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Fides Polonia Capital Management · Equity Research · April 2026

Żabka Group S.A.

Żabka — "The Little Frog" · Poland's 7-Eleven

ZAB.WA · Warsaw Stock Exchange · WIG30 · IPO October 2024

Buy — Europe's Fastest-Growing Convenience Chain
PLN 27.2B
Revenue
(2025)
PLN 4.1B
Adj. EBITDA
(2025)
12,339+
Stores Across
Poland & Romania
3M+
Customers
Per Day
1,300+
New Stores
Per Year
Return to Portfolio Prologue

The Little Frog on Every Corner: Poland's Answer to 7-Eleven

Walk out of any apartment block in Warsaw, Kraków, Wrocław, or Gdańsk and within a few minutes you will find a small green shop with a frog on the sign. It will be open. It will have fresh coffee, hot food, cold beer, a lottery terminal, a parcel collection point, and roughly 3,000 of the most purchased everyday products in Poland. It will accept every card, offer cash withdrawal, and let you pay your utility bills. At two in the morning, it will still be open. This is Żabka — "the little frog" — and it has become as much a part of the texture of Polish urban life as the tram, the parish church, and the milk bar.

To an American investor, the comparison is immediate: Żabka is Poland's 7-Eleven. Both are convenience store chains built on high-footfall urban locations, a franchise model, rapid network expansion, and a carefully curated product mix that emphasises impulse purchasing and daily necessity. Both generate extraordinary cash flows from small stores. Both have become so embedded in the daily routines of their respective populations that closing them would feel like removing a public utility. The difference is that 7-Eleven took eighty years to build its network. Żabka, founded in Poznań in 1998, built Europe's largest convenience chain in twenty-six — and it is still opening more than three stores every single day.

At Fides Polonia, we invest in businesses that serve the genuine daily needs of real people, generate durable cash flows, and compound their competitive advantage over time. Żabka does all three with uncommon discipline. It is a machine designed to open stores, fill them with franchise partners, optimise their economics using data and AI, and repeat — at a pace and scale that no competitor in Central Europe has come close to matching.

The convenience store is, in its deepest economic function, an act of service. It is the business that makes the small necessities of daily life — the morning coffee, the forgotten ingredient, the midnight snack, the parcel collected on the way home — a little less effortful. Catholic Social Teaching understands business not merely as a profit-seeking enterprise but as a form of genuine service to the community. A chain of 12,000 stores serving three million Polish families each day, operated by thousands of Polish franchise partners building their own livelihoods, is exactly the kind of enterprise the tradition has in mind when it speaks of business as vocation. Cf. Centesimus Annus §35 · Pope John Paul II · "The purpose of a business firm is not simply to make a profit, but is to be found in its very existence as a community of persons."
I. Company History

From Seven Stores in Poznań to Europe's Largest Convenience Empire

Żabka was founded in 1998 by Mariusz Świtalski in Poznań — a city that has produced a disproportionate share of Poland's most successful entrepreneurs. Świtalski, who had previously built the Elektromis wholesale network, identified a gap that few had noticed: Poland had large supermarkets and small kiosks, but nothing in between. The modern convenience store — clean, branded, staffed, and stocked with a curated daily-essentials range — simply did not exist in the Polish market at scale. Żabka's first seven stores in Poznań and Swarzędz were the experiment. By 2005, there were 1,700 stores across Poland.

The company changed hands several times over the following decade as its value became clear. Czech private equity firm Penta Investments acquired it in 2007. Mid Europa Partners bought the Polish operations in 2011. In 2017, CVC Capital Partners — one of the world's largest private equity firms — acquired Żabka for an estimated €1 billion to €1.5 billion. Under CVC, the company underwent a comprehensive transformation: a green rebranding replacing the old yellow signage, the introduction of Żabka Café hot food zones in every store, a data-led approach to store siting and product assortment, and an aggressive acceleration of the franchise expansion programme. By the time of the IPO in October 2024, Żabka had grown from 4,500 stores to over 10,500 — more than doubling under CVC's ownership.

