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Fides Polonia Capital Management · Equity Research · April 2026

InPost S.A.

Paczkomat® — The Network That Rewired European Delivery

INPST · Euronext Amsterdam · AEX Index · Founded Kraków, Poland · 1999

Buy — Poland's Greatest Technology Export
PLN 14.7B
Revenue
(2025)
PLN 4.1B
Adj. EBITDA
(2025)
1.4 Billion
Parcels
Delivered 2025
61,000+
APM Locker
Locations
9 Countries
European
Markets
Return to Portfolio Prologue

From Leaflets to Lockers: Poland's Most Important Invention Since the Solidarity Poster

In the early hours of a Warsaw morning, before the cafés open and before the trams begin to fill, a fleet of InPost vans completes a circuit of the city's orange-and-grey locker machines. By seven o'clock, parcels from hundreds of thousands of online orders are waiting inside 25,000 locker locations across Poland — positioned within a seven-minute walk of nearly 90% of residents in every major Polish city. No missed deliveries. No time windows. No standing at the door hoping the courier arrives before you leave for work.

This is the Paczkomat® — the automated parcel machine that Rafał Brzoska first planted on a Warsaw pavement in 2009, when e-commerce in Poland was still a novelty and the idea of a self-service locker felt, to many investors, like a solution to a problem that did not yet exist. Today, 93% of Polish consumers name InPost's APM network as their preferred delivery method. The company has built the largest locker network in Europe, expanded into nine countries, delivered 1.4 billion parcels in 2025, and in February 2026 became the subject of a €7.8 billion takeover offer from a consortium led by FedEx — the global logistics giant that spent decades building its own last-mile infrastructure and concluded it was cheaper and smarter to buy InPost's instead.

At Fides Polonia, we invest in businesses that have built something genuinely difficult to replicate — where the moat is not a patent or a brand alone, but a physical network that compounds in value with every additional node, every additional merchant, and every additional parcel. InPost is, in our judgement, one of the most structurally compelling logistics businesses in Europe: a platform that becomes more valuable the more it is used, operating in markets where e-commerce penetration is still growing, and being pursued by the world's most experienced logistics operator at a price we consider a meaningful discount to the company's long-term intrinsic value.

Rafał Brzoska did not build InPost with foreign capital, foreign expertise, or foreign vision. He built it from Kraków, with Polish engineering, Polish persistence, and the distinctly Polish conviction that the country's best entrepreneurs were capable of building something world-class and exporting it. The Church has always recognised the dignity of enterprise that serves the genuine needs of real people — and few businesses illustrate that principle more clearly than a parcel locker that gives a working mother in Warsaw the freedom to collect her online order at ten o'clock at night, on her own schedule, at her own convenience. Cf. Centesimus Annus §32 · Pope John Paul II · "The free economy is not an end in itself; it is a means in service of the human person."
I. The Founder's Story

Rafał Brzoska: From Leaflets to a €7.8 Billion European Champion

Rafał Brzoska founded Integer.pl in Kraków in 1999 as a leaflet distribution business — a modest starting point that gave no hint of what was to follow. By 2006, he had established InPost S.A. as a subsidiary, targeting the incumbent state-owned Polish postal monopoly with a faster, cheaper, private alternative. In 2007, he listed the parent company on the Warsaw Stock Exchange to fund his ambitions. By 2009, he had deployed the first Paczkomat® locker — a machine that, in those early years, generated just €500 a month while consuming €25 million in installation costs. Every investor on his board urged him to close it down.

Brzoska refused. He had identified something that the numbers did not yet show: that the e-commerce industry was growing faster than any incumbent logistics network could track, and that the consumer's fundamental complaint — the missed delivery, the inconvenient time window, the van that came while you were at work — was structural, not accidental. The parcel locker was not an answer to today's problem. It was the correct infrastructure for the decade that was coming. He was simply too early.

The Proof Came Fast: When COVID-19 lockdowns struck in 2020, contact-free, self-service delivery became not merely convenient but essential. InPost's volumes surged. Competitors scrambled to build locker networks that Brzoska had already spent a decade perfecting. By 2021, the company's IPO on Euronext Amsterdam raised €2.8 billion — the largest European technology IPO of the year — and valued a business that had started as a leaflet distribution firm at over €8 billion. From a Kraków leaflet round to the largest tech float in Europe: a journey of twenty-two years and one stubborn founder.
1999
Integer.pl
Founded in Kraków as leaflet distribution
2009
First Paczkomat®
€500/month. Board wanted to close it.
2021
Euronext IPO
€2.8B raised · Largest European tech float
2026
€7.8B Bid
FedEx-led consortium · Feb 2026
II. The Business

The Network Effect: Why Every New Locker Makes Every Existing Locker More Valuable

InPost is not, at its core, a delivery company. It is a network. The distinction matters enormously for the investment case. A delivery company competes on price, speed, and service quality — attributes that any well-capitalised competitor can eventually match. A network, by contrast, grows more valuable with scale: each new locker machine added to the network attracts new merchants who want to reach more consumers; each new merchant adds parcel volume that justifies further locker deployment; each new locker extends consumer coverage that attracts yet more merchants. The network feeds itself.

In Poland, this flywheel has been running for fifteen years and is now at the point of genuine dominance. InPost operates 27,600 locker machines in Poland alone, covering 64% of the population within a seven-minute walk and approaching 90% in cities. Its market share in the Polish out-of-home delivery segment is approximately 70%. The cost advantage that comes from this density — fewer miles per parcel, higher utilisation per machine, lower cost of sorting — produces EBITDA margins in Poland of 49.5%, a figure that would be the envy of almost any logistics business in the world.

61,196
APM Locker
Locations Globally
~33,000
PUDO Points
(Pick-Up Drop-Off)
~95,000
Total Out-of-Home
Delivery Points

The Poland Machine: A 49.5% EBITDA Margin Business

KGHM has its copper deposit. Orlen has its helium field. InPost has its locker density in Poland — an asset that took fifteen years and hundreds of millions of złoty to build, and that no competitor can replicate on any financially rational timeline. The unit economics of a mature InPost locker are extraordinary: once a machine is installed, deployed, and integrated into the routing network, every additional parcel it handles is nearly pure margin. Management have reported a more-than-40% reduction in cost per parcel over the past decade in Poland — a figure that reflects the compounding operational leverage of a dense, optimised, fully utilised network. In Q4 2025, the Polish EBITDA margin reached 49.5%. That is not a delivery company. That is a toll road.

III. International Expansion

Replicating Poland Across Europe: The Continent's Most Important Logistics Build-Out

The core investment thesis beyond Poland is straightforward: the same network effect that produced 49.5% EBITDA margins in Warsaw is now being deployed in Paris, London, Madrid, Rome, and Amsterdam. European e-commerce is growing structurally, consumer preference for out-of-home delivery is rising consistently, and no existing logistics operator has built a locker network of comparable scale or density. InPost is not entering these markets as a challenger — it is entering them as the only operator with a proven template for doing exactly this at European scale.

Poland
Dominant home market. 27,600 APMs. 70% out-of-home market share. 93% consumer preference rating. EBITDA margin of 49.5% — the mature template every international market is being built to replicate.
49.5% EBITDA margin
France · Mondial Relay
Acquired July 2021 for €513 million — the largest Polish private investment abroad. Operates across France, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg. 266.7M parcels in 2024. B2C share growing rapidly.
15.5% EBITDA margin (2025)
United Kingdom
262 million parcels in 2025, up 181% year-on-year. Yodel acquisition (95.5% stake, April 2025) added last-mile scale. Now the largest locker network in the UK. ~8% market share. Margins on a steep improvement trajectory.
+181% volume growth 2025
Italy
22.6 million parcels in 2024 (+41% YoY). Revenue up 45% YoY. 3,200 APMs by end-2024 — network doubled in the year. Strong B2C and C2C growth across both segments.
45% revenue growth (2024)
Spain & Portugal
Operated under Mondial Relay brand. Rapid APM deployment — more than double the machines versus a year prior. eBay partnership expanded in January 2025. Early-stage build with established brand.
APM network doubled YoY
Belgium, Netherlands,
Luxembourg
Operated through Mondial Relay infrastructure. Combined Benelux and Iberian PUDO network exceeds 31,000 locations. Growing B2C segment. Compact geographies suited to high locker density.
31,000+ OOH points

By 2025, more than half of InPost's revenue came from outside Poland for the first time — a milestone that confirmed the international expansion is not merely aspirational but commercially real. The Eurozone EBITDA margin reached 15.5% in 2025, up from 10% the previous year and still rising as locker utilisation in France and southern Europe approaches the inflection point that Poland passed a decade ago. The United Kingdom, while currently absorbing the integration costs of both Menzies Distribution and Yodel, grew volumes by 181% and is approaching the density levels at which margins begin to compound sharply.

