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Ester Industries Q3 FY26: ₹339 Cr Revenue, ₹-12 Cr Loss, Debt ₹738 Cr — Packaging King or Plastic Trap?


1. At a Glance – The Polyester Thriller Nobody Asked For

Picture this: a company doing ₹1,351 Cr in sales… trading below book value… backed by global clients like ITC, Amcor, Dabur… and still somehow managing to lose money like it’s a startup experimenting with “loss-making as a service.”

Welcome to Ester Industries — where polyester films shine, but profits vanish faster than free food at an Indian wedding.

On paper, this looks like a turnaround story.
In reality, it feels like a Bollywood plot twist where the hero is still figuring out whether he’s rich or bankrupt.

  • Q3 revenue? ₹339 Cr
  • PAT? ₹-12.4 Cr loss
  • Debt? ₹738 Cr
  • Interest coverage? A tragic 0.58x

And yet… management says:

“We are at the bottom of the cycle.”

Ah yes, the classic Indian corporate dialogue.
Every struggling company claims it’s “bottoming out”… like a student who says “next semester pakka top karunga.”

But here’s where it gets spicy…

  • China dumping products
  • US tariffs messing exports
  • FX losses eating EBITDA
  • Debt quietly sitting like a silent villain

And still… they’re planning a ₹1,600 Cr recycling mega project.

So the real question is:

👉 Is this a hidden turnaround gem?
👉 Or just another “hope-based valuation” story?

Let’s investigate like a slightly sarcastic forensic auditor.


2. Introduction – The Polyester Saga

Ester Industries isn’t new. It’s been around since 1985.

That’s older than most startup founders and definitely older than your favorite “finfluencer.”

Originally a polyester film manufacturer, the company has tried to evolve:

  • From commodity films
  • To specialty polymers
  • To recycled plastic (rPET)
  • And now… chemical recycling (fancy ESG buzzword)

Sounds impressive, right?

But the problem is — execution has been like Indian railways WiFi:

👉 Available… but unreliable.

Over the years:

  • Sales grew slowly (~5% CAGR)
  • Profits? Completely volatile
  • ROE? Basically sleeping (1–2%)

And now in FY26:

  • Losses are back
  • Debt is high
  • Industry is under pressure

But management says:

“Cycle is turning.”

Of course it is.

It’s always turning.

The real question is:

👉 Will it turn before your patience runs out?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify this.

Ester makes plastic… but premium plastic.

1. Polyester Films (87% revenue)

Think of:

  • Food packaging
  • Shampoo sachets
  • Chips packets

Basically… everything your dietician told you to avoid.

They produce:

  • BOPET films
  • Metallised films
  • Specialty coated films

These are used in packaging, industrial use, and labeling.

Problem?

👉 It’s a commodity business.

Which means:

  • Pricing = global demand
  • Margins = unpredictable
  • China = permanent headache

2. Specialty Polymers (13% revenue)

This is where things get interesting.

They make customized polymers for:

  • Electronics
  • Textiles
  • Automotive

And guess what?

👉 This segment actually makes money.

Management literally called it the “profit anchor”

Margins here can go:

  • 30%+ EBIT
  • Even 40–50% in niche products

So the big strategy is:

👉 Move from “cheap plastic” to “fancy plastic.”


3. The ESG Dream – Recycling

Now comes the hero entry:

The ELITe JV with Loop Industries

  • Project cost:
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