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Suzano S.A. (SUZ): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds
Suzano S.A. (SUZ): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

Yahoo

time16-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Suzano S.A. (SUZ): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where ​​Suzano S.A. (NYSE:SUZ) stands against other best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. Paper stocks encompass producers of paper, pulp, packaging products, toilet paper, and forestry operators. This sector typically thrives during periods of economic expansion when consumer spending, ecommerce activity, and industrial production are accelerating, driving higher demand for commercial packaging and consumer paper products. The performance of paper stocks strongly correlates with commodity prices of pulp and timber, as well as with the price of energy and freight, which are large cost inputs in the production chain. Consequently, paper-related stocks generally thrive in inflationary environments due to their pricing power, as producers can easily pass any inflation onto consumers and capture a margin of the price increase. Conversely, these stocks underperform during economic slowdowns as consumer demand and industrial activity fall, and lower commodity prices pressure profitability. Some investors avoid this sector as they mistakenly consider it low growth and disrupted. Their perception is based on a tough 2010s decade marked by several challenges that pressured growth. Here is how AFRY Advisory commented on the paper market: 'With the universal move to digital communication, the demand for print has been on a steep decline, triggering massive shutdowns in the graphic paper sector and sizeable entries in the packaging board market through conversions and grade changes from graphics to packaging grades. The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic deepened the paper markets' decline as decreasing economic activity and lockdowns further contracted the demand for graphics and office papers, while hygiene and corrugated packaging businesses recovered more effectively.' READ ALSO: The struggles of the paper & paper products sector, as proxied by a timber ETF that includes many paper companies as well, extended into the 2020s. In early 2025, just before the US stock market entered correction mode, the sector reached a new all-time low relative to the broad market. Another global timber and wood ETF shows a similar picture – years of underperformance relative to the broad market, which killed most of the investor interest in this sector. Despite sluggish performance in the last years, we believe that the underfollowed paper sector may become favored in the following years due to a plethora of factors triggered by the new Trump 2.0 administration in the US. First, we already know that paper stocks thrive during inflationary periods, and the US appears to have entered a multi-year period of above-average inflation due to the trade wars initiated by President Trump. Many of the paper companies have operations spanning several continents, with cultivation, processing, and selling often happening in two or three different countries, which means that the production chain may become subject to tariffs. Under such circumstances, paper companies will fully pass any inflationary pressures onto the end customer, meaning that they would capture a higher margin in absolute dollar value. The hypothesis of higher inflation in the US is fully supported by the 10-year US treasury yield climbing to 4.58% on April 11, significantly above the second half of 2024. Second, the current US administration is a notorious proponent of onshoring, which means a partial or full return of manufacturing activity into the US. Paper stocks are positively correlated to the level of industrial and commerce activity in the US and could benefit from the accelerating demand for paper used in industrial and commercial packaging. In fact, the onshoring trend is already happening as several corporations, from semiconductors to automobile manufacturers and other consumer discretionary businesses, announced plans to boost their manufacturing presence in the US. We used a stock screener and thematic ETFs to identify companies engaged in the production of pulp, toilet paper, newspapers, cardboard, forest, and other paper-related products. Then we compared the list with Insider Monkey's proprietary database of hedge funds' ownership and included in the article the top 10 stocks with the largest number of hedge funds that own the stock as of Q4 2024. The stocks are ranked in ascending order of the hedge funds having stakes in them. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter's strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points (). Aerial view of a large paper mill, steam billowing from its many smokestacks.​​Suzano S.A. (NYSE:SUZ) is a forestry-based company and one of the world's largest producers of eucalyptus pulp. Its portfolio of product includes coated and uncoated printing and writing papers, paperboard, tissue papers, market and fluff pulps, and lignin. The company's advantage stems from its large scale across Brazil, the US, the UK, and China, as well as it being a vertically integrated player, with operations including both cultivation and processing/manufacturing. Suzano S.A. (NYSE:SUZ) delivered a strong operational performance in the recent Q4 2024, achieving record sales volumes and setting a new baseline for cash cost operations. The company generated a robust EBITDA of BRL 23.8 billion for the year, bringing leverage in dollar terms to 2.9x. The company's Ribas mill demonstrated impressive performance, reaching 900,000 tons of production and 700,000 tons of sales in 2024, fully aligned with guidance provided after its mid-2024 start-up. Looking forward, Suzano S.A. (NYSE:SUZ) faces a tight supply scenario in Q1 2025 due to low inventories and scheduled maintenance downtimes while simultaneously benefiting from positive market dynamics in China. The company successfully renegotiated all commercial contracts for the US, securing better terms for 2025 and onwards, along with synergies in raw materials and logistics. Management remains focused on deleveraging while maintaining a strong hedging strategy, with the company currently having around $7.5 billion in the hedging portfolio. With 13 hedge funds owning the stock at the end of Q4 2024, SUZ is one of the best paper stocks to buy. Overall, SUZ ranks 9th on our list of best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. While we acknowledge the potential of SUZ to grow, our conviction lies in the belief that AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter time frame. There is an AI stock that went up since the beginning of 2025, while popular AI stocks lost around 25%. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than SUZ but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey. Sign in to access your portfolio

