1. At a Glance – The ₹5 Pen That Might Be Writing Its Own Tragedy
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the fascinating world of a company that sells millions of pens daily but still struggles to write its own profit story cleanly. Linc Ltd, the OG of Indian writing instruments, is currently caught in a strange plot twist: volumes are booming, but profits are… well, politely declining.
Imagine this: you sell 16.4 crore pens in a quarter, but your margins decide to take a vacation. Why? Because instead of selling fancy ₹10+ pens, you went all-in on ₹5 pens like a roadside chaiwala competing with Starbucks pricing strategy.
Now add a few more masalas:
- Joint venture losses quietly eating into profits
- One-time employee cost shocks (thanks, labour regulations)
- Exports looking flat despite “global expansion”
- And management saying: “Don’t worry, this is all intentional”
Intentional? Really?
This is like a student saying, “Yes, I failed math on purpose to focus on long-term algebra growth.”
So here’s the real question:
Is Linc playing 4D chess… or just aggressively discounting its own future?
Let’s decode.
2. Introduction – From School Bags to Stock Market Bags
Every Indian has used a Linc pen at some point.
Exam hall? Linc.
Office desk? Linc.
Borrowed pen that never came back? Definitely Linc.
Founded in 1976, this company didn’t just sell pens—it built a mass distribution empire across 2.41 lakh+ retailers and exported to over 40 countries.
But here’s the twist:
Being everywhere doesn’t automatically mean making money everywhere.
In FY26, Linc is facing a classic FMCG dilemma:
- Volume vs Value
- Mass vs Premium
- Growth vs Margins
And right now, it has clearly chosen one side:
👉 Volume at any cost
Management itself admitted the strategy is:
“Measured rather than aggressive… focused on long-term drivers rather than short-term expansion.”
Translation:
“We’re okay looking weak today if we think we’ll look smart tomorrow.”
But will tomorrow actually arrive?
Or will competitors like DOMS and Flair just eat their lunch while Linc sells ₹5 pens?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Simple answer:
They sell pens.
Complicated answer:
They sell a ridiculous number of pens across every possible price segment, plus a bunch of stationery items.
Core Revenue Engine:
- Writing instruments = ~84% of revenue
- Everything else = fillers (adhesives, calculators, etc.)
So yes, this is basically:
👉 A pen company pretending to be a stationery company
Brands:
- Linc – mass market king
- Pentonic – premium-ish, Instagram-friendly pen
- Uni – imported Japanese brand
- Deli – Chinese stationery giant collab
Distribution:
- 2,800+ distributors
- 2.5 lakh+ retail touchpoints
- 7,300+ lakh pens sold annually
Basically:
If India sneezes, Linc probably sold the tissue and the pen used to write “Get well soon.”
But here’s the catch…
Despite all this scale:
- Sales growth = just ~5%
- Profit growth = flat
So let me ask you: