1. Opening Hook
Just when sugar mills thought life couldn’t get sweeter, UP quietly dropped a ₹30/quintal SAP hike. Farmers smiled, millers choked on their tea, and analysts refreshed Excel sheets in panic. Naturally, Balrampur responded by declaring an interim dividend, talking up exports, and betting ₹1,100+ crore on bioplastics.
Between surplus sugar, underutilised ethanol capacity, grain stealing the ethanol spotlight, and governments promising “relief packages,” this concall felt less like earnings and more like a policy soap opera. Yet, management sounded unusually calm—almost optimistic.
Is the pain really peaking, or is this just sugar-sector denial? Keep reading, because behind the politics, PLA dreams, and ethanol lobbying, the real math of survival gets interesting.
2. At a Glance
- Sugar production ~31 MT (post diversion) – Too much sweetness, not enough pricing power.
- SAP raised to ₹400/quintal – Farmers happy, mill margins sweating.
- Ethanol diversion only 28% from sugar – Grain stole the spotlight, mills left waiting.
- Exports allowed: 1.5 MT – Helpful, but not the jackpot mills hoped for.
- PLA capex ₹1,093 cr spent – Sugar company flirting hard with bioplastics.
3. Management’s Key Commentary
“Net sugar production is expected to be around 31 million tonnes.”
(Translation: Surplus season is back, brace yourself 😏)
“An improvement in domestic sugar realization becomes critical.”
(Translation: Please let prices go up, somehow.)
“Ethanol approvals from sugar are only 28% of total requirement.”
(Translation: Grain lobby winning, sugar mills sidelined.)
“We are hopeful of a rise in ethanol prices.”
(Translation: No confirmation, only prayers 🙏)
“The worst may be behind us after the ₹30 SAP hike.”
(Translation: Don’t panic yet, give us a month.)
“PLA project is progressing well; we are confident of selling entire output.”
(Translation: Trust us, plastic-free future will pay.)
“We do not expect