− means that the quality of life we are providing is genuinely high. And the 25.8% growth in northwest Brooklyn home values recorded in recent years means that the underlying asset appreciates meaningfully whether or not we sell a single unit. We do not need to sell. We collect the income, we maintain the buildings, we care for the community, and we hold.

30 Units
Total Residential Units Across 4 Buildings
2.0%
Rental Vacancy Rate — One of NYC's Tightest Markets
$1.8M
Median Greenpoint Property Sale Price (2025)
Forever
Our Intended Hold Period — No Exit Required
VI. Investment Summary

The Fides Polonia Position

Fides Polonia Capital Management · Written by Daniel Chojnowski
Long-Term Hold — Roots Run Deeper Than Any Yield Calculation

Real estate is often described in the language of returns — yields, cap rates, appreciation multiples. Those numbers matter, and in Greenpoint they are compelling: 11th highest median income of New York City's 59 neighbourhoods, 10th most expensive rents, a vacancy rate of 2%, home value growth of 25.8% in northwest Brooklyn, and a crime rate below the city average. But they are not the reason we hold these buildings, and they were not the primary reason we bought them.

We hold these buildings because we know this community. We know which block gets the morning sun. We know which building the Polish church ladies walk past on their way to Saturday mass at Saint Stanislaus Kostka. We know the names of the families in our units, where they work, where their children go to school, and where their parents came from in Poland. We get phone calls from friends in the neighbourhood who notice something on the building before it becomes a problem. We placed a friend's son in a one-bedroom on the second floor when he moved to New York to start his first job — and his mother, who lives in Kraków, thanked us at Christmas. That is not a yield calculation. That is a community relationship, and it is the most durable foundation any real estate investment can have.

Here is what Fides Polonia's Greenpoint portfolio offers:

  • Thirty residential units across four multifamily buildings in Greenpoint, Brooklyn — acquired directly from retiring Polish owners with no succession plans, through community relationships rather than brokered market processes
  • A neighbourhood with median household income of $115,720 — 46% above the NYC average — low 2% vacancy, A− crime rating, and rents averaging $4,489 per month across a market that has seen 107% real rent growth since 2006
  • Pre-war brick residential stock that is architecturally irreplaceable — buildings constructed in the 1920s and 1930s whose character, scale, and neighbourhood integration no new construction can replicate, in a market receiving massive waterfront investment that raises surrounding values
  • Little Poland — the second-largest concentration of Polish Americans in the United States, anchored by Saint Stanislaus Kostka Catholic Church (1896), a dozen Polish restaurants and businesses on Manhattan Avenue, and a multi-generational community fabric that provides both tenant stability and acquisition pipeline for decades to come
  • An active community network — neighbourhood friends who watch over our buildings, Polish relatives we have placed in units as trusted tenants, and the ongoing quiet flow of succession-driven acquisition opportunities from retiring Polish owners who want to sell to people they know
  • A location that compounds: Greenpoint sits between Williamsburg — one of Brooklyn's most expensive rental markets at $5,500 average monthly rent — and Long Island City across the East River, with the G train, waterfront ferries, and a short commute to Midtown Manhattan, in a neighbourhood where home values grew 25.8% in a single year
  • A full gut rehabilitation on every acquired building — new roof, new boiler and mechanicals, each apartment stripped to bare walls and rebuilt with new kitchens, bathrooms, flooring, windows, and electrical — restoring pre-war stock to a standard that stabilisation economics made impossible for the previous owners, and positioning every renovated unit for free-market rental in a neighbourhood where the going rate is $4,489 per month
  • The Substantial Rehabilitation exemption — the one remaining legal pathway under New York State law to bring rent-stabilised units to free market, requiring at least 80% vacancy at the start of works and replacement of 75% of major building systems; applied with DHCR advisory opinions and qualified New York counsel on every qualifying acquisition

The Polish-American boomer generation that built these buildings is retiring. Their children are professionals who did not grow up managing properties and do not intend to start. The buildings will change hands — quietly, privately, through community connections — over the next decade. Fides Polonia is already part of that community. We already know which conversations are coming, and we are already trusted to be the right answer when they arrive. That is not an investment thesis. It is a neighbourhood. And we intend to be part of it for as long as the buildings stand.

