1. At a Glance
This is not a paper company. This is a full Punjabi jugaad machine disguised as a paper mill.
One side: government textbook orders (guaranteed demand, slow payments).
Other side: open market sales (volatile pricing, margin pressure).
Add: Chinese imports dumping cheap paper.
Add more spice: one paper machine shutdown for upgrade.
Top it off: sudden quarterly loss → followed by dramatic profit recovery.
Welcome to Satia Industries.
Q2 FY26: Net loss of ₹25 Cr.
Q3 FY26: Net profit of ₹28 Cr.
That’s not a turnaround. That’s mood swings.
And while the market is pricing this at just 8x earnings and 0.54x book value, the real question is:
Is this a cheap turnaround… or a cyclical trap wrapped in textbook paper?
Because when margins fall from 24% to 10%…
that’s not a “bad quarter”… that’s a business model reminder.
2. Introduction
Let’s set the stage.
India still prints textbooks like it’s 1995.
Government schools, election papers, notebooks, registers — everything needs paper.
And Satia sits right in that supply chain.
Sounds stable, right?
Wrong.
Because this is not an IT company with recurring SaaS revenue.
This is a commodity business wearing a school uniform.
Your profits depend on:
- Wood prices
- Agro residue availability
- Chinese imports
- Government tender timing
- Paper prices (which behave like crypto sometimes)
Now mix this with:
- Full capacity utilization
- Falling realizations (₹91/kg → ₹70/kg)
- Rising raw material costs
And suddenly your “stable business” becomes:
“Beta, margin kab aayega?”
The company had a dream run till FY24 (supernormal margins),
and then reality entered like an uninvited relative.
FY25:
- Revenue down
- Profit down
- ROCE crashed
FY26:
So what are we dealing with here?
A broken story?
Or a temporarily punched cyclical player?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Simple explanation:
They turn wheat straw + wood chips + waste paper → into notebooks and government files.
But the real magic is integration.
Satia’s 3 Superpowers:
1. Raw Material Flexibility
- Uses agro waste (wheat straw, rice straw)
- Uses wood pulp
- Uses waste paper
Basically: whatever is cheapest, they’ll cook it.
2. Fully Integrated Setup
- Pulping → Paper → Power → Chemical recovery
Everything in-house.
Meaning:
Less dependency = better cost control (in theory).
3. Captive Power Plant
- 100% power generated internally
Because electricity bills in India are not a joke.
Revenue Model Split:
- 40–50% → Government textbook orders
- 50–60% → Open market sales
Government side = stable, better margins
Open market = volatile, price wars, margin compression
Products:
- Maplitho paper (35% of sales)
- Snow white paper (20%)
- Plus everything from copier paper to wedding cards
Basically: if India needs to print something, Satia wants to be there.
But here’s the catch:
This entire business is not demand driven.
It is price