IV. Financial Analysis

The Numbers: A Platform Growing at 34%, With a 49% Margin Core

Metric2025 ResultYear-on-Year
Group RevenuePLN 14.7 billion+34% year-on-year
Adjusted EBITDAPLN 4.1 billion+12% year-on-year
Poland EBITDA Margin49.5%+170 basis points YoY · Expanding
Eurozone EBITDA Margin15.5%+60 bps YoY · Rising toward Poland template
Revenue from Outside Poland54%+First time majority of revenue is international
Total Parcels Delivered1.4 billion+25% year-on-year
UK Volume262 million parcels+181% YoY · Yodel consolidation
Out-of-Home Points~95,000+14,000 APMs added in 2025
APM Locations61,196Largest locker network in Europe
DividendNoneAll profits reinvested in network growth

Why No Dividend Is the Right Policy

InPost pays no dividend, and we regard this as the correct capital allocation decision for a company at this stage of its development. The return on capital from deploying a new locker machine in France or the United Kingdom — at a point where the network is still below critical density and utilisation is still climbing toward the inflection point — far exceeds any return available from distributing cash to shareholders. Brzoska is compounding the business, not extracting from it. Every złoty retained and reinvested into the network today is purchasing the operational leverage that will produce the margin expansion visible in Poland tomorrow. Patient investors understand this. Impatient ones see a missing dividend line and miss the point entirely.

"Already 54% of group revenue came from outside Poland — international diversification has become a core top-line growth engine for InPost." — Rafał Brzoska, Q3 2025 Earnings Call
V. The Takeover Situation

FedEx at the Door: What the €7.8 Billion Bid Tells Us About InPost's True Value

On 9 February 2026, InPost's Board announced it had agreed to a recommended all-cash takeover offer from a consortium comprising FedEx, existing shareholder Advent International, Rafał Brzoska's own investment vehicle A&R, and PPF — the Czech investment company of the Kellner family. The offer price of €15.60 per share represents a 17.3% premium to the closing price on the day before the announcement. Total deal value: approximately €7.8 billion, or roughly £6.8 billion.

Aberdeen Asset Management Voted Against: Aberdeen, one of InPost's institutional shareholders, publicly stated it would vote against the transaction, arguing that the offer price materially undervalues the company. Aberdeen's objection is, in our view, well-founded. At €15.60 per share, the deal implies an EBITDA multiple that does not fully credit the margin expansion trajectory of the international business, the operational leverage embedded in the UK network following Yodel, or the long-run earnings power of a platform that delivered 1.4 billion parcels in 2025 and is growing at 34%. FedEx and Advent know exactly what they are acquiring. Whether current shareholders are receiving full value is a separate question.
Consortium MemberRolePost-Deal Stake
FedExStrategic acquirer · Global logistics network37%
Advent InternationalExisting investor · PE firm · InPost since 201737%
A&R (Rafał Brzoska)Founder's investment vehicle · Brzoska stays as CEO16%
PPF (Kellner family)Czech investment group · Existing shareholder10%
Offer Price€15.60 per share · All-cash · Recommended17.3% premium
Expected CompletionSecond half of 2026 · Subject to regulatory approval
Post-Deal StructureInPost retains its brand, headquarters in Poland, and Brzoska as CEO. Delisted from Euronext Amsterdam on completion.

The strategic logic from FedEx's perspective is transparent. InPost operates the densest out-of-home delivery network in Europe's three largest e-commerce markets — the UK, France, and Poland — and is growing volumes in each faster than the underlying e-commerce market. Building an equivalent network from scratch would cost multiples of the acquisition price and take ten or more years to reach comparable density. The takeover bid is, in a meaningful sense, a validation of everything the Fides Polonia investment thesis has argued: that InPost's network is worth far more than the market, on average, has been willing to pay for it.

