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Fides Polonia Capital Management · Private M&A

Tristate Auto Collision Centers

The auto body shop is the doctor's office for cars — recession-proof and insurance-billed — and we are taking the most overlooked cash business in America, modernising it with OEM manufacturer certifications and advanced electric vehicle repair technology, then running it through a lean management system to turn a trusted neighbourhood institution into a precision-engineered, high-margin operation built for the next generation of vehicles.

Private M&A · New York Tristate Area · 2 Locations Operating · Target: 5 · Then Poland

Active Build — A Cash-Generating Neighbourhood Institution
~100,000
Annual Crashes
NYC Alone
284/Day
Average Daily
NYC Crashes
$5M
Target Revenue
Per Location
OEM
Certified · Luxury
Vehicle Moat
2 of 5
Locations Open
Target: 5 → Poland
Return to Portfolio Prologue

The Doctor's Office for Cars: The Most Overlooked Cash Business in America

Consider the business model of a medical practice. Patients arrive — not always by choice, not always at a convenient time — because something has gone wrong. The practice assesses the problem, documents the diagnosis, performs the repair, and bills an insurance company. The patient pays little or nothing directly. The insurance carrier settles the account. The practitioner earns a margin on every procedure, collects payment from a creditworthy institutional payer, and never has to convince the patient that the service was necessary. The demand was created by an event, not by marketing.

Now replace the patient with a car, the diagnosis with a damage estimate, the procedure with panel repair, paint, and structural alignment, and the medical practice with an auto collision centre. The business model is identical. The customer — the vehicle owner — arrives because an accident has occurred, not because they chose to spend their Saturday morning at a body shop. Their insurance company pays. The repairer earns a margin on every repair order, billed against a policy that the vehicle owner is legally required to carry in all fifty US states. There is no discretionary demand to stimulate, no seasonal campaign to plan, and no customer who needs to be convinced that the problem is real. The car is damaged. The insurer will pay. The clock is running.

This is the business that Fides Polonia has chosen to build in the New York tristate area — New York City, Long Island, Westchester, and northern New Jersey — under the Tristate Auto Collision Centers platform. We have chosen this geography deliberately and precisely: it is one of the densest concentrations of registered vehicles in the United States, one of the highest concentrations of luxury and near-luxury vehicles in the world, and one of the most underserved collision repair markets for certified, systematically managed, premium-quality repair. The opportunity does not come from inventing something new. It comes from running something old far better than the people who currently own it — in a market that produces more accidents per square mile than almost any other in the country.

The auto collision trade is one of the most genuinely local of all businesses. The shop on the corner of a neighbourhood street, the technicians who grew up in the same town as the customers they serve, the insurance adjuster who knows the shop owner by name — these are the relationships that make a collision centre a community institution rather than a transaction. Catholic Social Teaching has long recognised the importance of businesses that are embedded in the places they serve: enterprises that employ local people, build local competence, and contribute to the stability of the neighbourhood. Each shop Fides Polonia acquires is not merely a vehicle repair operation. It is, in the fullest sense, a neighbourhood foundation. Cf. Centesimus Annus §32 · Pope John Paul II · "It is the task of the state to provide for the defence and preservation of common goods such as the natural and human environments."
I. The Market Opportunity

100,000 Crashes a Year. The World's Highest Concentration of Luxury Vehicles. And Most Shops Can't Repair Them.

New York City alone recorded approximately 100,000 motor vehicle collisions in 2024 — roughly 284 accidents per day, every day of the year, including Christmas. That figure covers only the five boroughs. Add Long Island's Nassau and Suffolk counties, where the Southern State Parkway and the Long Island Expressway generate some of the highest rear-end collision rates in the state, and Westchester County, where commuter traffic on the Saw Mill River and Hutchinson River Parkways produces a steady volume of high-speed impacts, and northern New Jersey's densely trafficked arterials, and the total picture of the New York tristate collision market comes sharply into focus: this is a region that produces a legally and economically mandated stream of vehicle repair demand on a scale that no other single metropolitan area in the United States can match.

The Numbers Behind the Tristate Market: New York City alone averages over 100,000 crashes per year across its four full-data years (2019–2022), with approximately 50,000 people injured annually in the five boroughs. Brooklyn is consistently the highest-volume borough with over 11,000 crashes per year; Queens and Manhattan follow closely. Nassau and Suffolk counties on Long Island add tens of thousands of additional collisions annually — characterised by higher average vehicle speeds and correspondingly higher repair order values. Statewide, New York recorded 1,175 traffic fatalities in 2022, the highest in a decade. The tristate area as a whole represents one of the largest concentrations of vehicle collision repair demand in the world — and it is overwhelmingly served by small, independent, and under-equipped shops.

