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Fides Polonia Capital Management · Equity Research · April 2026

Coca-Cola HBC AG

The Red Can That Arrived With Freedom · Poland's Favourite Beverage Partner Since 1992

CCH.L · London Stock Exchange · FTSE 100 · Headquarters: Zug, Switzerland · Operations: 29 Countries

Buy — Growth and Dividend: The Best of Both Worlds
€11.6B
Revenue
(FY2025)
€1.36B
Comparable
EBIT (2025)
€1.20
Dividend Per Share
+17% (2025)
760M
Consumers
Served
~1,800
Employees
in Poland
Return to Portfolio Prologue

The Red Can That Arrived With Freedom

In 1989, the Berlin Wall fell. In 1990, Poland held its first fully free elections. In 1991, the red-and-white cans began to arrive — not as a curiosity, not as a black-market luxury, but as a commercial enterprise, a direct foreign investment, and an unmistakable signal that Poland had rejoined the world of open markets. Coca-Cola was not merely the first major American consumer brand to invest seriously in post-communist Poland. It was, for millions of Polish consumers who encountered it that year, a symbol in a bottle: tangible proof that the transformation was real, that the isolation had ended, and that the Polish market was open for business.

Today, thirty-four years after that first investment, Coca-Cola products are produced and distributed across Poland by Coca-Cola HBC Polska — the Polish subsidiary of Coca-Cola HBC AG, the Swiss-headquartered, London-listed European bottler that is the third-largest Coca-Cola bottling partner in the world by volume. The same company operates three production facilities on Polish soil, employs approximately 1,800 people, has invested billions of złoty in Polish production infrastructure, and distributes the most recognised brand on earth to millions of Polish consumers every day.

At Fides Polonia, when we considered how to access the Coca-Cola brand as an investment, we faced a specific and deliberate choice: the parent company on the New York Stock Exchange, or the European bottler on the London Stock Exchange. We chose the bottler. This report explains why — and why we believe that choice gives us the combination of growth and income that neither option delivers alone.

There is something fitting about the fact that one of the most globalised brands in the world maintains its Polish operations as a local employer, a local taxpayer, and a local manufacturer. Globalisation has often meant the extraction of value from local economies without proportionate contribution. The Coca-Cola model in Poland inverts that pattern: a globally recognised brand, produced locally, employing Polish workers, paying Polish taxes, and investing in Polish infrastructure. Catholic Social Teaching has always distinguished between capital that serves the community and capital that merely passes through it. In Poland, the red can has, by any honest accounting, chosen the former. Cf. Centesimus Annus §43 · Pope John Paul II · "The market economy acknowledges the role of business profits, but profit is not the only indicator of a firm's condition."
I. History in Poland

1991 to 2026: Thirty-Four Years of Deepening Commitment

Coca-Cola's relationship with Poland began earlier than most people realise. The drink was first produced in Poland in 1972, through a limited licence arrangement during the communist era — but under central planning, Coca-Cola operated in just one zone of the country while Pepsi-Cola was licensed in the other. Neither brand was freely distributed. Neither constituted a genuine market presence. The real story begins in 1991, when direct investment commenced alongside Poland's political and economic transformation.

In 1992 — the year Coca-Cola HBC Polska's production journey formally began — the first factory opened in Radzymin, near Warsaw, initially employing just 200 workers. That same year, local production of Fanta Orange and Sprite commenced, and the first Coca-Cola coolers, display stands, and branded signage appeared in Polish shops and restaurants. By mid-1993, the company had opened new factories in Gdynia, Bydgoszcz, Warsaw, and Radzymin, with three more plants opening that summer — an investment pace that reflected not caution but conviction. Within a year of full commercial launch, Coca-Cola had become Poland's number-one soft drink seller, overtaking Pepsi, on the back of a $300 million investment commitment and sales growth of 157% in a single quarter.

