Prospects bright for newsprint

| Prices may increase by as much as 20% this year from Rs 25,000 in last quarter. |
| After witnessing a depressing 2007, newsprint prices are set to see a buoyant 2008 with an expected price increase of over 20 per cent. |
| Newsprint prices are revised on a quarterly basis and the current (January-March) quarter has already seen companies raising prices by 6 per cent or an average Rs 1,500 a tonne to Rs 26,500-27,000 (for 45 grams per square metre or GSM). |
| The increase in newsprint prices is bound to affect the profitability of newspapers and other publications. In the last quarter, average prices of locally manufactured newsprint were Rs 25,000 a tonne, down over 16 per cent from the corresponding quarter in 2006. |
| "Newsprint manufacturers are expected to register gains in the year 2008 as there is a supply shortage and consumption is booming in the country," said Raji Philip, president of the Indian Newsprint Manufacturers' Association and chairman and managing director of Hindustan Paper Corporation. |
| Newsprint producers in Western countries have shifted to finer varieties of paper for higher profitability. This has caused a supply shortage, added Philip. |
| Annual newsprint domestic consumption is estimated close to 2 million tonnes, of which about 50 per cent are met through imports. The import duty on newsprint is 5 per cent, whereas writing and printing paper attracts a duty of 10 per cent. |
| The price of imported newsprint has also appreciated by average $60 a tonne to $635. But importers have the advantage of rupee appreciation here. |
| The demand is witnessing a double-digit growth, driven by new publications as well as more pages and issues of existing publications. Domestic manufacturers are also adding new capacities, expected to become operational next year. |
| "The industry had managed to sell newsprint at over Rs 33,000 a tonne in 2006 and it is anticipated that prices will jump in 2008 as well," said V D Bajaj, executive director of Rama Newsprint and Papers (RNPL). |
| While pulp prices have constantly risen, now there was pressure from high prices of other inputs like coal and chemicals, he added.
|
| COSTLY PRINT |
|
|
More From This Section
Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel
First Published: Jan 08 2008 | 12:00 AM IST

