1. At a Glance
Orient Paper & Industries Ltd (OPIL) – once the pride of the CK Birla Group, now feels like the ghost of its own glorious past. The company, incorporated in 1936, has seen it all — world wars, license raj, liberalization, and now, the tissue paper wars of modern India. But this quarter, it’s not wiping away anyone’s tears.
For Q2 FY26, OPIL reported sales of ₹200 crore, down 4% QoQ and 8% YoY, and a loss of ₹31 crore (yes, with a minus sign). The operating margin (OPM) collapsed to -16%, proving that even in the paper industry, profit margins can vanish faster than a college student’s attendance record.
The market cap stands at ₹493 crore, trading at a modest ₹23.2 per share, barely 0.32 times book value. But before you think it’s a bargain — hold that thought. The company carries ₹255 crore of debt, a ROE of -3%, and a ROCE of -2.6%. It’s not quite “rags to riches” — more like “pulp to pain.”
In short: Orient Paper is in a bind — quite literally.
2. Introduction
There was a time when “Orient Paper” meant premium quality notebooks, crisp printing sheets, and classy packaging. Now, it’s struggling to stay relevant in a world that’s turning paperless faster than you can say “digital India.”
In FY24, the company clocked ₹887 crore in revenue and a loss of ₹25 crore, reflecting a business that’s hanging by a bamboo fiber. Its tissue paper division once boasted India’s first high-quality virgin tissue line — now, it’s fighting imported brands and a fickle domestic demand curve that swings with every festive season.
Let’s not forget — OPIL is a CK Birla Group company, a conglomerate worth $2.9 billion that also houses heavyweights like Orient Cement and BirlaSoft. Yet, while its siblings went corporate, OPIL seems stuck in a 1980s government tender file.
And Q2 FY26 results only deepened the saga. Sales down, profits gone, margins bleeding — and management still optimistic about “efficiency improvements.” The only efficiency visible right now is in evaporating shareholder wealth: a 40% share price fall in one year.
Feeling nostalgic for your old school notebooks yet?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
At its core, Orient Paper manufactures paper and chemicals. But that’s like saying a restaurant “makes food” — technically true, but painfully vague.
Here’s the real breakdown:
- Writing & Printing Papers: High-bulk, virgin pulp-based sheets for books, notebooks, and packaging. Great for anyone who still uses pen and paper.
- Tissue Papers: Under the brands Orient Natura and Orient Bamboo Natura, the company makes premium, chlorine-free tissues that target wellness and hygiene markets.
- Chemicals Division: Produces caustic soda, chlorine, hydrochloric acid, bleaching powder, and other industrial chemicals — basically, a side hustle in chemistry class.
Product Revenue Mix FY24:
- Pulp, Paper & Board: 80%
- Caustic Soda (Lye): 9%
- Caustic Soda Flakes: 4%