1972
First Production
Limited communist-era licence · One zone only
1991–92
Real Entry
Direct investment begins · Radzymin factory · 200 workers
1993
Market Leader
Poland's #1 soft drink · $300M committed
2026
Deep Roots
3 plants · ~1,800 employees · PLN 1.85B capital

The network of production facilities has been rationalised and upgraded over the decades. Today, Coca-Cola HBC Polska operates three principal sites: the original Radzymin plant outside Warsaw, which remains the largest facility; the Staniątki plant near Niepołomice (adjacent to Kraków), which produces the full range of carbonated soft drinks for southern Poland; and the Tylicz Mineral Water Plant in Krynica-Zdrój in the Beskid mountains, which bottles the Kropla Beskidu mineral water brand under the Multivita acquisition — a brand with deep roots in the traditional spa culture of the Polish Carpathians. The company's Polish registered capital stands at PLN 1.85 billion, reflecting the cumulative scale of thirty-four years of physical investment in production assets on Polish soil.

II. Polish Operations

Three Plants, ~1,800 Employees, and the Most Recognised Brand in Every Polish Shop

Coca-Cola HBC Polska is headquartered at ul. Annopol 20 in Warsaw, within the broader business unit designated "Poland and Baltics" — a regional structure that integrates the Polish operation with parallel entities in Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. The Polish arm is by far the largest within this unit, both by revenue and by physical infrastructure. Its production network covers the country from north to south: Warsaw for the capital region and central Poland; Kraków for the south; and the Beskid highlands for mineral water production.

Radzymin · Near Warsaw
The original plant, opened 1992. The founding site of Coca-Cola HBC's Polish production. Produces the full range of Coca-Cola system carbonated beverages — Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, Fanta, Sprite, Schweppes, and others — for Warsaw and central Poland. The longest-running manufacturing site in the Polish system.
Founded 1992 · Core production site
Staniątki · Near Kraków
Serves southern and south-western Poland. Full carbonated soft drink production alongside juices and mineral water. Located near Niepołomice, in the industrial belt east of Kraków that has attracted major multinational manufacturing investment over the past three decades. Modern, high-capacity facility.
Southern Poland · Full CSDs + juice
Tylicz · Krynica-Zdrów
Dedicated mineral water plant in the Beskid Sądecki mountains, producing Kropla Beskidu — Poland's premium natural mineral water brand. Acquired through the Multivita purchase. The spring water from Tylicz has been recognised since the nineteenth century. Now one of the leading bottled water brands in Poland.
Mineral water · Beskid spring source · Krynica-Zdrój

Beyond manufacturing, Coca-Cola HBC Polska maintains a national distribution and sales network covering the entire country: every major supermarket chain, every convenience store (including Żabka, a fellow Fides Polonia holding), every petrol station forecourt, every restaurant and café. The product range served to Polish consumers extends well beyond the core sparkling beverages to include Powerade sports drinks, FuzeTea ready-to-drink tea, Cappy juices, Kinley tonic water, Costa Coffee ready-to-drink formats, and the Monster Energy range — the full "24/7" portfolio that Coca-Cola HBC deploys across all its markets.

Polish OperationsDetail
Headquarters Polandul. Annopol 20, Warsaw · Part of "Poland and Baltics" business unit
Employees in Poland~1,800 direct employees across manufacturing, distribution, sales, and administration
Production Plants3 — Radzymin (Warsaw), Staniątki (Kraków), Tylicz (Krynica-Zdrów)
Registered CapitalPLN 1.85 billion — the cumulative measure of physical investment since 1992
Parent EntityCC Beverages Holdings II B.V. → Coca-Cola HBC AG (Zug, Switzerland)
Key Brands in PolandCoca-Cola, Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, Fanta, Sprite, Powerade, FuzeTea, Cappy, Kinley, Schweppes, Kropla Beskidu, Costa Coffee RTD, Monster Energy
Market PositionLeading position in Polish carbonated soft drinks · Poland's largest single beverage system
Year of First Investment1991 — one of the earliest post-communist direct foreign investments in Poland
First Production Year1992 · Radzymin factory · 200 workers at opening
III. What Is Coca-Cola HBC?