1998
Founded
7 stores in Poznań · Mariusz Świtalski
2017
CVC Acquisition
~€1–1.5B · Rebranding & acceleration
Oct 2024
Warsaw IPO
PLN 6.45B raised · 4th largest GPW IPO ever
2025
12,339 Stores
Poland & Romania · 1,394 opened in 2025
II. Company Overview

The Facts: Europe's Largest Convenience Network by Store Count

MetricFigure
ListedZAB.WA · Warsaw Stock Exchange (GPW) · WIG30 · October 17, 2024
IPO SizePLN 6.45 billion — 4th largest in GPW history
Largest ShareholderCVC Capital Partners · Luxembourg-registered · ~40% post-IPO
Revenue (FY2025)PLN 27.2 billion (+14.1% YoY)
Sales to End Customers (2025)PLN 31.1 billion
Adjusted EBITDA (2025)PLN 4.1 billion (+16.0% YoY · Margin 13.1%)
Adjusted Net Profit (2025)+78% year-on-year · EPS PLN 1.1
Stores (end 2025)12,339 — Poland (12,166) + Romania (173)
New Stores (2025)1,394 net new openings
Daily CustomersOver 3 million across Poland
Franchise Model~9,000 franchisees operate the store network
Store Payback Period12 months (down from 20 months in 2017)
Free Cash Flow (2025)PLN 1.7 billion (+13.7% YoY)
Net Debt / EBITDA~1.0× (post-rent basis)
Dividend Policy50% of 2025 net profit · 50–70% in subsequent years
2028 Store Target~16,000 stores in Poland and Romania
Total Market Potential~27,000 stores in Poland and Romania long-term
III. The 7-Eleven Comparison

Why "Poland's 7-Eleven" Is the Most Accurate Description in European Retail

7-Eleven was founded in 1927 as an ice-house in Dallas, Texas. It became the world's largest convenience chain by doing one thing better than everyone else: being there. Open early. Open late. Close to where people live. Stocked with the things they need right now, not next week. The format is not glamorous. It does not aspire to be a destination. It aspires to be inescapable — and it succeeds by being so densely deployed that choosing not to use it requires conscious effort.

Żabka has executed the same formula in Poland with the same relentless discipline. Almost a third of Poland's entire population lives within 300 metres of a Żabka store. Warsaw alone has over 1,500 Żabka locations. The stores are open typically from six in the morning until eleven at night, seven days a week. They serve hot food, fresh coffee, packaged groceries, alcohol, tobacco, lottery tickets, bill payments, parcel collection, cash withdrawals, and an expanding range of own-brand products. They are not supermarkets. They are not restaurants. They are the default answer to the question: "I need something right now."

The Comparison in Numbers: 7-Eleven operates approximately 83,000 stores globally. Żabka operates 12,339 stores in two countries — Poland and Romania. But the density comparison is more revealing: 7-Eleven has approximately one store per 4,000 Americans. Żabka has one store per 3,100 Poles — and is still growing at over 1,300 new stores per year. In urban Poland, Żabka has already achieved the saturation density that took 7-Eleven decades to reach in its home markets. The company's own AI-driven site analysis has identified potential for approximately 27,000 stores in Poland and Romania combined — more than double the current network.

What Separates Żabka From the Supermarket

The convenience store is not competing with the supermarket. It is competing with the decision not to go to the supermarket. When a Polish family runs out of milk on a Sunday evening, they do not drive twenty minutes to Carrefour. They walk three minutes to Żabka. When a Polish office worker wants a hot lunch but has forty minutes, they do not queue at a restaurant. They pick up a Żabka Café hotdog, a salad from the Szamamm range, and a fresh juice. The occasions are different, the price sensitivity is different, and the competitive dynamics are therefore different. Żabka is not taking market share from hypermarkets. It is serving demand that hypermarkets were never designed to serve.

IV. The Franchise Model

~9,000 Polish Entrepreneurs Running Poland's Most Recognised Brand

Żabka does not own its stores. It licenses them — and the distinction is the engine of the entire business. Under Żabka's franchise model, an individual entrepreneur signs a franchise agreement, and Żabka provides everything: the fit-out, the brand, the product range (delivered directly to the store), the pricing, the promotions, the technology platform, and the training. The franchisee provides the labour — typically working in the store themselves, often with one or two members of family or staff — and earns a margin on every product sold.