Mercer International Inc. (MERC): One of the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds
Mercer International Inc. (MERC): One of the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

Yahoo

time16-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mercer International Inc. (MERC): One of the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where Mercer International Inc. (NASDAQ:MERC) stands against other best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. Paper stocks encompass producers of paper, pulp, packaging products, toilet paper, and forestry operators. This sector typically thrives during periods of economic expansion when consumer spending, ecommerce activity, and industrial production are accelerating, driving higher demand for commercial packaging and consumer paper products. The performance of paper stocks strongly correlates with commodity prices of pulp and timber, as well as with the price of energy and freight, which are large cost inputs in the production chain. Consequently, paper-related stocks generally thrive in inflationary environments due to their pricing power, as producers can easily pass any inflation onto consumers and capture a margin of the price increase. Conversely, these stocks underperform during economic slowdowns as consumer demand and industrial activity fall, and lower commodity prices pressure profitability. Some investors avoid this sector as they mistakenly consider it low growth and disrupted. Their perception is based on a tough 2010s decade marked by several challenges that pressured growth. Here is how AFRY Advisory commented on the paper market: 'With the universal move to digital communication, the demand for print has been on a steep decline, triggering massive shutdowns in the graphic paper sector and sizeable entries in the packaging board market through conversions and grade changes from graphics to packaging grades. The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic deepened the paper markets' decline as decreasing economic activity and lockdowns further contracted the demand for graphics and office papers, while hygiene and corrugated packaging businesses recovered more effectively.' READ ALSO: The struggles of the paper & paper products sector, as proxied by a timber ETF that includes many paper companies as well, extended into the 2020s. In early 2025, just before the US stock market entered correction mode, the sector reached a new all-time low relative to the broad market. Another global timber and wood ETF shows a similar picture – years of underperformance relative to the broad market, which killed most of the investor interest in this sector. Despite sluggish performance in the last years, we believe that the underfollowed paper sector may become favored in the following years due to a plethora of factors triggered by the new Trump 2.0 administration in the US. First, we already know that paper stocks thrive during inflationary periods, and the US appears to have entered a multi-year period of above-average inflation due to the trade wars initiated by President Trump. Many of the paper companies have operations spanning several continents, with cultivation, processing, and selling often happening in two or three different countries, which means that the production chain may become subject to tariffs. Under such circumstances, paper companies will fully pass any inflationary pressures onto the end customer, meaning that they would capture a higher margin in absolute dollar value. The hypothesis of higher inflation in the US is fully supported by the 10-year US treasury yield climbing to 4.58% on April 11, significantly above the second half of 2024. Second, the current US administration is a notorious proponent of onshoring, which means a partial or full