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Supreme Petrochem Q3 FY26 – EPS Slumps 72% QoQ, Margins Back to Reality, ₹1,200+ Cr Capex Storm Brewing


1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss the Margin Collapse

Supreme Petrochem is that one petrochemical stock which behaved like a crypto coin during COVID—suddenly margins went from boring single digits to Bollywood blockbuster levels, and now reality has slapped everyone back into petrochemical adulthood. The stock trades around ₹508, down ~37% in 6 months, with a market cap of ₹9,522 Cr, yet still flaunts a P/E of ~35x—yes, for a commodity-linked styrenics business. Latest Q3 FY26 numbers show sales of ₹1,265 Cr (-10% YoY) and PAT of just ₹30 Cr (-50% YoY). EPS for the quarter came in at a humble ₹1.60, making long-term holders question their life choices.

Despite the carnage, the balance sheet remains clean with debt-to-equity of just 0.06, ROCE ~23%, and a dividend yield of ~2%. Meanwhile, management is busy spending money like a stressed wedding planner—₹350–400 Cr annual capex, a ₹800 Cr greenfield Haryana project, and a shiny ABS plant that was commissioned and then… temporarily suspended. Confused? Good. Let’s dive in.


2. Introduction – From Pandemic Rockstar to Normal Human Being

Supreme Petrochem is a classic case study in why investors should never extrapolate abnormal margins into eternity. During FY21–FY22, global styrene shortages, COVID shutdowns, and supply chaos turned Supreme Petrochem into a margin monster—OPM shot up to 18–21%, ROCE touched the moon, and everyone suddenly discovered “pricing power”.

Fast forward to FY24–FY26, and guess what? Commodity cycles remembered their job description. Margins cooled to 7–10%, volumes became choppy, and profits started looking like a government bond—safe but boring. Except the stock price didn’t get the memo and continued to trade like it’s still 2021.

The real story now isn’t polystyrene. It’s ABS. Management wants to move from “plastic dabba supplier” to “engineering polymer player”. The logic is solid, the execution is expensive, and the timing… well, debatable.

So the big question: is Supreme Petrochem building the next growth engine, or just burning shareholder cash with polymer dreams?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Imagine Supreme Petrochem as the backbone supplier of all things white, light, and plastic.

Their core products:

  • Polystyrene (PS) – used in appliances, packaging, consumer goods
  • Expandable Polystyrene (EPS) – thermocol, insulation, packaging
  • XPS Boards – insulation boards (they’re the only producer in India)
  • Compounds & Masterbatches – customized plastic mixes

They command ~50% market share in domestic PS and EPS. Sounds sexy, but remember—styrene monomer prices decide your fate, not branding.

The next chapter is ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene):

  • Higher margin
  • Used in automobiles, electronics, appliances
  • Licensed tech from Versalis (ENI Group)

Phase 1 of 70,000 TPA ABS was commissioned in Sep 2025, but production was suspended in Dec 2025—a polite corporate way of saying “teething issues”.

So yes, the business is shifting from commodity to specialty—but the road is expensive, bumpy, and very capex-heavy.


4. Financials Overview – Numbers Don’t Lie, They Just Humiliate

📊 Quarterly Comparison (Standalone, ₹ Cr)

Source table
MetricLatest Q3 FY26Q3 FY25Q2 FY26YoY %QoQ %
Revenue1,2651,4051,100-10.0%+15.0%
EBITDA699978-30.3%-11.5%
PAT307148-57.7%-37.5%
EPS (₹)1.603.792.56-57.8%-37.5%

Margin commentary:

  • OPM slid to ~5%, lowest in years
  • Raw material pressure +
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