There is something worth noting in the structure of this transaction. Rafał Brzoska, the founder, is not selling and leaving. He is increasing his stake — from 12.5% to 16% — and remaining as CEO. He has committed that the headquarters, the management team, and the key innovation capabilities will remain in Poland. A founder who uses a takeover as a liquidity event is a different animal from one who uses it as a platform for the next phase of growth. Brzoska belongs in the second category. This speaks well of him, and it speaks well of InPost. Cf. Centesimus Annus §35 · "The decision to invest in one place rather than another… is always a moral and cultural choice."
VI. A Polish Business Paying Polish Taxes

The Number That DHL Does Not Want You to See

There is a question that rarely appears in equity research reports but that Fides Polonia considers essential to the investment case for any company operating in Poland: how much corporate income tax does this business actually pay to the Polish state? The answer, in InPost's case, is one of the most striking endorsements of this company that we can offer — not as sentiment, but as a factual measure of what it means to back a genuinely Polish enterprise over a foreign competitor that extracts value from Polish consumers while contributing almost nothing to the society that makes that extraction possible.

InPost's Corporate Income Tax Paid to Poland:

2023 — PLN 250 million in CIT paid to the Polish state
2024 — PLN 375 million in CIT paid to the Polish state (+50% year-on-year)
2025 — PLN 498 million in CIT paid to the Polish state (+33% year-on-year)

In three years, InPost has contributed over PLN 1.1 billion in corporate income tax to the Polish treasury. Every złoty of that goes toward Polish roads, Polish schools, Polish hospitals, and Polish national defence. InPost broke its own CIT record in 2024 and broke it again in 2025. It is growing its tax contribution at roughly the same rate as its EBITDA — because it is not structured to avoid it.

Now consider the comparison. DHL eCommerce — the German logistics operation that directly competes with InPost in the Polish parcel market, generating PLN 2.8 billion in Polish revenues — contributed zero in corporate income tax to Poland in 2024. Not a reduced amount. Not a small amount. Zero. All Polish DHL entities combined paid just PLN 20.2 million on revenues of PLN 5.5 billion — a rate of 0.4%. The profits are routed through Luxembourg, Frankfurt, and the Netherlands, and the Polish state sees almost none of them. The Polish roads DHL vans drive on are maintained by Polish taxpayers. The Polish hospitals treating the Polish couriers who work those routes are funded by Polish taxpayers. The Polish schools educating their children are paid for by Polish taxpayers. The entire foreign courier industry operating in Poland — DHL, DPD, FedEx, and others combined — paid just PLN 89.8 million in CIT for 2024. InPost alone paid PLN 375 million. Four times more. From one Polish company.

Catholic Social Teaching has always been clear on this point. The Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church states explicitly that taxation is not merely a legal obligation but a moral one — that those who profit from a society bear a genuine responsibility to contribute to it. A multinational that engineers its way to a zero tax contribution in the countries where it operates is not acting in accordance with justice, regardless of whether its lawyers have found a lawful route to that outcome. InPost's tax record is, in this sense, more than an accounting footnote. It is a statement of values. Cf. Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church §355 · "Tax evasion and tax avoidance are morally unacceptable forms of behaviour."

Over 10,000 Employees — and Growing After Yodel

InPost employs over 10,000 people directly across its group operations, as stated in its 2024 Annual Report — a figure that excludes the several thousand additional workers absorbed through the Yodel acquisition completed in April 2025. The large majority of these employees are based in Poland: the logistics operatives, the software engineers, the route planners, the customer service teams, the machine maintenance crews, and the warehouse sorters who make 1.4 billion parcel deliveries happen each year. They pay Polish income tax. They spend their wages in Polish shops and Polish restaurants. They raise their families in Polish cities and towns and send their children to Polish schools.

When you invest in InPost, you are not investing in a holding company registered in Luxembourg that happens to operate orange locker machines in Warsaw. You are investing in a Polish business — founded in Kraków, headquartered in Poland, staffed by Polish workers, paying Polish taxes at a rate that has grown by 99% in two years — that has built the most important logistics infrastructure in Central Europe and is now being recognised as such by the world's largest parcel carrier. The PLN 498 million InPost paid in CIT in 2025 alone funded more Polish public services than most companies of comparable scale pay in a decade. That is not a secondary consideration. For Fides Polonia, it is part of the investment thesis.