The Third-Largest Coca-Cola Bottler in the World — and a FTSE 100 Company

To invest in Coca-Cola HBC is not to invest in the formula, the brand licence, or the concentrate business. Those belong to The Coca-Cola Company in Atlanta. To invest in Coca-Cola HBC is to invest in the physical act of bottling, distributing, and selling Coca-Cola's products across 29 countries stretching from Ireland to Egypt, from Switzerland to Nigeria. Coca-Cola HBC buys concentrate from The Coca-Cola Company, adds water and carbonation in its factories, packages the product, loads it onto trucks, and sells it to retailers across its territory. It is operationally intensive, capital-intensive, and deeply embedded in the local economies of its markets — none of which are standing still. All of them are growing.

Coca-Cola HBC AG is incorporated in Switzerland, listed on the London Stock Exchange under the ticker CCH, and a constituent of the FTSE 100 index — making it one of the hundred largest companies by market capitalisation on the London market. It is also listed on the Athens Stock Exchange and carries ADR listings in New York. The Coca-Cola Company itself holds a 21% stake in Coca-Cola HBC, aligning the interests of the parent brand with the performance of the European bottler. The Kar-Tess holding company (the vehicle of the Leventis family, the founding Greek bottling dynasty) holds a further 23%. The remaining 56% is freely traded public float.

Coca-Cola HBC's Geographic Segments — Why the Mix Matters: Coca-Cola HBC divides its 29 markets into three segments: Established (Western Europe — Switzerland, Ireland, Italy, Austria, Greece, Northern Ireland), Developing (Central and Eastern Europe — Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia, Croatia, Serbia, and others), and Emerging (Africa and the former CIS — Nigeria, Egypt, Armenia, Moldova, and others). Poland sits in the Developing segment, a classification that reflects per-capita consumption levels still well below Western European norms — meaning meaningful structural growth remains ahead. In 2025, the Developing segment delivered 6.1% organic revenue growth; the Emerging segment grew 13.2%. This is not a company selling to saturated markets.
IV. Financial Analysis

Five Consecutive Years of Strong Growth — and a Dividend Rising at 17%

Coca-Cola HBC delivered its fifth consecutive year of strong financial performance in 2025, with reported revenue growing 7.9% to €11.6 billion and comparable EBIT — the company's primary earnings metric — rising 13.8% on a reported basis and 11.5% on an organic basis to €1.36 billion. Comparable EPS grew 19.7% to €2.72, and the Board proposed a full-year dividend of €1.20 per share, an increase of 17% — the sixth consecutive year of dividend growth. Free cash flow, despite a step-up in capital expenditure, held firm at €700 million, and the balance sheet remains conservative with net debt to comparable adjusted EBITDA at just 0.7 times.

MetricFY2025Year-on-Year
Reported Revenue€11,604.5 million+7.9% reported · +8.1% organic
Comparable EBIT€1,356.2 million+13.8% reported · +11.5% organic
Comparable EBIT Margin11.7%+60 basis points YoY
Comparable Gross Margin36.8%+70 basis points YoY
Comparable EPS€2.72+19.7% YoY
Free Cash Flow€700 millionResilient despite higher CapEx
ROIC19.4%+100 basis points YoY
Net Debt / Adj. EBITDA0.7×Conservative leverage — balance sheet strength
Dividend Per Share€1.20 proposed+17% · 44% payout ratio
NARTD Value Share+80 bpsSixth consecutive year of market share gains
Volume (unit cases)2.9 billionGrowth across Sparkling and Energy categories
~€22B
Market Capitalisation (April 2026)
~16×
Forward P/E (2026E) — at significant discount to KO
~3%
Approximate Dividend Yield (at current price)
6–7%
Medium-Term Organic Revenue Growth Target
V. The Investment Choice

Why We Chose the Bottler Over the Brand: Growth Plus Income

The Coca-Cola Company (NYSE: KO) is one of the most celebrated dividend investments in American financial history. It has raised its dividend for 63 consecutive years. It owns the most recognised brand on earth. It trades at a premium valuation that reflects its status as one of the world's permanent consumer staples franchises. Fides Polonia holds it in the highest regard.

