Balkrishna Paper Mills returns to losses as auditors flag going-concern risk
A negative net worth of ₹17,544.16 lakhs and discontinued operations have led auditors to question the company's future.
What's new
- Annual loss of ₹651.65 lakhs replaces previous year's ₹818.67 lakhs profit.
- Auditors issued a qualified opinion regarding the company's ability to operate.
- Revenue from continuing operations hit ₹473.22 lakhs, but finance costs were ₹607.95 lakhs.
Why it matters
The company has transitioned from a manufacturer to a paper trader while carrying a deeply impaired balance sheet. With manufacturing operations shuttered since November 2024, the auditor's going-concern warning confirms the firm's severe financial distress.
What we're watching
- Any formal plans for liquidation or debt restructuring.
- The survival of the trading business without manufacturing support.
- Regulatory scrutiny given the persistent negative capital base.
The full read
Balkrishna Paper Mills ended FY26 with a net loss of ₹651.65 lakhs, a sharp reversal from the ₹818.67 lakhs profit posted in the prior year. While the company grew revenue from continuing operations to ₹473.22 lakhs, it failed to generate an operating profit. Finance costs reached ₹607.95 lakhs, further straining a balance sheet already crippled by a negative net worth of ₹17,544.16 lakhs. The underlying reality is a shell; manufacturing operations stopped in November 2024. Auditors have now formalised the distress with a qualified opinion, citing material uncertainty about whether the company can continue as a going concern. The firm is currently consuming more in finance costs than it can generate through its limited trading activities. The path forward remains unclear.