Real Estate · Greenpoint, Brooklyn, NY 11222 · 30 Units · 4 Buildings · Full Gut Rehabilitation · Substantial Rehab Exemption · Long-Term Hold · Written by Daniel Chojnowski · Fides Polonia Capital Management · Kraków, Poland
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Important Disclosure

This document is produced by Fides Polonia Capital Management for informational and educational purposes only. It describes existing real estate holdings and does not constitute financial advice, a solicitation to invest, or an offer of investment services regulated under any jurisdiction. Real estate investment involves risk including illiquidity, market value fluctuations, regulatory changes, and the possible loss of capital. All statistical data is sourced from the NYU Furman Center, RentCafe/Yardi Matrix, Point2Homes, DoorProfit, PropertyShark, and publicly available New York City government data as of 2024–2026. Tenant details described herein are illustrative of the character of the portfolio's community relationships and do not identify any individual. Fides Polonia Capital Management and its principals hold direct ownership interests in the properties described in this document.

Powrót do Portfela Wstęp

Mała Polska, Nowy Jork: Dzielnica, Którą Znamy od Dziesięcioleci

Nie odkryliśmy Greenpointu. Dorastaliśmy wiedząc o nim — i kiedy właściciele kamienic na emeryturze bez planów sukcesyjnych zaczęli po cichu sprzedawać budynki, w których polskie rodziny mieszkają od pokoleń, byliśmy tam. To nie jest przypadkowa inwestycja w nieruchomości. To zakup w społeczności, którą rozumiemy od środka.

I. Lokalizacja

Cztery Budynki, Trzydzieści Jednostek, Jedna Wspólnota

Nasze aktywa w Greenpoincie obejmują cztery budynki wielorodzinne w obszarze North Brooklyn, obejmujące łącznie trzydzieści jednostek mieszkalnych. Każdy budynek jest zakorzeniony w tkance sąsiedztwa — naprzeciwko polskich delikatesów, w odległości kilku przecznic od polskich kościołów, w pobliżu polskich restauracji i usług, które definiują Green Pointu jako jedną z ostatnich autentycznych polskich enklawa miejskich w Ameryce Północnej.

II. Analiza Rynku

Greenpoint w Liczbach: Bezpieczna, Wysokodochodowa Polska Społeczność w Najlepszej Lokalizacji Nowego Jorku

Greenpoint graniczy z Williamsburgiem i Długą Wyspą od zachodu, z rzeką East River od południowego zachodu i ma bezpośredni dostęp metrem do Midtown Manhattan. Jest to jeden z nielicznych sąsiedztw Brooklyn, gdzie napływ wyższej klasy średniej jeszcze nie zniwelował całkowicie wcześniejszej zabudowy mieszkaniowej. Oznacza to, że czynsze nadal mają przestrzeń do wzrostu — podczas gdy pobliskie jednostki już handlują znacznie powyżej naszego kosztu nabycia.

III. Strategia Renovacji

Od Zmęczonego do Przekształconego: Pełna Renowacja i Droga do Wolnego Rynku

Większość jednostek przy nabyciu była zajęta przez długoletnich lokatorów korzystających ze stabilizacji czynszów nowojorskich. Nasza strategia: szanować istniejących lokatorów w pełni zgodnie z prawem, przeprowadzić kompleksową renowację pustych jednostek na poziomie, który odzwierciedla wymagania nowoczesnych najemców w tym sąsiedztwie, i stopniowo przenosić budynki w kierunku stawek rynkowych w miarę naturalnej rotacji lokatorów.

IV. Teza Wspólnotowa

Dlaczego Kupiliśmy poprzez Społeczność — i Dlaczego Trzymamy na Zawsze

Greenpoint jest rzadką polską instytucją za granicą — społecznością zachowaną przez stulecie imigracji, twardą pracą i solidarnością sąsiedzką. Kupiliśmy te budynki, ponieważ emerytujący polscy właściciele woleli sprzedać komuś, komu zależy na społeczności, zamiast deweloperowi, który zamieniłby je w luksusowe kondominima. To zaufanie jest aktywem niematerialnym, który ma wartość finansową — poprzez relacje, przepływ transakcji i reputację, które przynosi.

V. Werdykt

Werdykt Fides Polonia

Długoterminowe Utrzymanie — Polska Społeczność, Którą Znamy z Nazwiska. Greenpoint nie jest handlem spekulacyjnym ani projektem przebudowy. Jest długoterminową inwestycją w nieruchomości zakorzenioną w autentycznej relacji ze społecznością, która z powodów historycznych, demograficznych i geograficznych jest jedną z najbardziej atrakcyjnych lokalizacji mieszkaniowych w Nowym Jorku. Trzymamy. Utrzymujemy. Szanujemy.

Niniejszy raport sporządzony jest przez Fides Polonia Capital Management wyłącznie w celach informacyjnych i nie stanowi porady finansowej.

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