GRP Ltd: From Scrap Tyres to Soaring Profits—Is This Reclaim Rubber Stock Overheated?

📌 At a Glance

GRP Ltd. is India’s reclaim rubber king, transforming end-of-life tyres into a sustainable substitute for virgin rubber. Over the past five years (FY21–FY25), revenue climbed from ~₹280 Cr to ~₹550 Cr (+96 %), while EBITDA margins expanded from ~6 % to ~12 %. Profitability exploded—EPS jumped from ~₹3 to ~₹57—and ROCE surged from 2 % to 17 %. In short, GRP turned “waste” into waste not profit. But is this environmental hero stock fully priced, or can reclaim rubber continue reclaiming upside?


1) About GRP Ltd.

  • Incorporated: 1974
  • Headquarters: Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh
  • Core Business (≈ 89 % of revenue):
    • Reclaim Rubber: Recycling used tyres, tubes, and rubber waste into crumb rubber and reclaim rubber for tyre manufacturers, conveyor belts, and automotive components.
  • Other Verticals:
    • Upscaled polyamides (nylon waste → engineering plastics)
    • Engineered products: Die-cut components (e.g., gaskets, fuel tubes) from end-of-life tyres
  • Global Reach: Supplies reclaim rubber to 8 of the top 10 tyre manufacturers worldwide—EVEN Michelin can’t live without GRP’s crumb.
  • Manufacturing Footprint:
    • Kanpur Unit: Two reclaim rubber lines (16 TPD combined)
    • Baddi Unit (Himachal Pradesh): Technical collaboration for engineering plastics & die-cut products
  • Sustainability: Zero liquid discharge, ISO 9001 & ISO 14001 certified, converting millions of end-of-life tyres into circular economy inputs.

Tagline: “GRP: Where used tyres breathe (new) life, and investors breathe easy profits.”


2) Key Managerial Personnel (FY25)

NameDesignationFY25 Remuneration
Mr. Govind PoddarChairman & Managing Director₹2.3 Cr
Mr. Vivek RikhiramChief Executive Officer (Kanpur)₹1.2 Cr
Mr. Sunil AgrawalChief Financial Officer₹0.8 Cr
Mr. Rakesh KumarExecutive Director (Baddi Plant)₹0.6 Cr
Dr. Anuradha SinghIndependent Director₹ 15 Lac

Insight: Leadership has steered GRP through multiple cycles of raw-material price fluctuations, stepped up capacity every time margins peaked, and kept the balance sheet rock-solid.


3) Financial Performance (FY21–FY25)

3.1 Revenue & Profit Trends

Fiscal YearRevenue (₹ Cr)YoY Growth (%)OPM (%)PAT (₹ Cr)EPS (₹)
FY212806 %23.15
FY22388+38.6 %6 %610.87
FY23451+16.2 %6 %1426.32
FY24461+2.2 %11 %2342.72
FY25550+19.3 %12 %3157.56
  1. Revenue Surge (+96 % over five years)
    • FY21–FY22: Jump from ₹280 Cr to ₹388 Cr (+38.6 %) as large tyre producers began aggressively outsourcing reclaim rubber to conserve cost and comply with sustainability mandates.
    • FY22–FY23: Continued growth (+16 %) as GRP added a second line in Kanpur and inked new long-term contracts with international tyre majors.
    • FY24: Revenue plateaued (only +2 %) because existing lines ran at full capacity and Baddi plant ramp-up faced minor delays.
    • FY25: Vroom—revenue leaped to ₹550 Cr (+19 %) as Baddi engineering plastics and die-cut verticals hit stride, and new Kanpur line (online late FY24) doubled crumb capacity.
  2. Operating Margin (“Mojo Mile”)
    • FY21–FY23 (~6 %): Commodity crush—volatile natural rubber pricing and energy
    • costs (furnaces, autoclaves) left OPM pegged near 6 %.
    • FY24: Margin expansion to ~11 % driven by:
      • Higher capacity utilization (fixed overheads spread thinner)
      • Better product mix (more premium reclaim grades → >₹150 per kg vs. ₹100 / kg in FY21)
      • Operational efficiencies (steam-based reclaim process reduced coal usage by ~15 %).
    • FY25: Further expansion to ~12 %—GRP effectively passed on incremental energy costs to clients, and specialty die-cut products offered ~18 % EBITDA.
  1. Pat on the Back (PAT & EPS Growth)
    • FY21: Modest PAT ₹2 Cr (EPS ₹3.15) during COVID hangover.
    • FY22: PAT → ₹6 Cr (EPS ₹10.87) as volumes doubled.
    • FY23: PAT → ₹14 Cr (EPS ₹26.32) thanks to Kanpur II line commissioning.
    • FY24: PAT → ₹23 Cr (EPS ₹42.72)—new Baddi vertical kicked in, boosting non-reclaim profits.
    • FY25: PAT → ₹31 Cr (EPS ₹57.56)—record high, even as energy inflation spiked 25 %.

Quick Take: GRP’s EPS CAGR from ₹3 to ₹57 over five years is the “reclaim rocket investors dream of—rooted in capex discipline and global demand for sustainable rubber.


3.2 Quarterly Performance (Q1 FY24 – Q4 FY25)

QuarterSales (₹ Cr)OPM (%)PAT (₹ Cr)YoY PAT Var. (%)
Q1 FY2413816 %12+200 %
Q2 FY2412610 %4+ Euro 18 X
Q3 FY241327 %3+100 %
Q4 FY2413210 %13+225 %
Q1 FY2516020 %19+ 58 %
Q2 FY2514810 %40 %
Q3 FY251327 %30 %
Q4 FY2513210 %130 %
  • Q1 FY24 “Margin Madness” (16 % OPM): Reclaim rubber priced at a 10 % premium, minimal competition from European suppliers (logistics turmoil).
  • Q1 FY25 “Peak Powder” (20 % OPM): New Kanpur line contributed only in Q1; specialty engineering plastics (zero MBM) added to kitty.
  • Subsequent Quarters (7 %–10 % OPM): Seasonal slide as tyre-manufacturer orders stabilized; energy costs increased; Baddi plant ramped at 60 % utilization.

Insight: GRP’s quarterly NPV swings show “capex seasonality”—high margins post-commissioning, then normalization as lines run at steady state.


4) Balance Sheet & Cash Flow Highlights (FY21–FY25)

MetricFY21FY22FY23FY24FY25
Reserves & Surplus (₹ Cr)135146165186
Borrowings (₹ Cr)7210189113147
Fixed Assets (Gross ₹ Cr)110122103160182
CWIP (₹ Cr)2011127
Total Assets (₹ Cr)248296287342412
Cash from Ops (₹ Cr)252252745
Cash from Inv (₹ Cr)1– 38– 5– 42– 61
Cash from Fin (₹ Cr)– 2023– 191518
Net Cash Flow (₹ Cr)1– 10– 01
ROCE (%)2 %6 %9 %15 %17 %
  1. Asset Base
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