What makes this geography uniquely compelling for this platform is not just volume — it is the nature of the vehicles involved. The New York tristate area is home to one of the highest concentrations of luxury and near-luxury vehicles in the United States. Westchester County — covering White Plains, Scarsdale, Bronxville, Rye, and Greenwich-adjacent towns — has a median household income among the highest of any suburban county in the nation, and its roads are filled with BMWs, Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, Land Rover, Audi, Tesla, and Lexus at a density that would be remarkable anywhere else in the country. Long Island's North Shore — Great Neck, Manhasset, Oyster Bay, Huntington — and its South Shore affluent communities mirror this pattern. Northern New Jersey's Bergen County and Westfield corridor are no different. New Jersey as a whole sells more luxury vehicles per capita than any other state in the nation.

This matters enormously for the economics of a collision repair platform. A BMW 5 Series rear-ended on the Cross Bronx Expressway does not go to the nearest shop — it goes to a BMW-certified shop or the insurer directs it to one. A Tesla Model Y damaged on the Long Island Expressway cannot be repaired without Tesla's proprietary equipment and authorised procedures. A Mercedes-Benz GLC with a crumpled quarter panel requires aluminium repair capability and Mercedes-Benz Paint to Sample protocols that fewer than one in ten shops in the region can execute correctly. The combination of high crash volume and high-value, technologically complex vehicles creates an extraordinary mismatch: enormous demand for certified, capable repair, served by a fragmented market of shops that mostly lack the certifications, equipment, and management systems to meet it. That mismatch is Fides Polonia's opportunity.

~100,000
Annual Crashes in NYC Alone (2022–2024 Average)
284/Day
Average Daily Crashes Across Five Boroughs — Every Day
~50,000
People Injured Annually in NYC Traffic Crashes
#1 in US
New Jersey — Highest Luxury Vehicle Sales Per Capita Nationally
Recession-Proof and Pandemic-Proof — The Record Is Unambiguous: Auto collision repair was classified as an essential business throughout the COVID-19 lockdowns of 2020 and 2021. While restaurants, retailers, gyms, salons, and offices across New York were ordered closed — and the New York economy contracted sharply — body shops continued operating. Emergency vehicles, delivery trucks, NYPD patrol cars, ambulances, and the personal vehicles of essential workers all required repair. The industry did not experience the demand destruction that erased revenues across most of the services sector. Even in 2020, New York City still recorded 88,000 motor vehicle collisions — a figure that, in any other context, would be called a crisis. In the body shop business, it is simply called Tuesday. A business that continued operating through the sharpest economic contraction in a generation, serving the vehicles of a city that never fully stopped moving, is by any practical measure the closest thing to a guaranteed demand stream that private investment can find.
II. The Acquisition Thesis

Why Good Businesses Are Being Sold Cheaply — and What We Do When We Buy Them

The most important structural insight driving the Fides Polonia acquisition programme is this: the auto collision industry is undergoing a technology transformation that its current owners are, in many cases, unable or unwilling to navigate. This is true across the country — but it is especially acute in the New York tristate area, where the vehicle fleet tilts heavily toward luxury and near-luxury models that demand exactly the specialist equipment, manufacturer-specific procedures, and OEM certifications that most independent shops simply do not have. The BMW that commutes from Westchester into Manhattan. The Mercedes-Benz that parks in a Long Island garage. The Tesla that was bought at the Paramus, New Jersey showroom. These vehicles arrive damaged at body shops every day — and in the majority of cases, the shop that receives them is not equipped to repair them to manufacturer standard.

The owners of many well-established, well-located body shops are men and women in their late fifties and sixties who built these businesses over decades of honest hard work. They know their customers. They know their insurers. They know their neighbourhood. What they do not know — and cannot easily learn, and cannot easily afford to equip themselves for — is how to repair a Tesla, a Rivian, or a BMW constructed with bonded aluminium and boron-steel reinforcements. The technology has outrun them. And because the business is not easily sold to a son or daughter who faces the same capital and training demands, these owners are ready to sell — at multiples that reflect their operational challenges, not the underlying cash flow quality of the location, the customer base, or the insurance relationships they have built.

