Manufacturing Debt Restructuring Case Study

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Structured Debt Refinancing - Paper Board Manufacturer navigating Expansion-led Liquidity Stress

Industry:

Paper boards and packaging materials


Business Type:

Established manufacturing company with multi-decade promoter background


Segment:

Coated and uncoated duplex boards, white back and grey back variants, specialty packaging-grade paper products


Market Context: B2B packaging supply chain with exposure to recycled pulp economics, realization cycles and demand variability

 

This case involved a legacy manufacturing business with more than three decades of corporate operating history and a promoter background spanning roughly four decades in the paper sector.

Category

Structured

Finance

Client

Paper boards & packaging materials

Location

Derabassi, Punjab

Project Timeline

10 Months

Overview

A long-established paper board manufacturer faced severe liquidity pressure during a large modernization and capacity enhancement cycle. Despite strong promoter commitment and a disciplined repayment history, capex overrun, a prolonged shutdown and falling realizations created acute cash flow stress. A structured listed secured NCD refinancing solution helped restore breathing room and support recovery.

Highlights

  • 7x capacity expansion
  • 7 months of non/low operations
  • 31% revenue decline over two years
  • Structured refinancing with a 42-month tenor
  • Moratorium-like recovery window for operational ramp-up

This case involved a legacy paper board manufacturer serving the packaging industry, backed by a promoter group with nearly four decades of sector experience.

 

The company manufactured a range of packaging-grade paper products, including duplex board variants and premium white/grey back grades. Over time, it built a meaningful operating presence in the paper manufacturing segment.

 

To improve competitiveness, quality and scale, the company undertook a major modernization and expansion initiative aimed at upgrading technology, increasing throughput and widening its product range.

The Challenge

The stress did not arise because of poor business intent or repayment indiscipline. In fact, the company had remained regular in servicing its credit facilities, including finance cost obligations.

However, several pressures converged at the same time.           

 

Capex overrun beyond plan

The expansion and modernization project exceeded the planned cost. As a result, a substantial portion of the additional funding requirement had to be met through internal resources, straining liquidity.

 

7-month production disruption

During the implementation phase, the plant remained non-operational or operated at very low levels for around 7 months, impacting production and sales. Even while operations were disrupted, fixed outflows such as wages, administration and selling expenses continued.

 

Revenue moderation and realization pressure

The business had already experienced a revenue decline of around 5.7% in one year, followed by a sharper drop of about 27% in the next. Over two years, this translated into a cumulative moderation of roughly 31%. Lower sales volume, weak realizations and correction in wastepaper-linked pricing affected revenue performance.

 

Debt servicing pressure despite discipline

Although the company had continued servicing term obligations and finance costs, the combination of lower utilization, weaker turnover and project-related strain created increasing pressure on debt repayment capacity.

 

Promoter resources stretched

The promoters had already committed significant support to the business for project completion, finance cost servicing and working capital continuity. The business needed a more sustainable financial structure.

Importantly, the expansion itself was strategically sound.

 

The modernization resulted in:

  • a shift from older production technology to advanced wire technology
  • 7x increase in production capacity
  • better product quality
  • broader product mix
  • entry into additional paper and graphic-grade segments

In other words, the company emerged with a stronger production base — but the balance sheet came under pressure before the benefits of expansion could fully materialize.

This made the case highly suitable for structured refinancing rather than distress-driven funding alone.

Advisory Approach

The objective was to:

  • refinance substantially all existing debt outside ring-fenced working capital lines,
  • reduce immediate repayment pressure,
  • align debt servicing with ramp-up expectations,
  • and create breathing space for operational recovery.

Transaction Structure

  • Instrument: Listed secured NCDs
  • Purpose: Debt swap / refinancing of the majority of existing debt
  • Tenor: 42 months
  • Servicing profile: Lower coupon during the initial 9 months, followed by a step-up coupon thereafter
  • Strategic intent: Support stabilization during ramp-up and operational normalization

Final Takeaway

A viable manufacturing business can face severe liquidity stress even after making the right strategic investments.

 

When capex overrun, revenue moderation and debt servicing pressure overlap, a standard repayment structure may stop working.

 

This case demonstrates how structured debt refinancing, backed by thoughtful advisory and recovery-oriented design, can help a business move from pressure to stabilization.

 

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