This model produces extraordinary unit economics for both parties. For Żabka Group, it means the network can expand at a pace no company-owned retail chain could match: the capital requirement for each new store is borne primarily by the franchisee, while Żabka provides the infrastructure — the supply chain, the technology, the brand — that no individual entrepreneur could replicate alone. For the franchisee, it means entering a proven business with an established brand, a guaranteed supply chain, national marketing support, and a payback period that has fallen from twenty months in 2017 to just twelve months for stores opened in 2023 — a compelling proposition for any aspiring Polish entrepreneur seeking a small business with low entry risk.

What Żabka Provides the Franchisee
Full store fit-out and equipment · The Żabka brand and signage · Centralised product sourcing and direct store delivery · National advertising and promotional campaigns · Cyberstore management platform (built with Salesforce) · Real-time sales data and AI-driven inventory suggestions · Operational training and ongoing support · Financial support during disruptions (demonstrated during COVID-19)
What the Franchisee Provides
Labour — typically the franchisee plus one to two staff · Daily store management and customer service · Local community relationships · The motivation and commitment of an owner-operator rather than an employee · Initial franchise fee and working capital for inventory · Compliance with Żabka's operational standards and product range requirements
Franchisee Economics (2025)
Franchisee margin: approximately 17.1% of sales to end customers at Żabka stores — the amount franchisees earn from selling products plus incentives received from Żabka. Franchisee margins grew 16% year-on-year in the first nine months of 2025. Average store payback period: 12 months. A profitable franchisee is a loyal franchisee — over 2,625 new franchisees joined in the twelve months to Q3 2025.
Scale of the Franchise Network
Approximately 9,000 active franchisees operate the Żabka network. This means roughly 9,000 Polish families or individuals have built their primary livelihood around a Żabka store. The model is not merely a retail strategy — it is a small-business incubation programme operating at a scale that no government enterprise scheme in Poland has come close to matching.
The franchise model is, in its best expression, a form of solidarity in the economic sense that Catholic Social Teaching gives that word: a concrete mechanism by which a large, well-resourced organisation shares its infrastructure, its brand, and its know-how with thousands of small entrepreneurs who would otherwise not have the means to compete. When Żabka supported franchisees financially during COVID-19 — absorbing losses rather than demanding fee payments — it demonstrated precisely the kind of institutional behaviour that the Church describes as the proper orientation of business toward the common good. Cf. Sollicitudo Rei Socialis §38 · Pope John Paul II · On Social Concern, 1987 · Solidarity is not a feeling but a firm determination to commit oneself to the common good.
V. Expansion & Growth

Three New Stores Every Day: The Most Dynamic Retail Expansion in Europe

Between 2021 and 2023, Żabka opened between 1,100 and 1,131 new stores every year in Poland — roughly three per day, every day, including Sundays and public holidays. In 2024, it opened 1,166. In 2025, it opened 1,394 — accelerating even as the network approached 12,000 locations. The company has revised its expansion target upward, now aiming for more than 1,300 new stores per year through 2028, at which point it expects to operate approximately 16,000 stores in Poland and Romania — approximately 1,500 more than it guided at the time of the IPO. Its AI-driven site analysis, which evaluates over 9 million Polish addresses using geospatial and demographic data, identifies long-term potential for around 27,000 locations in the two markets combined.