return of manufacturing activity into the US. Paper stocks are positively correlated to the level of industrial and commerce activity in the US and could benefit from the accelerating demand for paper used in industrial and commercial packaging. In fact, the onshoring trend is already happening as several corporations, from semiconductors to automobile manufacturers and other consumer discretionary businesses, announced plans to boost their manufacturing presence in the US. We used a stock screener and thematic ETFs to identify companies engaged in the production of pulp, toilet paper, newspapers, cardboard, forest, and other paper-related products. Then we compared the list with Insider Monkey's proprietary database of hedge funds' ownership and included in the article the top 10 stocks with the largest number of hedge funds that own the stock as of Q4 2024. The stocks are ranked in ascending order of the hedge funds having stakes in them. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter's strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points (). A panoramic view of a forest filled with trees used to make NBSK pulp, wood chips, and saw logs.​​Mercer International Inc. (NASDAQ:MERC) is a global forest products company that produces market pulp and solid wood products in Germany, Canada, and the US. MERC manages large-scale pulp mills that produce northern bleached softwood and hardwood kraft pulps, as well as biomass-based green energy. The company's key solid wood segment includes the manufacture of lumber, timber, and wood pallets, with its key facilities being located in Germany. The company's leadership is ensured through diversification across products, a focus on innovative green energy as well as a large annual production that exceeds 2 million tons per year. Mercer International Inc. (NASDAQ:MERC) reported a significant improvement in Q4 2024, with an operating EBITDA of $99 million, almost doubling if compared to Q3, driven by no planned maintenance downtime, a strong dollar, and higher sales volumes. For the full 2024 fiscal year, EBITDA increased substantially to $244 million from $17 million in 2023, attributed to stronger pulp markets, lower production costs from easing inflation pressures, and cost-reduction initiatives. The company successfully redeemed its $300 million 2026 senior notes using $200 million of additional 2028 senior notes and $100 million of cash on hand, representing a first step in its leverage reduction initiative. Looking ahead, Mercer International Inc. (NASDAQ:MERC) faces both opportunities and challenges, with softwood pulp pricing expected to remain strong due to reduced supply and steady demand. The significant contrast between softwood and hardwood pulp supply-demand fundamentals is expected to drive price differences beyond historical norms, with the current net price gap in China at about $220 per tonne compared to the historical norm of $100. The company's absolute priority for 2025 will be reducing leverage through strategic projects, including aggressive cost reduction programs, reliability improvements, operational rationalization, and prudent capital management. These initiatives are set to position the company well to withstand any potential market turmoil, which makes it one of the best paper stocks to buy now. Overall, MERC ranks 7th on our list of best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. While we acknowledge the potential of MERC to grow, our conviction lies in the belief that AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter time frame. There is an AI stock that went up since the beginning of 2025, while popular AI stocks lost around 25%. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than MERC but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

