1. At a Glance
If wood could talk, Greenpanel’s MDF boards would probably whisper, “Bhai, thoda break de.” The MDF mogul of India, with a market cap of ₹3,321 crore and current price of ₹271, just saw its Q2FY26 numbers slide harder than a Delhi boy’s DMs post-IPL season. Revenue stood at ₹395.97 crore, up 17.5% YoY but profits? Vanished. The company clocked a net loss of ₹6.12 crore this quarter, compared to a ₹70.74 crore profit same time last year — a 133% fall that even plywood termites would find extreme.
The Operating Profit Margin shrunk to 6.26%, from 17.31% last year — because foreign exchange losses of ₹23.9 crore ate the MDF faster than a Chennai cyclone could disrupt the Andhra plant.
Meanwhile, the Debt to Equity rose to 0.30, ROCE halved to 4.48%, and ROE fell to 5.34%. The story of Greenpanel in FY26 is less about expansion and more about how “largest MDF plant in Asia” came with equally large headaches.
Yet, this is India’s MDF monarch, commanding a 27% market share in the organized segment and an unmatched dealer network of 2,300 distributors and 12,000 retailers. So the question isn’t whether Greenpanel can survive — it’s how stylishly it can sand down the rough patches.
2. Introduction
Once upon a plywood, Greenpanel Industries was born out of Greenply’s demerger drama in 2019 — like a spin-off show nobody thought would outshine the original, but somehow did. With its shiny MDF empire stretching across Uttarakhand and Andhra Pradesh, the company makes boards that go into your kitchens, offices, and possibly that overpriced coffee table you regret buying.
But FY26 has been more “Greenpainel” than Greenpanel. Forex losses from ECB loans, a CIO resignation mid-year, and a DGGI search at corporate offices have given investors enough masala for a corporate soap opera.
Still, the company doesn’t lack ambition. Its ₹600 crore capex plan aims to boost MDF capacity by another 2.31 lakh CBM, taking total MDF muscle to nearly 8.9 lakh CBM once fully online. Commercial production at the new Tirupati (AP) plant began in March 2025 — supposedly Asia’s largest MDF facility.
However, with demand volatility, high costs, and an unfortunate cyclone named Michaung that didn’t read Greenpanel’s production schedule, the numbers have temporarily taken a hit.
But let’s not forget — this is India’s only Ecolabelled MDF brand. In an era when everyone’s pretending to be sustainable, Greenpanel’s actually doing it — even if profits aren’t quite following the same green trend.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Alright, picture this. You’re at a fancy furniture showroom admiring that smooth, matte-finish table. Chances are, that board’s been through Greenpanel’s machines.
The company manufactures MDF (Medium Density Fibreboard), plywood, veneers, wood floors, and doors — but 90% of its revenue comes from MDF alone. The rest is plywood, which is kind of like that younger sibling still figuring out life.
The MDF business is basically compressed wood fibres treated to become strong, durable, and termite-resistant — the IKEA-style panel for India’s swelling urban interiors market. It’s cheaper than solid wood but can look like it, making it a darling for builders and furniture brands alike.
And while the domestic market contributes ~89% of revenue, exports (mainly MDF) form around 11%.
Its operations are anchored by two massive plants:
- Pantnagar, Uttarakhand: 2.16 lakh CBM MDF + 10.5 million sqm plywood capacity.
- Chittoor, Andhra Pradesh: 4.44 lakh CBM MDF, the biggest MDF plant in Asia.
Add to that the company’s growing line of premium and moisture-resistant MDF (perfect for kitchens and bathrooms) and you’ve got a company that knows exactly which side of the