Poland
12,166 stores at end-2025. Warsaw alone has over 1,500 locations. ~30% of the Polish population lives within 300 metres of a store. AI-driven site selection continues to identify high-return whitespace. Target: ~16,000 stores by 2028, with long-run potential of ~23,000.
12,166 stores
Romania — Froo Brand
Entered Romania in late 2023. Acquired DRIM Daniel Distributie FMCG as a logistics anchor. Operating under the Froo brand, adapting the Żabka format to local preferences. 173 stores by end-2025. Long-run potential estimated at approximately 4,000 stores.
173 stores · growing fast
Żabka Nano — Autonomous Stores
Unmanned, 24/7 stores using AI cameras and computer vision for checkout-free shopping. Customers tap a card to enter, take products, and leave — charged automatically. Operating in 44+ locations in Poland and Germany. The format of the future, piloting the technology that will expand Żabka into locations no manned store can reach.
24/7 · no staff required
VI. Ownership Structure

CVC, the Warsaw Float, and What the IPO Means for Polish Investors

Żabka Group S.A. is incorporated in Luxembourg — a common holding company structure for private-equity-backed businesses — but its operational headquarters, its management team, its workforce, and the overwhelming majority of its business activity are in Poland. The company is listed on the Warsaw Stock Exchange under the ticker ZAB and is a component of the WIG30 index, Poland's benchmark of its thirty largest and most liquid listed companies.

CVC Capital Partners, the Luxembourg-based global private equity firm, remains the largest single shareholder with approximately 40% of shares following the IPO. The October 2024 listing raised PLN 6.45 billion — the fourth largest IPO in the history of the Warsaw Stock Exchange, behind only Allegro, PZU, and PKO BP — at an offer price of PLN 21.50 per share, valuing the company at PLN 21.5 billion. All proceeds went to selling shareholders; no new shares were issued. Individual Polish retail investors, who participated actively despite being rationed to just 5% of the offering and experiencing a 90% reduction rate due to oversubscription, are now co-owners of the most visited retail format in their country.

The Dividend Has Arrived: At the September 2025 strategy update, Żabka's Board announced it would recommend distributing 50% of 2025 net profit as a dividend — the company's first-ever dividend since listing. With net profit growing 78% in 2025 and net debt falling to approximately 1.0× EBITDA, the financial conditions that Żabka committed to at IPO are now met. For patient investors who bought at or near the listing and reinvested, the combination of earnings growth, de-leveraging, and the initiation of a dividend represents the maturation of the investment case that was articulated in October 2024.
VII. Financial Analysis

The Numbers: A Compounding Retail Machine With Growing Margins

MetricFY2025Year-on-Year
RevenuePLN 27.2 billion+14.1%
Sales to End CustomersPLN 31.1 billion+14.1%
Adjusted EBITDAPLN 4.1 billion+16.0% · Margin 13.1%
Adjusted Net ProfitEPS PLN 1.1+78% year-on-year
Free Cash FlowPLN 1.7 billion+13.7%
Like-for-Like Sales Growth5.5% (9M 2025)Positive despite adverse weather
Franchisee Margin17.1% of StEC+16% YoY (9M 2025) — franchisees earning more
Net Debt / Adj. EBITDA~1.0×Down from 2.3× in 2023 · Rapid deleveraging
Store Payback Period12 monthsDown from 20 months in 2017
New Stores Opened1,394Exceeds guidance · Fastest year on record

The Margin Story: Scale Doing What Scale Does

Żabka targets an adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 12–13%, and is delivering consistently at the upper end of that range. The improvement from 12.4% in 2023 to 13.1% in 2025 reflects the simple power of operating leverage in a high-fixed-cost, high-volume retail model: as each store generates more revenue — driven by new store openings, like-for-like growth, and the expansion of the higher-margin hot food offering — a greater share of that revenue falls through to EBITDA. The Żabka Café street food programme, available in more than 75% of Polish stores by end-2024, is the highest-margin element of the product mix, and its continued rollout is the primary internal driver of margin expansion beyond the current range.