The Seller Profile We Target: We are not buying a business — we are buying a foundation. What we look for first is the facility itself: the right square footage, the right number of bays, and the right location in a dense, high-traffic corridor of Long Island, Westchester, Queens, or northern New Jersey. What we are really acquiring, before any consideration of equipment or revenue, are the permits and zoning approvals that come attached to that building — environmental licences, municipal auto repair permits, stormwater compliance certifications, and collision centre operating approvals that in the New York tristate area can take years to obtain and are routinely denied outright to new applicants. These are not administrative formalities. They are genuine barriers to entry that make an existing permitted site more valuable than its current owner often realises. We look past the old equipment, the faded signage, and the tired operation. We see what the shell already holds: an address with legal standing that cannot be replicated, in a market where the demand never stops.
III. The Transformation Playbook

From Under-Equipped Workshop to OEM-Certified Production Floor

When Fides Polonia acquires a shop, we do not inherit the seller's problems and carry on. We apply a structured, repeatable transformation playbook — the same sequence of interventions at every location — that takes a permitted, well-located but underperforming operation and builds it into a certified, efficient, high-margin repair centre. The playbook has four components: OEM certification, equipment investment, a lean management system, and insurance network integration. Executed together, they compound each other's effects. Each component reinforces the others.

Step One
OEM Certification: The Moat That Cannot Be Bought Off the Shelf
Original Equipment Manufacturer certifications — from Ford, BMW, Tesla, Honda, GM, and others — authorise a shop to perform manufacturer-approved repairs using manufacturer-approved procedures. OEM-certified shops gain access to restricted OEM parts that uncertified competitors cannot purchase, to proprietary repair protocols, and to the manufacturer's referral programme — a direct pipeline of owners whose warranty or lease conditions require factory-certified repairs. Certification takes months of training, equipment investment, and audit compliance. It cannot be replicated quickly. Once earned, it is a moat.
Step Two
Equipment Investment: The Infrastructure for the Next Generation of Vehicles
We invest in the equipment that retiring owners could not justify or could not finance: aluminium welding and straightening systems, EV-safe battery handling infrastructure, advanced frame measuring and straightening equipment, computerised paint mixing and application systems, and ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance System) calibration rigs. Without this equipment, a shop simply cannot perform certain repairs on modern vehicles. With it, a shop can command a premium labour rate, take on high-complexity work that competitors must decline, and build the technical reputation that attracts the highest-value insurance carriers.
Step Three
Lean Management System: The Production Method That Cuts Cycle Time
We implement a lean management framework across every acquired shop from day one of ownership — encompassing Sort, Set in Order, Shine, Standardise, Sustain, and Safety. A collision centre is, in operational terms, a production facility: vehicles enter as damaged work-in-progress and exit as completed finished goods. Every inefficiency in the production flow — the tool that takes four minutes to find, the part that sits unclaimed for three days, the bay that cannot be used while a job waits for a supplement — costs money in cycle time and costs money in rental car charges billed against the repair order. Lean management eliminates waste, reduces vehicle cycle time, and frees bay capacity without adding headcount.
Step Four
Technician Training: Certified People Commanding Premium Labour Rates
We invest in I-CAR Gold Class training and OEM-specific technician certification programmes. Certified technicians earn more than uncertified ones — and produce measurably better work, faster. More importantly, certified technicians are required by OEM programmes and by many DRP (Direct Repair Programme) insurance carrier agreements. A shop whose technicians hold current certifications commands higher labour rates from insurers, qualifies for more DRP relationships, and produces repairs that pass OEM compliance audits. The training is a capital investment that pays a recurring labour rate premium on every repair order, indefinitely.
Step Five
DRP Insurance Relationships: The Demand Pipeline That Never Requires Marketing
Direct Repair Programme agreements with major insurance carriers — State Farm, Geico, Progressive, Allstate, and others — form the backbone of a well-run collision centre's volume. Under a DRP, an insurer directs claimants to its approved shops in exchange for guaranteed volume, priority claim handling, and adherence to the carrier's pricing and quality standards. This institutional pipeline accounts for approximately 70% of revenue. The remaining 30% comes from customers who choose the shop directly — driven by reputation, OEM certification recognition, online reviews, and the trust of a well-located neighbourhood institution. That self-procured customer is often the most valuable: they arrive without a DRP rate cap, choose the shop on quality rather than direction, and become the source of the word-of-mouth referrals that no insurance programme can replicate.
Step Six
Blank Canvas Management: Rebuilding the Operating Model From the Ground Up
Every acquired shop is reviewed with a blank canvas approach — no legacy process is retained simply because it already exists. We examine the production flow, the parts ordering system, the supplement and billing procedures, the customer communication process, and the scheduling logic. We implement standardised processes, digital job tracking, parts pre-ordering protocols, and management reporting from day one. The goal is a lean staff operating a high-throughput shop: fewer people, more vehicles completed per week, consistently higher quality, and a customer experience that turns first-time claimants into lifetime referrers.
IV. The Lean Management System

Lean Production in the Body Shop: Every Minute Saved Is a Dollar Earned

The lean production methodology — derived from decades of manufacturing excellence in high-precision, high-volume production environments — is the most proven framework for eliminating operational waste ever applied to industry. Its application to an auto collision centre is not a theoretical exercise — it is a direct and powerful fit. A body shop is a flow production facility: vehicles enter, move through a sequence of processes — disassembly, structural repair, panel replacement, preparation, paint, reassembly, detail, quality control — and exit as completed repairs. Any interruption to that flow costs money in direct technician time, in rental car charges accumulating on the repair order, and in customer dissatisfaction measured in Google reviews and insurance carrier scorecards.