VII. The Competitive Moat

Why No One Can Build What InPost Has Built

At Fides Polonia, the first question we ask of any business is whether a well-capitalised competitor could replicate it in five years. For InPost's Polish operation — and, increasingly, for its French and UK networks — the answer is no. Not because of intellectual property, and not solely because of brand. Because of physical density.

A parcel locker network has a non-linear relationship between density and value. A city with 100 machines is useful to some consumers. A city with 500 machines is convenient for most. A city with 2,500 machines — where 90% of residents live within a seven-minute walk of a locker — is simply the infrastructure of daily life. At that point, the locker network is not a delivery option; it is the default. InPost crossed that threshold in Poland a decade ago, and the 93% consumer preference rating it commands today is the result. No competitor entering the Polish market now can close that gap within any commercially rational time horizon, because the cost of installation is not the problem — the time required to build the consumer habit is.

The Operational Leverage Secret: Once locker density exceeds a critical threshold, each additional parcel costs almost nothing to deliver. The machine is already installed. The route is already optimised. The consumer already knows where to go. InPost's management have reported a more-than-40% reduction in cost-per-parcel in Poland over the past decade — not from efficiency projects, but from the simple arithmetic of spreading fixed infrastructure costs across a growing volume base. As international markets approach the same density threshold, the same dynamic will emerge. This is why the Poland margin of 49.5% is not an outlier. It is a preview.
VIII. Risk Factors

What Could Go Wrong

Fides Polonia requires intellectual honesty at every stage of the research process. The following material risks are acknowledged in full:

  • Deal completion risk. The FedEx-led takeover is expected to complete in H2 2026, subject to regulatory approval across multiple European jurisdictions. Competition authorities in the EU and UK will scrutinise the transaction. If the deal is blocked or significantly restructured, the share price would fall sharply as the take-private premium unwinds.
  • UK integration complexity. The consolidation of both Menzies Distribution and Yodel into the InPost UK network is an operationally complex exercise being undertaken at pace. Integration failures, cost overruns, or labour disputes could suppress UK margins and group EBITDA through 2026 and beyond.
  • International margin timeline. The investment thesis depends on Eurozone and UK margins following the Polish trajectory toward 40–50%. If European consumer adoption of out-of-home delivery is slower than expected, or if competitive dynamics force sustained price concessions, the timeline for margin expansion extends and the return profile weakens.
  • No dividend. InPost pays no dividend and has no near-term intention to do so. Income-oriented investors cannot participate in the compound return until the company transitions to a capital-return phase — which will not happen while the international build-out remains in progress.
  • Competition from Amazon Logistics. Amazon is systematically building its own last-mile delivery infrastructure across Europe and has the capital and volume to threaten InPost's merchant relationships in the UK and France. So far, the evidence suggests InPost is gaining rather than losing share, but Amazon's long-term strategic intent in European logistics is a legitimate watch item.
  • Delisting risk. If the FedEx consortium takeover completes as announced, InPost will be delisted from Euronext Amsterdam. Public equity investors will no longer be able to hold the stock. Participation in InPost's next growth phase — building toward FedEx's ambition of becoming the dominant European e-commerce enabler — will require private market access.
IX. Investment Conclusion

The Fides Polonia Verdict

Fides Polonia Capital Management · Written by Daniel Chojnowski · April 2026
Buy — Poland's Greatest Technology Export

In 1999, Rafał Brzoska started distributing leaflets in Kraków. In 2026, FedEx — the company that pioneered overnight express delivery and built one of the world's great logistics empires — agreed to pay €7.8 billion for the business he built. That arc is one of the most remarkable in the history of European entrepreneurship, and it happened entirely in Poland, financed by Polish ambition, and driven by an insight that took a decade of boardroom scepticism to vindicate: that consumers do not want to wait at home for deliveries. They want a box on the pavement, open at any hour, available when they are.

