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Star Paper Mills Q3 FY26: 5.27 EPS, 0.31x Book Value & 47.2% Promoter Pledge – Is This India’s Cheapest Paper Factory or a Slow-Burning Bonfire?


1. At a Glance – A 1938 Dinosaur Trading at 5.6 P/E

Let’s start with the headline: ₹219 Cr market cap, ₹140 stock price, P/E of 5.60, Price-to-Book of 0.31, and a Dividend Yield of 2.50%.

This is not a startup burning venture capital. This is a company incorporated in 1938 — older than independent India — and still running four paper machines in Saharanpur.

Latest quarterly numbers?

  • Q3 FY26 Sales: ₹91.82 Cr
  • Q3 FY26 PAT: ₹8.22 Cr
  • EPS (Q3): ₹5.27

Annualised EPS (Q3 × 4): ₹21.08

At ₹140 CMP, that gives a forward P/E of roughly 6.64 (140 ÷ 21.08).

Return in last 3 months? -14.1%.
ROE? 5.91%.
ROCE? 7.76%.
Debt to equity? A microscopic 0.01.

And yes — promoters have pledged 47.2% of their holding.

Cheap? Yes.
Boring? Definitely.
Safe? Depends.
Interesting? Oh absolutely.

Ready to see whether this is undervalued paper or just recycled disappointment?


2. Introduction – A Mill That Survived British Rule, Demonetisation & Two Fires

Star Paper Mills Ltd is part of the Duncan Goenka Group. It manufactures industrial, packaging, and cultural papers. ISO certified. R&D recognised by the Ministry of Science & Technology.

Sounds respectable, right?

Now let’s add masala.

  • Fire in Nov 2022 → ₹9 Cr loss
  • Another fire in Dec 2023 → ₹2 Cr damage
  • Promoter pledge: 47.2%
  • Sales decline in FY24 vs FY23
  • EBITDA compression in 9MFY25

This is not a hyper-growth story. This is a cyclical, commodity-linked, working capital-heavy paper business that occasionally catches literal fire.

But here’s the twist:

  • Almost zero debt
  • Strong interest coverage (50x as per screener ratios)
  • Trading at 0.31x book

So the real question is:

Is the market pricing in permanent decline?
Or is this a boring cash-generating asset temporarily ignored?

Let’s break it down.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

They make paper.

But not notebook paper from your childhood crush’s love letters.

They make:

Cultural Papers

Used in:

  • Printing
  • Diaries
  • Security paper
  • Envelopes
  • Greeting cards

Industrial Papers

Used in:

  • Carry bags
  • Paper cups
  • Bidi wrappers
  • Soap packaging
  • Tobacco packing
  • Lamination

Installed capacity: 75,000 MTPA
Writing & Printing volume: ~28,052 MT
Packaging segment: ~36,226 MT

So basically, if something in India needs to be wrapped, printed, laminated or packaged — they might be involved.

They are integrated: pulp to paper.

They even operate turbines (5 MW & 6 MW) — meaning some level of energy self-reliance.

But here’s the catch:

Paper is:

  • Commodity driven
  • Raw material volatile
  • Highly competitive
  • Margin sensitive

This is not a moat business. This is a grind business.

Would you rather own a tech SaaS company or a Saharanpur pulp

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