1S
Sort · Seiri
Remove everything from the shop floor and storage areas that is not actively needed. Old parts, obsolete equipment, accumulated consumables, and years of organisational sediment are cleared. What remains belongs there.
2S
Set in Order · Seiton
Every tool, every part, every piece of equipment is assigned a designated, clearly marked location. A technician who reaches for a welding tip or a grinding disc finds it in the same place every time. Four minutes recovered per search, thirty searches per day, across a team of six technicians — this is where lean pays for itself.
3S
Shine · Seiso
The shop is cleaned to a standard that most collision centres have never seen: floors swept and degreased, equipment maintained, spray booths cleaned after every use. A clean shop is a fast shop — contamination in the paint environment costs re-do time. A clean shop is also a safe shop and, crucially, the shop that impresses an OEM auditor on inspection day.
4S
Standardise · Seiketsu
The first three S's are made permanent through written standards, visual management boards, and daily team reviews. Every production process has a documented procedure. Every technician knows the standard for their station. The shop does not depend on one experienced person's memory — it runs on institutional knowledge that survives turnover.
5S
Sustain · Shitsuke
Standards are maintained through daily habit and management accountability, not periodic effort. The 6S checklist is completed every morning. The shop manager walks the floor at opening. Non-conformances are addressed the same day. Discipline applied consistently becomes culture applied automatically.
6S
Safety · Anzen
The sixth S — unique to the automotive application — addresses the specific hazards of a body shop environment: chemical handling, electrical safety around EV battery systems, spray booth fire protocols, and lift equipment inspection. A safe shop is a legal shop, an insurable shop, and the shop whose technicians show up every morning.

The measurable output of 6S in a collision centre is a reduction in vehicle cycle time — the number of calendar days from when a damaged vehicle enters the shop to when it is returned to the customer. The industry average cycle time for a mid-complexity repair in the Northeast is approximately ten to fourteen days. A lean-managed, well-staffed Fides Polonia shop targets seven days or fewer. That reduction means more vehicles processed per bay per month, lower rental car cost accruals on each repair order, higher insurance carrier scorecards, and more DRP referrals — a compounding cycle of operational improvement that converts directly into margin expansion.

V. The Business Economics

What a Well-Run Collision Centre Looks Like as a Financial Asset

The economics of a mature, OEM-certified, DRP-affiliated collision centre in the New York tristate market are compelling by any private business standard. Revenue is driven by the volume of vehicles completed and the average repair order value — and the tristate area's vehicle fleet, skewed toward luxury and near-luxury models, delivers average repair order values materially above the national norm. The same rear-end collision that costs $2,500 to repair on a 2010 Honda Accord costs $8,000 to $12,000 on a 2024 BMW X5 with radar modules, parking sensors, camera arrays, and aluminium structural panels requiring OEM procedures. In Westchester, on Long Island, and across northern New Jersey, the BMW X5 — and its equivalents from Mercedes-Benz, Audi, Land Rover, and Tesla — is not an occasional visitor to the shop floor. It is a daily occurrence. Every certified repair order on one of these vehicles is worth two to four times the equivalent job on a mainstream vehicle. OEM certification in this market is not merely a competitive advantage. It is the difference between serving the fleet and being excluded from the most profitable portion of it.

Financial MetricTarget RangeCommentary
Annual Revenue Per Location~$5 millionMid-size operator in NY tristate · Scalable production model · Luxury vehicle mix drives higher average repair order values
Gross Margin (Labour + Parts)45–55%Labour-heavy mix; OEM certification supports premium labour rates
EBITDA Margin (Mature Location)15–22%Post-transformation · DRP volume stabilised · Lean staff · Lean management fully implemented
Revenue Source70% Insurance · 30% Self-Procured70% DRP insurance carrier referrals · 30% reputation and location-driven walk-in customers who choose the shop directly
Acquisition Multiple3–5× EBITDAPre-transformation · Retiring owner · Technology gap pricing
Post-Transformation Value5–8× EBITDAOEM-certified · DRP-affiliated · Lean-managed · Equipment-upgraded
Average Vehicle Cycle Time (Target)≤7 calendar daysvs. 10–14 day industry average in Northeast · KPI for DRP scorecards
Customer Acquisition CostEffectively zeroInsurance-driven referral; DRP pipeline; OEM referral programme
Scale Target5 locations2 operating · 3 in pipeline · New York tristate area · Then Poland
Real Estate StrategyOwn the buildingBusiness pays the mortgage · Equity builds tax-free · Location is irreplaceable
Property Appreciation ThesisLong-term upsideIndustrial zoning on main arterials frozen by regulation · No new competing supply possible · Values compound independently of the operating business
VI. The Real Estate Layer

The Business Pays the Mortgage. The Land Compounds Forever.