Clearwater Paper (CLW): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds
Clearwater Paper (CLW): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

Yahoo

time16-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Clearwater Paper (CLW): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where Clearwater Paper Corporation (NYSE:CLW) stands against other best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. Paper stocks encompass producers of paper, pulp, packaging products, toilet paper, and forestry operators. This sector typically thrives during periods of economic expansion when consumer spending, ecommerce activity, and industrial production are accelerating, driving higher demand for commercial packaging and consumer paper products. The performance of paper stocks strongly correlates with commodity prices of pulp and timber, as well as with the price of energy and freight, which are large cost inputs in the production chain. Consequently, paper-related stocks generally thrive in inflationary environments due to their pricing power, as producers can easily pass any inflation onto consumers and capture a margin of the price increase. Conversely, these stocks underperform during economic slowdowns as consumer demand and industrial activity fall, and lower commodity prices pressure profitability. Some investors avoid this sector as they mistakenly consider it low growth and disrupted. Their perception is based on a tough 2010s decade marked by several challenges that pressured growth. Here is how AFRY Advisory commented on the paper market: 'With the universal move to digital communication, the demand for print has been on a steep decline, triggering massive shutdowns in the graphic paper sector and sizeable entries in the packaging board market through conversions and grade changes from graphics to packaging grades. The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic deepened the paper markets' decline as decreasing economic activity and lockdowns further contracted the demand for graphics and office papers, while hygiene and corrugated packaging businesses recovered more effectively.' READ ALSO: The struggles of the paper & paper products sector, as proxied by a timber ETF that includes many paper companies as well, extended into the 2020s. In early 2025, just before the US stock market entered correction mode, the sector reached a new all-time low relative to the broad market. Another global timber and wood ETF shows a similar picture – years of underperformance relative to the broad market, which killed most of the investor interest in this sector. Despite sluggish performance in the last years, we believe that the underfollowed paper sector may become favored in the following years due to a plethora of factors triggered by the new Trump 2.0 administration in the US. First, we already know that paper stocks thrive during inflationary periods, and the US appears to have entered a multi-year period of above-average inflation due to the trade wars initiated by President Trump. Many of the paper companies have operations spanning several continents, with cultivation, processing, and selling often happening in two or three different countries, which means that the production chain may become subject to tariffs. Under such circumstances, paper companies will fully pass any inflationary pressures onto the end customer, meaning that they would capture a higher margin in absolute dollar value. The hypothesis of higher inflation in the US is fully supported by the 10-year US treasury yield climbing to 4.58% on April 11, significantly above the second half of 2024. Second, the current US administration is a notorious proponent of onshoring, which means a partial or full return of manufacturing activity into the US. Paper stocks are positively correlated to the level of industrial and commerce activity in the US and could benefit from the accelerating demand for paper used in industrial and commercial packaging. In fact, the onshoring trend is already happening as several corporations, from semiconductors to automobile manufacturers and other consumer discretionary businesses, announced plans to boost their manufacturing presence in the US. We used a stock screener and thematic ETFs to identify companies engaged in the production of pulp, toilet paper, newspapers, cardboard, forest, and other paper-related products. Then we compared the list with Insider Monkey's proprietary database of hedge funds' ownership and included in the article the top 10 stocks with the largest number of hedge funds that own the stock as of Q4 2024. The stocks are ranked in ascending order of the hedge funds having stakes in them. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter's strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points (). A mobile crane moving a shipment of bulk pulp & paper product.​​Clearwater Paper Corporation (NYSE:CLW) is a manufacturer specializing in bleached paperboard products used in folding cartons, liquid packaging, and food service applications, primarily serving North American packaging converters. The company operates three mills located in the US, along with several converting facilities. The US-based company ranked seventh on our 2024 list of 7 Best Paper Stocks To Buy Right Now. Clearwater Paper Corporation (NYSE:CLW) completed two transformative transactions in 2024 – acquiring the Augusta paperboard facility, which increased paperboard capacity by 70%, and selling its tissue business for $1.06 billion. The Augusta acquisition positions CLW as a premier independent paperboard packaging supplier in North America, with the potential to contribute $140 million to $150 million in annual adjusted EBITDA once volume synergies are captured and industry utilization normalizes. The tissue business sale proceeds were used to significantly delever the balance sheet, resulting in a net leverage ratio of 1.1x by year-end. While industry demand showed improvement, with shipments increasing 4% in 2024, utilization rates remained below historical averages at 85%, creating pricing and margin pressure. In response, Clearwater Paper Corporation (NYSE:CLW) is implementing $30 million to $40 million in cost savings for 2025, including a 10% reduction in workforce, and has secured a major long-term supply agreement to help fill open capacity. Management remains optimistic about medium-to-long-term prospects, expecting strong margins and cash flows through the cycle with mid-cycle margins of 13% to 14% and free cash flow conversion of 40% to 50%. We include CLW on our list of best paper stocks to buy as we believe management has taken the right steps to improve the company's resilience and long-term free cash flow growth. Overall, CLW ranks 6th on our list of best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. While we acknowledge the potential of CLW to grow, our conviction lies in the belief that AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter time frame. There is an AI stock that went up since the beginning of 2025, while popular AI stocks lost around 25%. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than CLW but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey. Sign in to access your portfolio

Sylvamo Corporation (SLVM): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds
Sylvamo Corporation (SLVM): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

