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Maybe you are polishing with white pads and cloths. If you remove enough material, you will see the color of the single stage paint on the pad or cloth you are using, because that is the color of the paint, and removal of material WILL transfer color.Interestingly enough, color transfer to a buffing pad can confirm single stage paint, but the absence of color transfer does not necessarily mean that it's not single stage.
I confirmed this recently with my single stage white Toyota (~14 years old), which (so far anyway) has not shown any color transfer, but I verified it is single stage by calling toyota and talking to a paint specialist who verified it's single stage by the VIN . Others have had the same experience, with confirmed single stage paint but no color transfer.
I'm not saying I'll *never* see color transfer, just that I (and others) have buffed and not seen any on paint that was in generally good to excellent condition to start with. It's strange and goes against all that I had previously read, but it is what it is.
So the OP may want to call the manufacturer with your VIN number handy, and ask to talk to a paint expert. No guarantees it will work since some customer service is just not very helpful, but worth a try.