Every Fides Polonia collision acquisition is structured to include the purchase of the property itself — not merely the operating business. This is not incidental. It is the second engine of value creation that most buyers of body shops completely overlook, and it is the structural insight that separates a good investment from an exceptional one. When we acquire a permitted, well-located collision centre and own the real estate beneath it, we achieve something that the operating business alone cannot: a cash-generating tenant — the collision centre itself — paying down a commercial mortgage on an industrial property in one of the most land-constrained metropolitan markets in the world. The business funds the building. The building compounds in value independently.

The Zoning Insight — Why These Properties Will Never Be Replaced: The industrial and commercial properties that house body shops on the main arterial roads of Long Island, Westchester, Queens, and northern New Jersey — Route 110, the Jericho Turnpike, Route 17, Northern Boulevard, Sunrise Highway — were zoned and developed decades ago, in a planning era that no longer exists. Today, municipalities across the New York tristate area routinely deny new applications for industrial use on main roads. Environmental regulations, community opposition, and the political preference for residential and retail development have made the permitting of a new auto repair facility on a high-visibility arterial route effectively impossible in most tristate jurisdictions. The existing permitted sites are not merely scarce. They are irreplaceable. Every year that passes without new industrial zoning approvals on main roads makes the properties that already hold those approvals more valuable — not because the collision repair business is growing, but because the supply of permitted locations is structurally frozen while the demand from operators who need them continues to rise.

The financial architecture of each acquisition reflects this reality. Fides Polonia structures the purchase to separate the real estate from the operating business wherever possible, using a commercial real estate entity to hold the property and lease it to the collision centre operation. The lease payments made by the operating business service the commercial mortgage. Over time — across a seven-to-twelve-year hold period on a well-located tristate property — the mortgage is progressively paid down by the operating business's cash flow, while the underlying property appreciates in a market with no new supply. The equity that builds in the real estate is, under properly structured ownership, a tax-advantaged accumulation: depreciation allowances, 1031 exchange opportunities, and cost segregation studies allow the property's appreciation to compound with a materially lower tax drag than an equivalent return generated through operating income alone.

Three Sources of Return in One Acquisition: Each Fides Polonia collision acquisition is therefore not one investment but three, compounding simultaneously. First, the operating business — OEM-certified, lean-managed, generating $5 million in annual revenue and 15–22% EBITDA margins from a customer base that is legally required to have insurance and has no choice but to repair their vehicles. Second, the real estate equity — built progressively as the operating business services the commercial mortgage, converting operating cash flow into an ownership stake in an irreplaceable industrial property. Third, the property appreciation — driven not by the business's performance but by the structural scarcity of permitted industrial sites on main arterial roads in one of the most supply-constrained real estate markets in the United States. These three return streams do not merely add to each other. They reinforce each other: a better-performing business pays down more mortgage, faster; a higher-value property supports better financing terms; and the combined asset — operating business plus owned real estate — is worth materially more to a strategic buyer than either component individually.

The long-term vision is a portfolio of five owned, permitted, OEM-certified collision centres on irreplaceable main-road industrial sites across the New York tristate area — each generating operating income, each building real estate equity through business-funded mortgage amortisation, and each sitting on a piece of land that the local planning authority would not permit to be developed for the same use today. That combination of operational cash generation and structural real estate scarcity is, in our judgement, one of the most durable value-creation frameworks available to the private investor in the current market environment.

VII. The Poland Vision

Exporting the Model: Why Poland Is the Right First European Market

The Fides Polonia collision model is not a peculiarity of the American market. The structural conditions that make collision repair compelling in New Jersey are present — and in several respects even more favourable — in Poland. Car ownership in Poland has grown dramatically over the past three decades, from approximately 7 million vehicles in 1990 to over 28 million today. Third-party liability insurance is compulsory for every vehicle on Polish roads. Comprehensive insurance, while not mandatory, is widely carried and increasingly required by vehicle finance arrangements. The Polish vehicle fleet is ageing — the average age of a car in Poland exceeds fourteen years, above even the American average — generating sustained repair demand from an established base of older, accident-prone vehicles.