Yahoo

time16-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Sylvamo Corporation (SLVM): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where Sylvamo Corporation (NYSE:SLVM) stands against other best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. Paper stocks encompass producers of paper, pulp, packaging products, toilet paper, and forestry operators. This sector typically thrives during periods of economic expansion when consumer spending, ecommerce activity, and industrial production are accelerating, driving higher demand for commercial packaging and consumer paper products. The performance of paper stocks strongly correlates with commodity prices of pulp and timber, as well as with the price of energy and freight, which are large cost inputs in the production chain. Consequently, paper-related stocks generally thrive in inflationary environments due to their pricing power, as producers can easily pass any inflation onto consumers and capture a margin of the price increase. Conversely, these stocks underperform during economic slowdowns as consumer demand and industrial activity fall, and lower commodity prices pressure profitability. Some investors avoid this sector as they mistakenly consider it low growth and disrupted. Their perception is based on a tough 2010s decade marked by several challenges that pressured growth. Here is how AFRY Advisory commented on the paper market: 'With the universal move to digital communication, the demand for print has been on a steep decline, triggering massive shutdowns in the graphic paper sector and sizeable entries in the packaging board market through conversions and grade changes from graphics to packaging grades. The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic deepened the paper markets' decline as decreasing economic activity and lockdowns further contracted the demand for graphics and office papers, while hygiene and corrugated packaging businesses recovered more effectively.' READ ALSO: The struggles of the paper & paper products sector, as proxied by a timber ETF that includes many paper companies as well, extended into the 2020s. In early 2025, just before the US stock market entered correction mode, the sector reached a new all-time low relative to the broad market. Another global timber and wood ETF shows a similar picture – years of underperformance relative to the broad market, which killed most of the investor interest in this sector. Despite sluggish performance in the last years, we believe that the underfollowed paper sector may become favored in the following years due to a plethora of factors triggered by the new Trump 2.0 administration in the US. First, we already know that paper stocks thrive during inflationary periods, and the US appears to have entered a multi-year period of above-average inflation due to the trade wars initiated by President Trump. Many of the paper companies have operations spanning several continents, with cultivation, processing, and selling often happening in two or three different countries, which means that the production chain may become subject to tariffs. Under such circumstances, paper companies will fully pass any inflationary pressures onto the end customer, meaning that they would capture a higher margin in absolute dollar value. The hypothesis of higher inflation in the US is fully supported by the 10-year US treasury yield climbing to 4.58% on April 11, significantly above the second half of 2024. Second, the current US administration is a notorious proponent of onshoring, which means a partial or full return of manufacturing activity into the US. Paper stocks are positively correlated to the level of industrial and commerce activity in the US and could benefit from the accelerating demand for paper used in industrial and commercial packaging. In fact, the onshoring trend is already happening as several corporations, from semiconductors to automobile manufacturers and other consumer discretionary businesses, announced plans to boost their manufacturing presence in the US. We used a stock screener and thematic ETFs to identify companies engaged in the production of pulp, toilet paper, newspapers, cardboard, forest, and other paper-related products. Then we compared the list with Insider Monkey's proprietary database of hedge funds' ownership and included in the article the top 10 stocks with the largest number of hedge funds that own the stock as of Q4 2024. The stocks are ranked in ascending order of the hedge funds having stakes in them. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter's strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points (). A landscape of a large paper mill at sunrise, a sign of the size and importance of the industry.​​​Sylvamo Corporation (NYSE:SLVM) is a global producer of uncoated freesheet paper, operating several integrated and non-integrated mills across the US, Brazil, France, and Sweden. The company's product portfolio encompasses copy and printer papers, commercial printing papers, converting papers, and specialty papers, marketed under well-known brands. SLVM ranked eighth on our recent list of 12 Best Land and Timber Stocks to Buy According to Analysts. Sylvamo Corporation (NYSE:SLVM) delivered strong financial results in 2024, generating a 23% return on invested capital while strengthening its competitive position in core uncoated freesheet markets. The company achieved significant financial milestones, including $632 million in adjusted EBITDA with a 17% margin, $248 million in free cash flow, and adjusted operating earnings of $7.42 per share, which was 14% higher than 2023. The company maintained strong financial discipline by repaying $154 million in debt, achieving a net debt-to-adjusted EBITDA ratio of 0.9x, and returning $130 million in cash to shareholders. Looking ahead, Sylvamo Corporation (NYSE:SLVM) is making strategic investments to strengthen its competitive position, particularly at its flagship Eastover mill in South Carolina, where three high-return projects are being implemented. These projects, requiring approximately $145 million in investments over three years, are expected to generate an internal rate of return greater than 30% and create incremental adjusted EBITDA of more than $50 million per year. The company exceeded its Project Horizon cost reduction program goals by $34 million, achieving savings through manufacturing efficiencies, supply chain optimization, and overhead cost reductions. With strong guidance ahead and profitable rates of returns on its key projects, SLVM is one of the best paper stocks to consider in 2025. Overall, SLVM ranks 8th on our list of best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. While we acknowledge the potential of SLVM to grow, our conviction lies in the belief that AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter time frame. There is an AI stock that went up since the beginning of 2025, while popular AI stocks lost around 25%. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than SLVM but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey. Sign in to access your portfolio

Smurfit Westrock (SW): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds
Smurfit Westrock (SW): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

Yahoo

time16-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Smurfit Westrock (SW): Among the Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds

