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Stocks of paper companies rise by up to 89% on bumper June quarter

Company shares also got support from rising demand for the packaging variety in states like Maharashtra which had imposed a partial ban on use of plastics

paper
Coated paper accounts for 60 per cent of the paper and paperboard imports in India | BS Photo
Dilip Kumar Jha Mumbai
Last Updated : Aug 21 2018 | 5:34 AM IST
The share prices of paper companies have risen by up to 89 per cent over the past month, after stronger than expected earnings were reported by primary producers for the quarter ended June.

Leading branded copier maker JK Paper's share price rose 89 per cent on the BSE to trade currently at Rs 188. That of International Paper APPM has risen 49 per cent to Rs 465. Significant rises have also been seen in the shares of Ballarpur Industries, Seshasayee Paper, West Coast Paper and Tamil Nadu Newsprint, among others. 

For a start, cost improvement measures over the past several years have started yielding results. And, a depreciating rupee has made paper import from Southeast Asian countries (the Asean bloc) costlier, with local producers raising their product prices to match the former's landed cost. Paper stocks are likely to remain firm in the medium term as long as the rupee continues to hold at the current level of around 70 against the dollar or depreciates further.

“While there has been no fresh capacity addition over the past few years, paper demand continues to rise at the normal rate. Also, the depreciating rupee has resulted in demand turning towards local players,” said V Kumaraswamy, finance head at JK Paper.

Saurabh Bangur, vice-chairman at West Coast Paper Mills, said the prices of all varieties of paper had risen so far this year by five to seven per cent, reflecting the surge in demand. Prices in  international markets have also risen across varieties, by $100-150 a tonne to $750-800 a tonne currently, on rising demand from China. 


JK Paper's net profit rose a little over 50 per cent to Rs 95.1 million for the June quarter 2018 from the corresponding period last year. Emami Paper's rose nearly seven-fold to Rs 20.6 mn.

Company shares also got support from rising demand for the packaging variety in states like Maharashtra which had imposed a partial ban on use of plastics. 

“Rising demand and stagnating domestic production capacity has increased India’s reliance on import of paper,” says Rohit Pandit, secretary general, Indian Paper Manufacturers Association (Ipma). Data compiled by the body shows the country's import of paper and paperboard rose to a record of close to 1.9 million tonnes for 2017-18, compared to a little over 1.4 mt the previous year. Newsprint import, however, fell to 1.45 mt for the year, from close to 1.6 mt in 2016-17. 

On Monday, however, the shares of International Paper and Tamil Nadu Newsprint & Papers declined by up to five per cent, due to the BSE’s decision to put these under a surveillance framework due to a sudden run-up.


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