The Polish collision repair market is, if anything, more fragmented than the American one. Small, independently owned body shops — wulkanizacje, blacharnie, lakiernie — operate across every city and suburban district, many run by skilled craftsmen who built their reputations through decades of hands-on work but who face exactly the same technology transition challenge as their American counterparts: the new generation of vehicles requires equipment, training, and OEM relationships that the traditional workshop owner does not possess and cannot easily acquire. The OEM certification landscape in Poland is less developed than in the US, meaning the competitive moat available to the first operator to build a certified, systematically managed platform is proportionally larger.

The Poland Advantage: The combination of compulsory insurance, a large and ageing vehicle fleet, a fragmented and technology-lagging incumbent base, and the absence of an established certified operator network creates a first-mover opportunity in Poland that closely mirrors the early-stage consolidation opportunity that made the US regional body shop roll-up one of the most reliable private equity strategies of the past two decades. Fides Polonia's intention is to bring the OEM certification framework, the lean management system, and the insurance DRP relationship model to Poland — initially in the Kraków and Warsaw markets — once the US platform has been proven, systematised, and financed to support international replication.
VIII. Risk Factors

What Could Go Wrong

Intellectual honesty is non-negotiable at Fides Polonia. The following material risks are acknowledged in full:

  • Technician shortage. The collision repair industry faces a structural shortage of trained, certified technicians across the Northeast. I-CAR Gold Class and OEM-certified technicians are in high demand and short supply. Competing for talent against well-capitalised national consolidators requires competitive wages, genuine career development, and a positive shop culture. A shop that cannot staff its production bays cannot generate revenue regardless of its certifications or DRP relationships.
  • Insurance carrier rate pressure. The major insurance carriers — State Farm, Geico, Progressive, Allstate — hold significant negotiating leverage over DRP-affiliated shops on labour and parts rates. A carrier can reduce approved labour rates, mandate the use of aftermarket or recycled parts over OEM parts, or de-list a shop from its DRP programme. The 70/30 revenue split between DRP-referred and reputation-driven self-procured customers materially reduces this concentration risk compared with a purely insurer-dependent model — but the 70% DRP component still represents meaningful counterparty exposure that must be managed through carrier diversification across multiple DRP relationships.
  • EV technology transition pace. The rapid growth of battery electric vehicles requires ongoing capital investment in EV-specific repair equipment and training — high-voltage safety systems, battery handling infrastructure, and EV OEM certification programmes. Staying ahead of the technology curve requires sustained capital expenditure. A shop that falls behind the technology standard loses access to a growing portion of the vehicle fleet.
  • Post-acquisition integration risk. Each acquired shop has its own culture, customer relationships, and operational habits. Imposing the 6S system and new operating procedures on an established team requires management skill and careful communication. A poorly executed integration can result in key technician departures, customer dissatisfaction, and temporary revenue disruption during the transition period.
  • National consolidator competition. Caliber Collision, Gerber, and Service King collectively operate thousands of locations and are well capitalised to accelerate expansion. While their penetration of the dense New York tristate market remains limited — driven by high real estate costs, local regulatory complexity, and the difficulty of acquiring well-located established shops — a better-funded national operator entering the same acquisition pool as Tristate can outbid on price and speed. Tristate's advantage is deep local relationships, faster decision-making at the smaller end of the market, and the operational depth to create value that a consolidator acquiring at volume cannot replicate.
  • Poland market entry complexity. Exporting the US model to Poland requires navigating a different regulatory environment, a different insurance claims system, different OEM certification structures, and a different labour market. The timeline for Poland entry is dependent on the US platform demonstrating consistent operational performance across multiple locations before capital and management attention are diverted internationally.
IX. Investment Conclusion

The Fides Polonia Verdict

Fides Polonia Capital Management · Written by Daniel Chojnowski
Build — A Recession-Proof Institution, Engineered One Shop at a Time

Somewhere on Long Island today, a sixty-three-year-old shop owner is looking at a Tesla Model Y that came in for a rear-end repair and realising that the parts are restricted, that his straightening equipment does not carry Tesla's approved procedure, and that the insurer's supplement requires ADAS calibration documentation he does not know how to produce. His shop has been on the same street for twenty-four years. He knows every adjuster at every carrier in Nassau County. His EBITDA margin is fifteen percent on $4.6 million in revenue — built on a foundation of loyal customers and genuine craft. He just cannot take it where it needs to go next, in a market where the vehicle fleet around him has quietly transformed into one of the most technologically demanding in the world. He knows it, and he is ready to sell.

