1. At a Glance – The Great Indian Jute Story (With Plot Twists)
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to one of India’s most underrated corporate soap operas — a company that literally makes sacks… but somehow also packs more contradictions than a Bigg Boss finale. Cheviot Company is that quiet kid in class who never speaks, but secretly tops exams. Revenue is growing, profits are suddenly flexing (400% YoY jump in quarterly profit — yes, you read that right), and yet the stock behaves like it forgot its own achievements. Trading at a P/E of just ~8 and below book value, this company is practically screaming “value” — but the market is like, “Hmm… but jute?”
You’ve got a business heavily dependent on government orders (read: food grain sacks), a legacy industry (read: not sexy), and promoters who seem more interested in steady cash generation than storytelling. Add to that inconsistent long-term growth, declining 5-year sales trends, and a balance sheet that looks like a disciplined CA student — and you’re left wondering:
Is this a hidden gem quietly compounding… or just a boring company going nowhere slowly?
And wait — they even did a ₹31.5 crore buyback at ₹1,800 while the stock now sits around ₹968. Either management knows something… or they just got emotional. Either way, this story deserves a deep dive.
So buckle up — because this isn’t just about jute bags.
This is about capital allocation, cyclicality, government dependence, and one big question:
Is Cheviot a cash cow… or a slow-moving buffalo?
2. Introduction – When “Simple Business” Becomes Complicated
Let’s set the scene.
You run a company that makes jute bags. Sounds boring? Good. Because boring businesses often make serious money — if they’re disciplined.
Cheviot Company has been around since 1976. That’s older than most startup founders’ parents. It belongs to the Kanoria family, a group known for being low-profile but financially conservative. No flashy interviews. No LinkedIn motivational threads. Just quiet operations.
But here’s the twist — the business is not just jute.
They:
- Manufacture jute yarn, fabrics, sacks
- Export globally (USA, Germany, Japan, etc.)
- Supply bags for Government of India food grain packaging
- Run a tea estate (because why not?)
So you’re not just investing in a textile company.
You’re investing in:
- Agriculture-linked demand
- Government procurement cycles
- Export markets
- Commodity pricing
Basically, this company sits at the intersection of “simple product” and “complex ecosystem.”
And that’s where things get interesting.
Because simple businesses should grow steadily.
But Cheviot?
- 5-year sales growth: -0.83%
- 3-year profit growth: -14%
Yet suddenly:
- Q3 FY26 profit up 400% YoY
So what’s happening?
Did the business improve — or did something temporarily spike?
That’s the mystery we’re about to solve.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s break this down like you’re explaining to your friend who only invests in “AI and EV.”
Core Business: Jute Products
They make:
- Jute yarn
- Hessian fabrics
- Sacks and bags
- Technical textiles
Main use?
👉 Packaging food grains for the government
Translation:
👉 When India feeds itself, Cheviot gets paid
They produce:
👉 50+ million jute