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TPL Plastech: The Company Time Technoplast Remembers to Feed

₹114 Cr Q4 sales, 22% ROE, but a P/E of 17.9 that’s begging a question: Is this the plastic boom, or are you paying for a parent’s pet?


Section 1: At a Glance

Here’s the tension: TPL Plastech reported Q4 FY26 sales of ₹114.07 Cr, up 23.75% YoY. Net profit hit ₹8.06 Cr, up 18% YoY. On annual numbers, FY26 saw ₹422.55 Cr in sales (a 20.9% jump) and ₹29.07 Cr in net profit—a growth rate that would make most mid-caps nod with respect.

The other tension: ROE sits at 18.4%, debt has shrunk to ₹18.92 Cr, and ROCE stands at 22.3%. These are not scam-company numbers. These are a functional, capital-efficient packaging business doing exactly what it’s supposed to do: grow steadily, print margins, and remind shareholders that monotonous businesses often win quietly.

Yet there’s a wrinkle. The company is 74.9% owned by parent Time Technoplast Ltd. CEO Akshay Chandan resigned in December 2024 and was replaced by Jayesh Ashar. Promoter support is structural, which is both a safety net and a ceiling—subsidiaries of larger parents often lack the volatility (and upside surprise) that make retail investors rich. The credit rating remains CRISIL A+/Stable. No drama. No fireworks.

This is a company that will deliver, just not shout about it.


Section 2: Meet the Beast

TPL Plastech manufactures HDPE drum containers—the 20-250 litre industrial packaging boxes that hold specialty chemicals, paints, inks, pharmaceuticals, and FMCG liquids. Five plants across India: Silvassa, Ratlam, Visakhapatnam, Bhuj, and the newer Dahej facility in Gujarat. The Dahej plant, commissioned in FY24, is still ramping. Installed capacity: 36,250 tonnes per annum.

The business is unsexy until you realise: whoever owns the right to move hazardous chemicals in bulk owns a structural, recurring contract with every major pharma, paint, and specialty chemical company in India. Switching costs are high. Relationships are sticky. Margins are modest (11.4% OPM) but reliable.


Section 3: WTF Do They Even Do?

They make buckets. Premium, durable, polymeric buckets. That’s it. And yet, that simplicity is the moat.


Section 4: Financials Overview

Figures are standalone, in ₹ crore.

MetricQ4 FY26YoYFY26FY25
Sales114.07+23.75%422.55349.33
Operating Profit12.87+14.9%48.70*41.17
Net Profit8.06+18.0%29.0723.60
EPS1.033.733.03

*Operating profit = Sales – Direct Costs. FY26 OPM was 11.5%, consistent with FY25’s 11.8%.

The Q4 beat is real: sales accelerated, and net profit margin held steady at 7.07%, despite inflationary cost pressure. Management has shown it can pass commodity price swings to customers with a 30-day lag—a luxury many packaging companies lack.


Section 5:

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