That is the business Fides Polonia acquires. Not a distressed asset. Not a turnaround. A permitted, well-located shell with legal standing that cannot be replicated — being sold at a multiple that reflects the seller's technology gap rather than the underlying value of the address and the licences attached to it. We arrive with capital, with OEM certifications, and with the willingness to invest in the equipment and the training that turns a tired shop into an exceptional one. We do not change what the business fundamentally is — a trusted neighbourhood repairer that its community relies on. We change what it is capable of, and we build the operating systems that let it run efficiently at scale.

For the patient investor, here is what Fides Polonia builds:

  • One of the highest-crash-volume metropolitan markets in the United States — New York City alone averages over 100,000 crashes per year, 284 per day, with Long Island and Westchester adding tens of thousands more; approximately 50,000 people are injured annually in NYC traffic collisions alone
  • The world's highest concentration of luxury vehicles in the suburban radius — Westchester, Long Island's North Shore, and northern New Jersey are dominated by BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Audi, Tesla, Porsche, and Land Rover; New Jersey ranks first in the nation for luxury vehicle sales per capita; these vehicles generate repair orders worth two to four times a mainstream vehicle, and they can only be repaired correctly at OEM-certified facilities
  • OEM certification across multiple manufacturers — a competitive moat that takes months to build, cannot be purchased at will, grants access to restricted parts and referral programmes, and commands premium labour rates that uncertified competitors cannot achieve
  • A lean management system applied to every acquired location — reducing vehicle cycle time to seven days or fewer, freeing bay capacity, cutting rental car charges, and improving insurance carrier scorecards that directly drive DRP referral volume
  • A $40+ billion fragmented national market with a deeply underdeveloped NY tristate — where the large national consolidators have not yet dominated and where disciplined regional operators with strong local relationships can acquire at 3–5× EBITDA and operate at 15–22% EBITDA margins
  • A target acquisition profile — shops generating approximately $5 million in revenue in Long Island, Westchester, Queens, or northern New Jersey, operated by retiring owners who have built real customer equity and insurance relationships but lack the capital, technology, and management systems to compete in the next decade
  • A proven model already operating — two locations open in the New York tristate area, with three more in the acquisition pipeline to reach the five-location platform, after which the same OEM certification and lean management system will be exported to Kraków and Warsaw, where the collision market is equally fragmented, insurance is equally mandated, the vehicle fleet is equally aged, and the first certified operator network has yet to be built
  • A real estate layer beneath every operating business — Fides Polonia acquires the building alongside the business, letting the collision centre's cash flow service the commercial mortgage, building tax-advantaged equity in irreplaceable industrial properties on main arterial roads that municipalities will never permit to be built again
  • Three compounding return streams in a single acquisition: operating business income, real estate equity built through business-funded mortgage amortisation, and structural property appreciation driven by frozen industrial zoning that prevents new supply from ever competing with existing permitted sites

Fides Polonia invests in businesses that are genuinely necessary, structurally durable, and capable of being operated materially better than they currently are. The collision repair shop is all three — and in the New York tristate area, surrounded by 100,000 annual crashes, a vehicle fleet that is among the most valuable and technically complex in the world, and thousands of uncertified shops that cannot serve it properly, it is all three simultaneously. Underneath the operating business sits a piece of industrial real estate on a main road that the local planning authority would not approve for the same use today, and will not approve tomorrow. The business pays the mortgage. The land compounds forever. It is not glamorous. It does not have a stock ticker, a venture capital story, or a technology narrative. It has damaged BMWs and Teslas that must be fixed to manufacturer standard, insurance companies that must pay for them, a community that depends on it, and a piece of ground beneath it that becomes more valuable with every year the zoning stays frozen. That is the Fides Polonia collision thesis. We are building it one shop — and one property — at a time.

Private M&A · New York Tristate Area · 2 Locations Operating · Target: 5 · Then Poland · 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 a private acquisition strategy and does not constitute financial advice, a solicitation to invest, or an offer of investment services regulated under any jurisdiction. Private business investment involves substantial risk including the possible loss of all capital invested. Projections and financial targets described herein are forward-looking and subject to material uncertainty. Past performance in related strategies is not indicative of future results. Fides Polonia Capital Management and its principals may hold direct ownership interests in businesses described in this document. Prospective investors should conduct their own independent due diligence and consult qualified legal, financial, and tax advisers before making any investment decision. This document is intended solely for the use of the recipient and may not be reproduced or distributed without the prior written consent of Fides Polonia Capital Management.

