PG Electroplast share fell 7% today: Why Half of Its Manufacturing Plants Are Now Inoperative

Synopsis: Shares of PG Electroplast Limited (NSE: PGEL) faced a fresh round of selling on Friday, March 13, 2026, sliding nearly 7% to trade at ₹490.65. The decline follows a alarming regulatory update confirming that the ongoing LPG shortage has forced the company to shut down 2 out of its 4 manufacturing plants, directly threatening its FY26 revenue and production targets.


PG Electroplast Share Price Fall: 7% Drop as Plants Shut Down

The flagship company of the PG Group has seen its market value erode sharply this week, losing over 20% in just five trading sessions.

While the broader market attempted a recovery earlier in the week, PG Electroplast remains caught in a fundamental “supply-side” trap as the Middle East conflict continues to choke energy imports through the Strait of Hormuz.

PG Electroplast Share Price Fall

The Shutdown Crisis: 50% Capacity Offline

The primary driver for today’s 7% fall is the escalation from “supply constraints” to actual “plant shutdowns.”

  • Operational Status: As of March 13, only 2 out of 4 manufacturing units are operational. PG Electroplast utilizes LPG for critical processes like gas-assisted injection molding and high-precision paint shops.
  • Revenue Guidance at Risk: Management has officially acknowledged that the inoperative plants will lead to a downward revision of its revenue guidance. The company had previously seen robust growth in its Room Air Conditioner (RAC) segment, which is now facing a severe bottleneck.
  • Alternative Fuel Hurdles: While the firm is exploring electric heating and alternative gas sources, the “retrofitting” time and higher operational costs of these alternatives are weighing heavily on investor sentiment.

The “Double Whammy”: Energy Shock and Structural Fears

Investors are offloading the stock not just due to the temporary gas crisis, but also due to deeper financial concerns:

  1. Inflationary Input Costs: With Brent crude hovering near $100, the cost of plastic granules and chemicals—both derived from oil—is surging. PGEL’s already thin EBITDA margins (which moderated to 8.3% in Q3) are expected to face further compression.
  2. Cash Generation Issues: Analysts have recently flagged that PG Electroplast‘s operating cash flow has been significantly lower than its reported profits over the last five years, raising questions about inventory management and payment collections from downstream brands like Voltas and Blue Star.
  3. SEBI Legacy: A lingering 10-year ban from capital markets by SEBI (currently under appeal) related to its 2011 IPO has resurfaced in market discussions, making institutional investors more cautious during this period of high volatility.

Also read: Renewables Surge: Why Solar and Wind Stocks Skyrocketed as Oil Reclaimed $100

Intraday Market Snapshot (March 13, 2026 – as of writing)

The stock hit a fresh multi-month low today, underperforming the broader Electronics Manufacturing Services (EMS) sector.

MetricValue (as of 10:15 AM)Day Change (%)
Current Market Price (CMP)₹497.45-6.56%
52-Week High / Low₹1,054 / ₹490
Traded Volume3.5 Lakh Shares2.5x Avg.
Market Cap~₹12,700 Crore


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