We did not buy it. We bought the bottler instead — and the reasoning is precise. Coca-Cola HBC operates in markets where per-capita consumption of soft drinks remains well below Western norms and continues to grow. Its Developing segment, which includes Poland, is producing 6% annual organic revenue growth. Its Emerging segment — Nigeria, Egypt, and after the 2025 acquisition of Coca-Cola Beverages Africa, the broader African continent — is growing at 13% organically. The Coca-Cola Company, by contrast, derives the majority of its earnings from mature, high-per-capita markets in North America and Western Europe, where volume growth is modest and the growth story is largely one of price and mix. Morningstar explicitly flags "secular headwinds in carbonated soft drink demand in developed markets" as a challenge to KO's long-term growth outlook.

Our Choice
Coca-Cola HBC AG · CCH.L
2025 Revenue Growth+7.9% reported / +8.1% organic
EPS Growth (2025)+19.7%
Dividend Growth (2025)+17%
Dividend Yield~3%
Forward P/E (2026E)~16×
Net Debt / EBITDA0.7×
Market ExposureCEE + Africa — structural growth
Medium-Term Rev. Target6–7% organic growth
The Alternative
The Coca-Cola Company · KO
2025 Revenue Growth+3% reported / +12% organic
EPS Growth (2025)~+7–8% guided
Dividend Growth (5Y CAGR)+4.6%
Dividend Yield~2.7%
Forward P/E (2026E)~23×
Dividend Payout Ratio67% (above 100% on cash basis)
Market ExposurePrimarily North America & W. Europe
Morningstar Fair Value$66 — trading ~18% above fair value

The comparison is, in our judgement, unambiguous at current prices. Coca-Cola HBC offers faster organic revenue growth, faster EPS growth, faster dividend growth, a higher dividend yield, a lower valuation multiple, and a far more conservative balance sheet — all in a single stock. It provides the brand security of the Coca-Cola system (The Coca-Cola Company holds 21% and is a commercial partner, not a competitor) alongside the operational exposure to the faster-growing markets in Central and Eastern Europe and Africa where the per-capita consumption runway is longest. It is, in the specific terminology of Fides Polonia's investment framework, the combination of growth and income that the US parent, at its current premium valuation, cannot match.

The Africa Expansion — A Decade-Long Growth Catalyst: In October 2025, Coca-Cola HBC announced the acquisition of a 75% stake in Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (CCBA) for $2.6 billion, with a path to full ownership. CCBA is the largest Coca-Cola bottler on the African continent, operating across more than ten African countries including South Africa. This transaction, expected to close by end-2026, is strategically transformative: Africa is the world's youngest and fastest-growing consumer population, with per-capita soft drink consumption far below the global average. Coca-Cola HBC's CEO Zoran Bogdanović has described it as the company's most significant strategic move since the formation of the modern group. For Fides Polonia, the acquisition adds a long-duration growth asset to an already-growing portfolio — extending the compound growth runway of this investment by a decade or more.
VI. Risk Factors

What Could Go Wrong

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

  • Currency risk across 29 markets. Coca-Cola HBC reports in euros but earns revenues in a wide range of currencies — Polish złoty, Nigerian naira, Egyptian pound, Romanian leu, and many others. Currency depreciation in emerging markets, particularly Africa after the CCBA acquisition, can erode reported revenue and earnings even when underlying operational performance is strong.
  • CCBA acquisition integration risk. The acquisition of Coca-Cola Beverages Africa is the largest in the company's modern history. Integration complexity, operational challenges in African markets, and the capital required to close and finance the transaction all represent execution risk. If CCBA underperforms expectations, it could weigh on group earnings and leverage metrics.
  • Input cost inflation. Sugar, aluminium, PET plastic, and energy are the principal cost inputs for a beverage bottler. Spikes in commodity prices — as seen in 2021 and 2022 — compress gross margins even when revenue growth is strong. Coca-Cola HBC hedges these exposures, but hedging has a finite horizon and sustained commodity inflation eventually reaches the income statement.
  • Sugar and health regulation. Several of Coca-Cola HBC's markets have introduced or are considering sugar taxes on carbonated soft drinks. Regulatory pressure on high-sugar beverages — driven by public health concerns — could reduce volumes in core product categories, though the company's portfolio expansion into Coca-Cola Zero Sugar, water, energy, and coffee partially mitigates this.
  • Geopolitical exposure. Coca-Cola HBC's geography includes markets with elevated geopolitical risk — Ukraine, Belarus, Russia (from which the company has effectively withdrawn), and parts of Africa. Conflict, sanctions, or political instability in any major market can result in impairment charges, asset write-offs, or revenue loss.
  • Dependence on The Coca-Cola Company. Coca-Cola HBC operates under a franchise agreement with The Coca-Cola Company. Any deterioration in that relationship, adverse renegotiation of concentrate pricing, or strategic shift by the Atlanta parent could affect the terms under which the bottling business operates. The Coca-Cola Company's 21% stake provides strong alignment, but the franchise structure is not unconditional.
VII. Investment Conclusion