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Gabinet Lekarski dla Samochodów: Najbardziej Pomijany Biznes Gotówkowy w Ameryce

Warsztat blacharsko-lakierniczy to gabinet lekarski dla samochodów — odporny na recesję i rozliczany przez ubezpieczycieli — a my przejmujemy najbardziej pomijane firmy gotówkowe w Ameryce. Każdego roku w obszarze Tri-State (Nowy Jork, New Jersey, Connecticut) dochodzi do ponad 100 000 wypadków drogowych wymagających naprawy blacharskiej. Każda naprawa jest rozliczana przez ubezpieczyciela. Żadna nie jest odkładana, gdy budżety domowe się kurczą. To jest definicja biznesu odpornego na recesję.

I. Rynek

100 000 Wypadków Rocznie. Najwyższe Zagęszczenie Luksusowych Pojazdów na Świecie. Aż Żaden Konsolidator.

Obszar Tri-State to jeden z najbogatszych rynków motoryzacyjnych na świecie — z niezwykłą koncentracją pojazdów luksusowych i premium, które wymagają certyfikowanych techników OEM i specjalistycznych materiałów przy naprawie. Mimo to rynek napraw blacharskich pozostaje ekstremalnie rozdrobniony: zdominowany przez niezależnych właścicieli jednego warsztatu, wielu z planami sukcesji, którzy sprzedają po wielokrotnościach znacznie poniżej tego, co uzasadniają ich przepływy pieniężne.

II. Strategia Przejęć

Dlaczego Dobre Biznesy Sprzedawane są Tanio — i Co Robimy Gdy Je Kupujemy

Typowy właściciel warsztatu blacharskiego, który sprzedaje, to 55–65 lat, nie ma następcy, chce szybkiego zamknięcia transakcji i woli sprzedać komuś, kto będzie traktować jego pracowników uczciwie, zamiast prywatnej firmie equity, która zredukuje koszty agresywnie. Nasza strategia pozycjonuje nas jako wiarygodnego nabywcę dla tego profilu sprzedającego — szybkie zamknięcie, uczciwe wyceny i szacunek dla kultury istniejącej firmy.

III. Certyfikacje OEM

Od Niedoposażonego Warsztatu do Certyfikowanej Podłogi Produkcyjnej OEM

Po przejęciu naszą pierwszą inwestycją operacyjną jest inwestycja w certyfikację OEM — autoryzację producenta pojazdu (BMW, Mercedes, Tesla, Porsche) do naprawy tych pojazdów zgodnie ze specyfikacją producenta. Certyfikacja OEM ma trzy skutki: premia cenowa za naprawy certyfikowane vs. nieprzypisane; selektywna jakość pracy, która przyciąga samochody premium; i bariera wejścia dla konkurentów, którzy nie mogą lub nie chcą inwestować w sprzęt i szkolenia.

IV. Lean Manufacturing

Lean Production w Warsztacie Blacharskim: Każda Zaoszczędzona Minuta to Zarobiony Dolar

Warsztaty blacharskie tradycyjnie mają długie czasy cyklu — pojazdy stają w kolejce czekając na części, techników i miejsca w strefach malowania. Zastosowanie zasad lean manufacturing (wizualne zarządzanie przepływem, planowanie opar­te na czasie cyklu, dostawa części just-in-time) kompresuje czas cyklu i zwiększa przepustowość bez dodawania przestrzeni fizycznej. Wyższe zarobki bez wyższych kosztów. Taka jest ekonomika lean w tym środowisku.

V. Analiza Finansowa

Jak Wygląda Dobrze Prowadzone Centrum Kolizji jako Aktywo Finansowe

Prawidłowo certyfikowany i zarządzany lean warsztat blacharsko-lakierniczy w obszarze Tri-State może generować marżę EBITDA na poziomie 15–25% — znacznie powyżej większości biznesów usługowych. Przepływy pieniężne są stabilne (rozliczenia ubezpieczeniowe mają przewidywalne harmonogramy płatności), wymagania kapitałowe po początkowych inwestycjach w certyfikację są niskie, a model konsolidacyjny generuje dodatkowe oszczędności poprzez negocjacje zbiorczego zakupu części i wspólne zatrudnienie.

VI. Werdykt

Werdykt Fides Polonia

Aktywna Budowa — Generująca Gotówkę Instytucja Sąsiedzka. Naprawa blacharsko-lakiernicza nie jest ekscytującym biznesem. Ale generuje przewidywalne, ubezpieczeniowo-rozliczane przepływy pieniężne z bardzo złożonych do odtworzenia relacji z certyfikatorami OEM, na rynku, który jest zbyt rozdrobniony, by stać się celem dużych konglomeratów, i zbyt technicznie złożony, by nowi uczestnicy mogli wejść tanio. Dla cierpliwego inwestora to rzadka kombinacja: wysoka przepustowość gotówki, bariera wejścia, i historia kompoundu dopiero się zaczyna.

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

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