Worth Peripherals Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹75 Cr Quarterly Revenue, EV/EBITDA 4.8x, ROCE Sliding to 13%: Cheap Box or Just Empty Packaging?
1. At a Glance – Corrugated Boxes, Corrugated Returns?
Worth Peripherals Ltd is trading at ₹135, with a market cap of ~₹213 crore, quietly sitting in the forgotten corner of the Indian packaging universe. In the last three months, the stock is down ~12%, and over one year, investors are nursing a ~17% drawdown. Ouch.
The company just reported Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025) numbers:
Revenue: ₹75.1 crore (+10.3% YoY)
PAT: ₹4.08 crore (-22.4% YoY)
EPS: ₹2.02
Despite decent topline growth, profits slipped — because apparently corrugated boxes don’t protect margins as well as they protect products.
Valuation-wise, Worth looks temptingly cheap:
P/E: ~13.2
Price to Book: 1.17
EV/EBITDA: ~4.8
Debt-to-Equity: just 0.10
Sounds like a bargain? Or is it one of those “cheap for a reason” industrial smallcaps? Let’s unbox this properly.
2. Introduction – Smallcap, Big Boxes, Small Excitement
Founded in 1996, Worth Peripherals Ltd (WPL) is a plain-vanilla manufacturer of corrugated boxes. No fancy polymers, no AI-enabled packaging, no “sustainable blockchain traceability solution” nonsense. Just cardboard boxes. Lots of them.
The company supplies regular slotted containers, die-cut boxes, multi-colour packaging, honeycomb partitions, etc. Think FMCG, consumer goods, industrial packaging — boring, essential, volume-driven stuff.
Over the years, WPL has tried to look respectable by collecting certifications like Pokémon:
ISO 9001:2015
SMETA 4-pillar audit
SEDEX & Unilever Responsible Sourcing Audit
But certifications don’t pay dividends — cash flows do.
Financially, the last decade shows steady but unexciting growth. Sales CAGR over 5 years is ~9%, profit growth is basically flat, and ROCE has slid from ~29% (FY18) to ~13% (FY25). That’s not a stumble — that’s gravity.
So the key question: 👉 Is Worth Peripherals a boring compounder hiding at cheap valuations, or a mature business slowly running out of steam?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s explain this like you’re smart but tired.
Worth Peripherals buys kraft paper → converts it into corrugated boxes → sells them to customers. That’s it. No IP. No moat. No switching costs. The business survives on:
Volumes
Long-term customer relationships
Cost control
Working capital discipline
Margins depend heavily on paper prices, which are cyclical and moody — like commodity traders on expiry day.
The company earns ~98% of revenue from sale of products, with negligible contribution from other income. This is a clean, focused manufacturing P&L — no financial engineering, no treasury magic.
However, Worth tried some side quests:
Invested ₹10.07 crore in partnership firm Yash Packers (50% stake)
Set up Worth Wellness Pvt Ltd (personal care products) — yet to commence operations
Exited Worth India Pack Pvt Ltd completely
So yes, they flirted with diversification… and then quickly friend-zoned it.
👉 Question for you: Do you want your packaging company experimenting with personal care products, or sticking to boxes and sweating margins?
4. Financials Overview – Growth Up, Profits Down
Quarterly Performance (Q3 FY26 – Dec 2025)
(All figures in ₹ crore)
Metric
Latest Qtr
YoY Qtr
Prev Qtr
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
75.09
68.06
77.46
10.3%
-3.0%
EBITDA
8.21
7.15
8.69
14.8%
-5.5%
PAT
4.08
5.20
5.55
-22.4%
-26.5%
EPS (₹)
2.02
3.17
2.90
-36.3%
-30.3%
What happened?
Revenue grew nicely — demand is fine.
EBITDA held up, margins around 11%.
PAT collapsed due to higher interest, tax, and operating volatility.
This is not a one-off. TTM profit growth is -5%, and 3-year profit CAGR is negative.