The Fides Polonia Verdict

Fides Polonia Capital Management · Written by Daniel Chojnowski · April 2026
Buy — The Brand the World Knows, the Growth the Market Undervalues

In 1991, when Coca-Cola first planted its investment in post-communist Poland, it was making a statement about the future of this country: that free markets worked, that consumer demand was real, and that Polish citizens deserved access to the same products as people in Frankfurt and Chicago. That statement has been validated many times over. Three Polish factories, approximately 1,800 Polish employees, and billions of złoty in accumulated investment later, the red can is as Polish as kielbasa. It is in every Żabka, every supermarket, every café, and every office vending machine in the country.

For the patient investor, here is what Coca-Cola HBC offers:

  • The world's most recognised brand — Coca-Cola — distributed across 29 countries to 760 million consumers, with the security of a franchise backed by The Coca-Cola Company's own 21% equity stake in the bottler
  • Poland since 1992 — three production plants, ~1,800 employees, PLN 1.85 billion in registered capital, and market leadership in carbonated soft drinks: a deep, three-decade commitment to Polish manufacturing and Polish jobs
  • €11.6 billion in revenue in 2025, growing at 8.1% organically — the fifth consecutive year of strong growth under CEO Zoran Bogdanović's leadership, with market share gains for the sixth year in a row
  • Comparable EPS of €2.72, up 19.7% — earnings growing materially faster than revenue, reflecting operational leverage, margin expansion, and disciplined cost management
  • Dividend of €1.20 per share proposed for 2025 — an increase of 17%, yielding approximately 3% at current prices, with a conservative 44% payout ratio that leaves ample room for continued growth
  • A balance sheet with net debt at just 0.7× EBITDA — the financial discipline of a company that generates strong free cash flow, allocates capital carefully, and enters the CCBA acquisition from a position of strength
  • Structural exposure to Central and Eastern Europe (Poland, Romania, Hungary, Czech Republic and others) where per-capita soft drink consumption is growing toward but still well below Western European levels — a multi-decade volume growth tailwind
  • The CCBA acquisition — 75% of Coca-Cola Beverages Africa, the continent's largest Coca-Cola bottler, agreed October 2025 for $2.6 billion — adding Africa's billion-consumer growth market to an already-growing portfolio
  • Valued at approximately 16× forward earnings — a meaningful discount to The Coca-Cola Company's 23× forward P/E — despite faster EPS growth, faster dividend growth, higher yield, and lower leverage

Fides Polonia does not invest in the Coca-Cola brand on nostalgia or sentiment. We invest in it because the bottler that brings the brand to Central Europe and Africa — at 16 times earnings, growing organically at 8%, raising its dividend by 17%, with a 0.7× leverage ratio — is one of the most compelling combinations of quality, growth, and income available to the patient investor in the European equity universe today. The Coca-Cola Company in Atlanta is a magnificent institution. But at 23 times earnings with modest volume growth and a dividend payout that has exceeded free cash flow, it is priced as the certainty it represents. Coca-Cola HBC is priced as if its growth markets do not count, its Africa expansion does not matter, and its five consecutive years of strong earnings delivery are a coincidence. We disagree on all three counts.

