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Uflex Ltd: ₹15,283 Cr Sales, ₹871 Cr Forex Loss – Packaging King with Drama Wrapped Inside


1. At a Glance

Uflex is basically the Ambani of plastic wraps—every time you open a packet of chips, chances are you’re staring at their handiwork. From holograms that scream “don’t copy me, bro” to films that could probably survive a nuclear blast, they make it all. With 16 factories spread across continents, they’ve got more packaging lines than a desi wedding buffet has food counters. But beneath the glossy plastic lies a story: forex losses of ₹871 Cr, tax raids worth ₹149 Cr, and debt swelling faster than a samosa at 6 p.m. chai time.


2. Introduction

Picture this: You buy a packet of biscuits, tear it open, and eat. The crumbs? Gone. The wrapper? Forever. That’s Uflex’s legacy—making packaging that lasts longer than relationships on Instagram.

Founded in 1983, Uflex went from being a Delhi-based film maker (no, not Bollywood, actual plastic film) to a multinational packaging giant. They are in 150 countries, serving Coca-Cola, Nestlé, P&G, and Amul. Basically, if your snack is fancy enough to have a shiny wrapper, Uflex probably touched it.

But all is not fun and foil. Their debt ballooned from ₹1,543 Cr (FY22) to ₹8,353 Cr (FY25). The taxman knocked, slapped a ₹149 Cr demand, and then Egypt and Nigeria currency fluctuations handed them an ₹871 Cr forex loss—mostly “notional,” says management, which is corporate-speak for “bhool jao, cash gaya nahi… abhi.”

So while the business is solid and margins decent, Uflex is fighting battles on multiple fronts: debt, taxes, currency swings, and yes, competition from cheaper Asian players.

Question to readers: Do you think “forex losses” should just be renamed “excuses department” in annual reports?


3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)

Simple version: Uflex makes packaging films and the fancy packaging that goes on your chocolates, biscuits, detergents, juices, and medicines. Complex version:

  • Packaging Films (62%) – Think of this as the “core”—BOPET, BOPP, CPP films. They also launched recyclable and post-consumer recycled films. Basically, plastic with a conscience.
  • Value Added Products (38%)
    a) Flexible Packaging (29%) – Pouches, sachets, liquid packs, holography. Uflex is like the Aadhaar of brand security—hard to copy.
    b) Engineering (3%) – They build packaging machinery too, because why not sell the weapon and the war?
    c) Chemicals/Inks (6%) – They make their own inks and adhesives, with 62,000 MTPA capacity. Ink-stained hands, but in bulk.

Client list includes Nestlé, PepsiCo, ITC, Britannia. Their top 5 customers = 20% of revenue. Which means if Amul stops making butter, Uflex will start sweating butter.

Global spread: India (46%), Americas (19%), Europe (17%), MEA (16%), Others (2%). Truly everywhere—probably even on your birthday cake wrapper.


4. Financials Overview (YoY & QoQ)

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (Jun’25)YoY Qtr (Jun’24)Prev Qtr (Mar’25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue₹3,901 Cr₹3,654 Cr₹3,814 Cr6.8%2.3%
EBITDA₹454 Cr₹408 Cr₹410 Cr11.3%10.7%
PAT₹58 Cr-₹98 Cr₹169 CrNA-65.7%
EPS (₹)8.0-13.623.3NA-65.6%

Commentary:

  • Revenue steady like your neighborhood kirana—always growing a little.
  • EBITDA margin improved (12%) thanks to cost discipline.
  • PAT crashed QoQ because forex losses & tax effects don’t care about your packaging dreams.
  • EPS swings more than Sensex on Budget day.

5. Valuation (Fair Value Range)

Let’s crunch:

  • EPS (TTM) = ₹41.4
  • Current Price = ₹544
  • P/E = 13.1 (vs industry ~22.8).

Method 1: P/E Valuation
If re-rated to industry median 20–22× → FV = ₹828 – ₹910.

Method 2: EV/EBITDA
EV = ₹11,115 Cr; EBITDA (FY25) = ~₹1,710 Cr → EV/EBITDA = 6.5.
Peers trade at 10–12× → FV range = ₹850 – ₹1,000.

Method 3: DCF (simplified)
Assume EBITDA growth 10%, discount rate 12%, terminal growth 4%. FV per share = ~₹750 – ₹880.

👉 Consolidated FV Range: ₹750 – ₹950
Disclaimer: Educational purposes only, not investment advice.


6. What’s Cooking – News, Triggers, Drama

  • Capex Galore – ₹280 Cr in Q1FY25. Egypt PET chips plant (USD 68m), Mexico CPP line (USD 37m). Clearly, they like expansion more than paying off debt.
  • Tax Drama – ₹149 Cr demand post IT
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