For the patient investor assessing InPost before the takeover completes, here is what the business offers:

  • PLN 498 million in CIT paid to the Polish state in 2025 alone — over PLN 1.1 billion across three years, funding Polish roads, hospitals, schools, and defence. DHL eCommerce, directly competing with InPost on PLN 2.8 billion in Polish revenue, paid zero. The entire foreign courier industry in Poland paid PLN 89.8 million combined in 2024. InPost alone paid PLN 375 million
  • Over 10,000 direct employees (2024 Annual Report figure, prior to Yodel) — the large majority Polish — paying Polish income tax, spending their wages in Polish communities, and raising their families in Poland
  • Poland's dominant e-commerce infrastructure platform — 27,600 APMs, 70% out-of-home market share, 93% consumer preference, and a 49.5% EBITDA margin that no logistics competitor in Europe has matched
  • A proven network template now being replicated across nine European countries — with France, the UK, Italy, Spain, and Benelux all growing volumes ahead of their underlying e-commerce markets
  • PLN 14.7 billion in revenue in 2025 (+34%), PLN 4.1 billion in adjusted EBITDA (+12%), and 1.4 billion parcels delivered — all records, and all reflecting a platform that is still in the expansion phase of its European build-out
  • A structural competitive moat based on physical density — the same economic logic that makes a motorway more valuable the more cars use it applies, with even greater force, to a parcel locker network
  • A recommended €7.8 billion all-cash takeover by FedEx — the most credible possible third-party validation of InPost's strategic value, and a consortium structure that keeps Brzoska at the helm and Poland as the headquarters
  • A founder who is increasing his stake in the takeover transaction rather than reducing it — the clearest possible signal that InPost's best years of growth lie ahead of this deal, not behind it
  • The largest European technology IPO of 2021, built entirely from Poland, with Polish capital, Polish engineering, and Polish operational excellence — the proof that this country's entrepreneurs can build world-class businesses and export them to every major European market

The active investor's question at this point is not whether InPost is a great business — the FedEx offer has answered that definitively. The question is whether the €15.60 offer price reflects full value. Aberdeen's public dissent, and our own analysis, suggests it does not. InPost at €7.8 billion is a business generating over PLN 4 billion in annual EBITDA with a Polish core that produces near-50% margins and an international expansion still approaching its inflection point. We consider the current offer a floor, not a ceiling. And we note that FedEx, with decades of logistics experience behind it, chose to buy rather than build — which is the ultimate expression of this network's irreplaceable value.

When you invest in InPost, you are not merely buying a stake in a high-growth logistics platform. You are supporting a Polish business that has contributed over PLN 1.1 billion in corporate income tax to the Polish state across three years — funding the roads its vans drive on, the hospitals its 10,000+ employees rely on, and the schools their children attend. You are standing behind a company that pays its taxes in Poland rather than routing its profits through Luxembourg or the Netherlands — while DHL eCommerce, generating PLN 2.8 billion in Polish revenues, paid zero. In a market where foreign competitors extract value from Polish consumers while contributing almost nothing to Polish public life, InPost is the alternative. Fides Polonia was built to find exactly this kind of business — and to stand behind it.

INPST · Euronext Amsterdam · AEX Index · Offer Price: €15.60 · FedEx Consortium · Expected Completion H2 2026 · Rating: Buy · Report Date: April 2026 · Written by Daniel Chojnowski · Fides Polonia Capital Management · Kraków, Poland
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Important Disclosure

This report is produced by Fides Polonia Capital Management for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, a solicitation to buy or sell securities, or an offer of investment services regulated under any jurisdiction. All investment involves risk, including the possible loss of capital. The recommended takeover offer of €15.60 per share may or may not complete; regulatory approval is not guaranteed. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Investors should conduct their own due diligence or consult a qualified, licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions. All statistics are sourced from InPost S.A. investor relations, InPost Annual Reports and quarterly filings 2024–2025, Euronext Amsterdam regulatory disclosures, FedEx/InPost consortium announcement (February 2026), and independent financial databases as of April 2026. Fides Polonia Capital Management may hold positions in securities discussed in this report.

Powrót do Portfela Wstęp

Od Ulotek do Paczkomatów: Najważniejszy Polski Wynalazek od Solidarności

Paczkomat® to pomarańczowa metalowa szafka, w której możesz odebrać paczkę o dowolnej porze dnia i nocy, bez konieczności czekania w domu, bez opłat za ponowne dostarczenie, bez interakcji z kierowcą. Brzmi prosto. W 2009 roku — kiedy Rafał Brzoska jako pierwszy zainstalował je w Polsce — było to rewolucyjne. Dziś jest czymś, czego Polacy po prostu oczekują. To jest istota fosy InPostu.

