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Seshasayee Paper Q3 FY26: Margins Collapse from 26% to 6%, EPS Crash 80% — Is This a Paper Business or Origami Gone Wrong?


1. At a Glance – The Great Indian Paper Meltdown 🎭

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the most underrated drama on Dalal Street — where a 60-year-old paper company suddenly decided to remind investors that paper melts faster than ice cream in Nagpur summer.

Seshasayee Paper & Boards Ltd — once a proud, margin-rich, cash-generating machine — is now quietly slipping into the “arre bhai kya ho gaya?” category.

Imagine this:

  • FY23 operating margins: 26%
  • FY25 operating margins: ~6%
  • Profit: down from ₹396 Cr → ₹109 Cr → ₹84 Cr (TTM)

This is not a decline. This is a financial free fall without a parachute.

And the best part? The stock is still chilling at ~20x P/E like nothing happened.

You’d expect panic. Instead, investors are like:
“Paper hai… chal jayega.”

But here’s the real twist — this company is:

  • Almost debt-free
  • Sitting on ₹500+ Cr liquidity (as per rating note)
  • Expanding capacity
  • Investing in solar & wind

So the question becomes:

👉 Is this a temporary cyclical slap?
👉 Or is this the beginning of a long-term paper-cut death?

Because let’s be honest — in a world going digital, owning a paper company already feels like owning a typewriter startup in the AI era.

And yet… sometimes, the most boring industries give the most surprising turnarounds.

So buckle up — because this is not just analysis…
This is a full-on financial post-mortem with jokes, sarcasm, and brutal honesty.


2. Introduction – The Veteran Who Forgot How to Fight

Founded in 1960, Seshasayee Paper is basically the Rajinikanth of Indian paper industry — been around forever, seen cycles, survived chaos.

Part of the SPB-ESVIN group, this company has its fingers in:

  • Sugar (Ponni Sugars (Erode) Ltd)
  • Batteries (High Energy Batteries (India) Ltd)
  • Consulting

Basically, a diversified Tamil Nadu industrial family business.

For decades, SPBL built:

  • Strong distribution
  • South India dominance
  • Export presence

And then suddenly…

📉 Imports entered like Salman Khan in a climax scene.
📉 Raw material (wood) prices shot up.
📉 Realizations fell.

And boom — margins collapsed.

Even management admitted:

  • Lower realizations
  • Cheap imports
  • Higher wood costs

Classic commodity cycle story.

But here’s where it gets spicy:

👉 This isn’t just a bad quarter
👉 This is a structural margin compression story

And the company is responding with:

  • Capacity expansion (MDP-IV)
  • Renewable energy investments
  • Acquisition (Servalakshmi unit)

Translation:
“Business gir raha hai? Chalo aur paisa daalte hain!”

Risky? Yes.
Necessary? Also yes.

Because in commodity industries — you either scale up or disappear.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do? 📄

Okay, simple version:

They

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