~PLN 21.5B
Market Capitalisation (IPO Valuation)
~5.2×
EV / Adj. EBITDA (Approximate)
1.0×
Net Debt / EBITDA — Conservative Leverage
50%+
Net Profit Distributed as Dividend (2025)
VIII. Risk Factors

What Could Go Wrong

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

  • CVC overhang and ownership structure. CVC Capital Partners retained approximately 40% of shares post-IPO. As a private equity fund with a defined investment horizon, CVC will eventually sell its remaining stake. Large block sales into the market can depress the share price and introduce volatility that is unrelated to the underlying business performance.
  • Franchisee relations and regulatory risk. Żabka has faced criticism from politicians and business organisations over the balance of the franchise agreement — specifically the degree of control the group exercises over product selection, pricing, and operations. Polish government proposals to regulate franchise agreements could increase Żabka's operational costs, introduce penalties, or limit the terms it can offer new franchisees, slowing network growth.
  • Sunday trading ban complexity. Żabka has operated on Sundays under a franchise exemption — stores can open if the owner works behind the till. This legal interpretation has been contested. Any tightening of the Sunday trading ban enforcement could reduce Sunday revenues, which represent a meaningful share of weekly footfall and sales.
  • Network saturation concern. With 12,000+ stores already operating, questions about the pace of returns on new openings are reasonable. Management's own AI analysis continues to identify whitespace, and the Romanian expansion provides a second runway — but disciplined investors should monitor like-for-like growth rates and new-store payback periods closely for any sign of declining returns.
  • Energy and wage cost inflation. Żabka's store economics are sensitive to energy prices and the national minimum wage, both of which have risen sharply in Poland in recent years. Management has navigated this successfully through pricing and efficiency, but sustained cost inflation could compress both group and franchisee margins.
  • Luxembourg holding structure. While Żabka's operational centre is in Poland, the Group's ultimate holding company is registered in Luxembourg. As with InPost, this creates a structural distance between the company's economic activity in Poland and its legal domicile — a point that Polish nationalist politics have historically focused on, and which CVC's eventual exit will further complicate.
IX. Investment Conclusion

The Fides Polonia Verdict

Fides Polonia Capital Management · Written by Daniel Chojnowski · April 2026
Buy — The Little Frog Keeps Jumping

A third of Poland's population lives within 300 metres of a green frog. Over three million Polish citizens walked through a Żabka door today — and tomorrow, and the day after that. The brand has achieved something that most retail businesses spend entire decades attempting: it has become habitual. Not preferred. Habitual. The Żabka stop is not a choice most Polish consumers consciously make — it is what happens on the way to work, on the way home, late on a Sunday when everything else is closed. That habit, embedded in the daily lives of tens of millions of Polish people and reinforced by a network that opens three new stores every single day, is one of the most powerful retail franchises in Europe.

For the patient investor, here is what Żabka offers:

  • Europe's largest convenience store network — 12,339 stores in Poland and Romania at end-2025, growing at 1,300+ per year and targeting ~16,000 by 2028, with long-run AI-assessed potential for ~27,000 in the two markets
  • Poland's 7-Eleven — a brand that has achieved habitual daily usage from over 3 million Polish customers, with almost a third of the Polish population living within 300 metres of a store
  • PLN 27.2 billion in revenue and PLN 4.1 billion in adjusted EBITDA in 2025 — both growing consistently ahead of the Polish grocery market, driven by network expansion, like-for-like growth, and the Żabka Café street food rollout
  • Adjusted net profit up 78% in 2025, with net leverage falling to approximately 1.0× EBITDA — the balance sheet is clean, cash generation is strong, and the company has earned the right to begin returning capital to shareholders
  • First dividend announced: 50% of 2025 net profit to be distributed, with 50–70% in subsequent years — a commitment to shareholders that the business is entering its capital-return phase without sacrificing growth
  • ~9,000 Polish franchise partners running Żabka stores — small entrepreneurs whose livelihoods depend on the brand, whose alignment with Żabka's success is direct and personal, and whose 12-month investment payback period makes the franchise one of the most commercially attractive small-business propositions in Poland
  • Store payback period reduced from 20 months in 2017 to 12 months for stores opened in 2023 — evidence of improving unit economics as the supply chain, logistics, and data intelligence compound over time
  • Romania expansion via the Froo brand — a second growth runway in a market with an estimated 4,000-store long-run potential, providing a decade of additional compounding beyond Poland
  • IPO on the Warsaw Stock Exchange in October 2024 — the 4th largest in GPW history, bringing Poland's most visited retailer into the public equity market and making it accessible to every Polish investor as a stake in the company that serves them daily

Fides Polonia was built to find businesses that are embedded in the genuine fabric of daily Polish life — businesses that serve real families, generate real cash flows, and compound their advantage over time. Żabka is perhaps the purest expression of that principle in the entire Polish equity market. It is not a technology company with a promising future. It is not a commodity business with a cyclical thesis. It is a green shop on every corner that Polish families use every single day — backed by a franchise model that turns 9,000 Polish entrepreneurs into motivated partners, a data infrastructure that makes each new store more efficient than the last, and a management team that has consistently delivered on every commitment made to investors since the IPO. The little frog keeps jumping. We suggest you own a piece of it.