I. Przegląd Firmy

Rafał Brzoska: Od Ulotek do Europejskiego Championa wartego 7,8 mld EUR

InPost S.A. (IPO: AMS w 2021 roku) jest właścicielem i operatorem największej sieci paczkomatów w Polsce i jednej z największych w Europie. Firma założona przez Rafała Brzoskę w 1999 roku jako studentka biznes zaczęła od dystrybucji ulotek reklamowych. Brzoska, obserwując nieefektywność tradycyjnej dostawy do drzwi, wymyślił koncepcję samoobsługowego lockersa i poświęcił dekadę na jej doprowadzenie do skali. Dzisiaj InPost jest jedną z najbardziej wartościowych spółek technologiczno-logistycznych w Europie.

II. Przewaga Konkurencyjna

Efekt Sieci: Dlaczego Każdy Nowy Paczkomat Zwiększa Wartość Każdego Istniejącego

Sieć paczkomatów wykazuje klasyczny efekt sieciowy po stronie podaży: im więcej punktów odbioru, tym bliżej domu lub pracy jest każdy z nich dla każdego klienta; im wygodniejszy jest każdy punkt odbioru, tym więcej sprzedawców integruje InPost jako preferowaną opcję dostawy; im więcej sprzedawców integruje InPost, tym więcej konsumentów oczekuje go przy kasie; tym więcej konsumentów oczekuje tego, tym więcej sprzedawców musi to zaoferować. Koło się nakręca.

III. Ekspansja Europejska

Replikacja Polski w Europie: Najważniejsza Budowa Logistyczna Kontynentu

Po zdominowaniu polskiego rynku InPost zaczął replikować swój model w całej Europie — Wielka Brytania (Yodel), Francja (Mondial Relay), Włochy, Benelux. Każdy rynek jest trudniejszy niż Polska, ponieważ istniejący poczta i gracze kurierowi mają głębszą penetrację. Ale żaden z nich nie dysponuje technologią ani ekonomiką paczkomatów InPost. Wygrana w Europie Zachodniej potwierdziłaby tezę, że to globalnie skalowalny model — nie tylko polski fenomen.

IV. Wyniki Finansowe

Liczby: Platforma Rosnąca o 34%, z Rdzeniową Marżą 49%

InPost wykazał konsekwentnie imponujące wzrosty przychodów napędzane przez: wzrost wolumenu paczek, ekspansję do nowych krajów europejskich, wzrost poza sezonem — przesunięcie od czysto sezonowych do całorocznych wzorców wolumenu. Podstawowa marża EBITDA w segmencie polskim przekracza 49% — wskaźnik, który odzwierciedla ekonomikę platformy, a nie tradycyjnej logistyki.

V. Oferta Przejęcia FedEx

FedEx przy Drzwiach: Co Oferta za 7,8 mld EUR Mówi nam o Prawdziwej Wartości InPostu

W 2024 roku FedEx — jeden z największych operatorów logistycznych na świecie — złożył niezamówioną wstępną ofertę dotyczącą InPostu wyceniającą spółkę na 7,8 mld EUR. Oferta została odrzucona. Ale sam fakt jej złożenia mówi coś istotnego: największy gracz w logistyce globalnej ocenił sieć paczkomatów InPost jako wyjątkowo cenną — a wycena, którą zaproponował, znacznie przewyższa miejsce, w którym handlowały akcje.

VI. Czynniki Ryzyka

Co Może Pójść Nie Tak

Ekspansja europejska może być trudniejsza niż się wydaje; marże europejskie są znacznie niższe niż polskie, ponieważ sieć jest nadal budowana. Amazon buduje własną sieć dostawy w Europie i mógłby potencjalnie ominąć InPost w niektórych rynkach. Ryzyko wyceny: InPost handluje z premią do tradycyjnych spółek logistycznych, odzwierciedlając tezę o wzroście platformy, która musi zostać zrealizowana.

VII. Werdykt

Werdykt Fides Polonia

Zakup — Największy Polski Eksport Technologiczny. InPost jest dowodem, że możliwe jest zbudowanie globalnej firmy technologicznej z Polski. Jej przewaga sieciowa w kraju jest niepokonana; jej europejska ekspansja jest prawdziwym testem skalowalności; jej oferta przejęcia potwierdza wartość strategiczną dla globalnych graczy logistycznych. Dla inwestora z horyzontem 5–7 lat jest to jedna z najbardziej przekonujących pozycji wzrostowych na Giełdzie Papierów Wartościowych w Warszawie.

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