CCH.L · London Stock Exchange · FTSE 100 · Also: ATHEX: EEE · ADR: CCHGY · 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. Currency movements, commodity price changes, acquisition integration risk, and geopolitical events may affect Coca-Cola HBC's reported results materially. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The comparison with The Coca-Cola Company (NYSE: KO) is provided for analytical context only and does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell KO shares. Investors should conduct their own due diligence or consult a qualified, licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions. All statistics are sourced from Coca-Cola HBC AG investor relations, Coca-Cola HBC Annual Reports and full-year results announcements 2024–2025, London Stock Exchange regulatory disclosures, 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

Czerwona Puszka, Która Przybyła z Wolnością

Istnieje pewien rodzaj zaangażowania marki, którego nie można kupić za pomocą budżetu reklamowego: emocjonalne skojarzenie produktu z wolnością. W Polsce rok 1991 — rok wejścia Coca-Coli — jest rokiem transformacji, optimizmu i zachodniej kultury po dziesięcioleciach komunistycznych ograniczeń. Czerwona puszka była symbolem. Trzydzieści cztery lata później symbol ten stał się nawykiem, a nawyk stał się dominacją rynkową.

I. Przegląd Firmy

1991–2026: Trzydzieści Cztery Lata Pogłębiającego się Zaangażowania

Coca-Cola HBC AG (CCH.LN, FTSE 100) jest jednym z największych butelkowników Coca-Coli na świecie, obsługującym 29 krajów i ponad 715 milionów konsumentów. Spółka jest notowana w Londynie i wchodzi w skład FTSE 100, co czyni ją dostępną dla globalnych inwestorów instytucjonalnych. W Polsce prowadzi trzy zakłady produkcyjne i zatrudnia ponad 1 800 pracowników.

II. Operacje w Polsce

Trzy Zakłady, ~1 800 Pracowników i Najbardziej Rozpoznawalna Marka w Każdym Polskim Sklepie

Zakłady Coca-Coli HBC w Polsce produkują pełne portfolio napojów — w tym Coca-Colę, Fanta, Sprite, wodę Vitalia oraz rozwijające się marki napojów energetycznych i napojów dla dorosłych. Polska jest jednym z kluczowych rynków w portfelu europejskim spółki, charakteryzującym się wysokim wolumenem, rosnącą klasą średnią i silnymi tendencjami w kategorii premium.

III. Wyniki Finansowe

Pięć Kolejnych Lat Silnego Wzrostu — i Dywidenda Rosnąca o 17%

Coca-Cola HBC wykazała pięć kolejnych lat wzrostu przychodów, marż i dywidendy. Strategia cenowania premium — przesunięcie konsumentów w kierunku droższych produktów, mniejszych formatów opakowań o wyższej marży i nowych kategorii takich jak alkohole gotowe do spożycia — jest kluczowym czynnikiem napędowym wzrostu marży. Dywidenda rośnie w tempie 17% rocznie.

IV. Strategia Inwestycyjna

Dlaczego Wybraliśmy Butelkownika, a Nie Markę: Wzrost Plus Dochód

The Coca-Cola Company (KO.NYSE) jest właścicielem marki i receptur; Coca-Cola HBC produkuje, butelkuje i dystrybuuje napoje w ramach umów franczyzowych. Butelkownik oferuje coś, czego główna firma nie oferuje: operacyjny dźwignik na wzrost wolumenu i cenowania w poszczególnych regionach, w połączeniu z dywidendą rosnącą w tempie, które odzwierciedla realne zyski operacyjne — a nie jedynie politykę zwrotu kapitału dla akcjonariuszy.

V. Werdykt

Werdykt Fides Polonia

Zakup — Wzrost i Dywidenda: Najlepsze z Obydwu Światów. Coca-Cola HBC nie jest najtańszą spółką w naszym portfelu — handluje z premią, odzwierciedlającą siłę marki i konsekwencję wyników. Ale w zamian oferuje dywidendę rosnącą w tempie 17%, ekspozycję na jeden z najbardziej wartościowych portfeli marek napojów na świecie i bezpośrednią obecność produkcyjną w Polsce. Dla inwestora szukającego wzrostu dywidendy i stabilności, jest to przekonująca kombinacja.

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