ZAB.WA · Warsaw Stock Exchange · WIG30 · IPO October 2024 · PLN 21.50 per share · 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. 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 Żabka Group S.A. investor relations, Żabka Group Annual Reports and quarterly filings 2024–2025, Warsaw Stock Exchange regulatory disclosures, OC&C Strategy Consultants market analysis, 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

Żabka na Każdym Rogu: Polska Odpowiedź na 7-Eleven

Istnieje test na to, czy marka osiągnęła kulturowe nasycenie: czy jej nazwa staje się czasownikiem? W Polsce słyszy się: „Skocz do Żabki" — tak samo jak „Google it" po angielsku. Żabka nie jest siecią sklepów. Jest nawykiem. A nawyki są najtrudniejszym rodzajem fosy do zbudowania — i najtrudniejszym do zniszczenia.

I. Przegląd Firmy

Od Siedmiu Sklepów w Poznaniu do Największego Europejskiego Imperium Convenience

Żabka Group S.A. (ZAB.WA, IPO październik 2024) prowadzi ponad 12 750 sklepów convenience w Polsce i ekspanduje na rynki europejskie, co czyni ją największą siecią convenience w Europie pod względem liczby sklepów. Założona w Poznaniu w 1998 roku przez Mariusza Świtalskiego, Żabka przeszła przez kolejnych właścicieli private equity — Penta Investments, MidEuropa, Ardian, CVC Capital Partners — z których każdy reinwestował w skalowanie modelu. CVC kontroluje 47,6% poprzez dwa podmioty luksemburskie; reszta jest w wolnym obrocie na GPW.

II. Skala

Fakty: Największa Sieć Convenience w Europie pod Względem Liczby Sklepów

12 750+ sklepów w Polsce (stan na marzec 2026). Ponad 1 300 nowych otwarć rocznie — trzy nowe sklepy każdego dnia. Obecność w ponad 1 100 polskich miastach. Kapitalizacja rynkowa: ~6,3 mld USD. Przychody TTM: ~7,2 mld USD. Model franczyzowy: ~9 000 polskich przedsiębiorców prowadzi sklepy Żabka jako franczyzobiorcy.

III. Model Franczyzowy

~9 000 Polskich Przedsiębiorców Prowadzących Najbardziej Rozpoznawalną Markę Polski

Model franczyzowy Żabki jest kluczem do jej skali: firma dostarcza sklep, towary, technologię i markę; franczyzobiorca zapewnia pracę i obsługę klienta. Dla polskiego mikroprzedsiębiorcy to niskie ryzyko wejścia do własnego biznesu z rozpoznawalnym szyldem. Dla Żabki oznacza to szybką ekspansję bez konieczności zatrudniania dziesiątek tysięcy pracowników na pełny etat. Efektem jest sieć, która czuje się lokalnie zakorzeniona w każdej dzielnicy, w której działa.

IV. Werdykt

Werdykt Fides Polonia

Zakup — Najszybciej Rosnąca Sieć Convenience w Europie. Żabka to marka wkomponowana w tkankę polskiego codziennego życia w sposób, którego żaden konkurent nie jest w stanie szybko replikować. Tempo wzrostu jest imponujące; ekonomika modelu franczyzowego jest sprawdzona; europejska ekspansja może stać się katalizatorem przeszacowania wartości. Dla inwestora szukającego ekspozycji na polskie wydatki konsumenckie i wzrost klasy średniej, Żabka jest oczywistą pozycją do rozważenia.

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

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