We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where ​​Smurfit Westrock Plc (NYSE:SW) stands against other best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. Paper stocks encompass producers of paper, pulp, packaging products, toilet paper, and forestry operators. This sector typically thrives during periods of economic expansion when consumer spending, ecommerce activity, and industrial production are accelerating, driving higher demand for commercial packaging and consumer paper products. The performance of paper stocks strongly correlates with commodity prices of pulp and timber, as well as with the price of energy and freight, which are large cost inputs in the production chain. Consequently, paper-related stocks generally thrive in inflationary environments due to their pricing power, as producers can easily pass any inflation onto consumers and capture a margin of the price increase. Conversely, these stocks underperform during economic slowdowns as consumer demand and industrial activity fall, and lower commodity prices pressure profitability. Some investors avoid this sector as they mistakenly consider it low growth and disrupted. Their perception is based on a tough 2010s decade marked by several challenges that pressured growth. Here is how AFRY Advisory commented on the paper market: 'With the universal move to digital communication, the demand for print has been on a steep decline, triggering massive shutdowns in the graphic paper sector and sizeable entries in the packaging board market through conversions and grade changes from graphics to packaging grades. The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic deepened the paper markets' decline as decreasing economic activity and lockdowns further contracted the demand for graphics and office papers, while hygiene and corrugated packaging businesses recovered more effectively.' READ ALSO: The struggles of the paper & paper products sector, as proxied by a timber ETF that includes many paper companies as well, extended into the 2020s. In early 2025, just before the US stock market entered correction mode, the sector reached a new all-time low relative to the broad market. Another global timber and wood ETF shows a similar picture – years of underperformance relative to the broad market, which killed most of the investor interest in this sector. Despite sluggish performance in the last years, we believe that the underfollowed paper sector may become favored in the following years due to a plethora of factors triggered by the new Trump 2.0 administration in the US. First, we already know that paper stocks thrive during inflationary periods, and the US appears to have entered a multi-year period of above-average inflation due to the trade wars initiated by President Trump. Many of the paper companies have operations spanning several continents, with cultivation, processing, and selling often happening in two or three different countries, which means that the production chain may become subject to tariffs. Under such circumstances, paper companies will fully pass any inflationary pressures onto the end customer, meaning that they would capture a higher margin in absolute dollar value. The hypothesis of higher inflation in the US is fully supported by the 10-year US treasury yield climbing to 4.58% on April 11, significantly above the second half of 2024. Second, the current US administration is a notorious proponent of onshoring, which means a partial or full return of manufacturing activity into the US. Paper stocks are positively correlated to the level of industrial and commerce activity in the US and could benefit from the accelerating demand for paper used in industrial and commercial packaging. In fact, the onshoring trend is already happening as several corporations, from semiconductors to automobile manufacturers and other consumer discretionary businesses, announced plans to boost their manufacturing presence in the US. We used a stock screener and thematic ETFs to identify companies engaged in the production of pulp, toilet paper, newspapers, cardboard, forest, and other paper-related products. Then we compared the list with Insider Monkey's proprietary database of hedge funds' ownership and included in the article the top 10 stocks with the largest number of hedge funds that own the stock as of Q4 2024. The stocks are ranked in ascending order of the hedge funds having stakes in them. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter's strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points ().​​Smurfit Westrock Plc (NYSE:SW) is a global leader in sustainable paper-based packaging solutions, formed in mid-2024 through the merger of Ireland's Smurfit Kappa and US-based WestRock. The transaction boosted the company's scale as it now operates in 40 countries, managing over 500 packaging converting operations and a large network of 62 paper mills. Its product portfolio includes corrugated packaging, consumer packaging, proprietary box systems, and point-of-sale displays. SW also became an integrated producer and sources raw materials through its own recycling and forestry operations, aligning with its commitment to the circular economy. Smurfit Westrock (NYSE:SW) delivered a strong Q4 performance and achieved its previous full-year 2024 guidance of $4.706 billion adjusted EBITDA. The company has identified significant value-creating opportunities beyond the initial $400 million synergy target, with additional opportunities of at least $400 million through cost takeout and commercial approach improvements. The company has already taken decisive action by streamlining operations, with over 1,000 people leaving the company as part of their decentralization strategy and accountability model. Looking ahead, Smurfit Westrock (NYSE:SW) has started 2025 well and anticipates delivering an adjusted EBITDA growth for the first quarter. The management team is focused on implementing a value-over-volume strategy and is committed to maintaining a strong investment-grade credit rating, targeting a long-term leverage ratio below 2x through the cycle. SW's commitment to innovation, cost discipline, and quality has reinforced its position as not only the largest integrated player in their regions but also the most reliable packaging and supply chain partner for customers, which persuaded us to include it in the fifth place on our list of best paper stocks to consider. Overall, SW ranks 5th on our list of best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. While we acknowledge the potential of SW to grow, our conviction lies in the belief that AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and doing so within a shorter time frame. There is an AI stock that went up since the beginning of 2025, while popular AI stocks lost around 25%. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than SW but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey. Sign in to access your portfolio

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