1. At a Glance – The Confusing Comeback Kid
₹1,028 crore market cap.
Current price ₹65.4.
3-month return: 12.9%.
1-year return: 62.6%.
Stock P/E: 34.7.
Book value: ₹80.8.
Price to book: 0.81.
ROE: 11.2%.
Debt: ₹11.3 crore.
Ladies and gentlemen, meet Oricon Enterprises Ltd — a company whose sales are shrinking like a forgotten dhokla in the microwave, but profits are doing bhangra thanks to “other income”.
Latest quarterly sales? ₹17.66 crore.
Quarterly PAT? ₹8.83 crore.
YoY profit jump? 208%.
Operating margin? A spicy -41%.
So yes — the core business is bleeding. But the bottom line is smiling.
The real story? Asset sales, slump sales, restructuring, promoter reshuffles, and strategic exits.
Is this a turnaround?
Or a “sell assets, show profits” phase?
Let’s unpack the drama.
2. Introduction – From Packaging King to Asset Surgeon
Incorporated in 1968, Oricon was once a full-blown packaging powerhouse.
Plastic closures.
PET preforms.
Crown corks.
Aluminium tubes.
Mixed pentane and heptanes.
Marine logistics.
Real estate in Worli.
Basically, if it could be sealed, shipped, or sold — Oricon was there.
But here’s the plot twist.
Over the past two years, Oricon has:
- Sold plastic closures business (₹520 crore deal)
- Sold metal crown seals business (₹42.5 crore)
- Transferred petrochemical unit
- Slump-sale manufacturing units
- Sold associate stake in Tecnocap Oriental Pvt Ltd
This isn’t business expansion.
This is business pruning with surgical precision.
And guess what?
Debt dropped from ₹113 crore (Mar 2024) to just ₹11 crore (Mar 2025 & Sep 2025).
So the company isn’t growing revenue.
It’s shrinking operations and strengthening the balance sheet.
Question is — are we watching a phoenix rise?
Or a business quietly downsizing?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Currently, Oricon operates across:
- Packaging
- Marine logistics (via 100% owned United Shippers Limited)
- Real estate
- Residual petrochemicals
- Trading
FY23 segment mix:
- Packaging: 79%
- Petrochemicals: 12%
- Logistics: 5%
- Real estate: 3%
But since then, major packaging units have been sold.
So today’s Oricon is more asset-light than before.
Revenue streams include:
- Closures (51%)
- Preforms (19%)
- Petrochemicals (12%)
- Real estate income (3%)
- Freight & logistics services
Also — they