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1 Growth Stock Down 50% to Buy Right Now

The Motley FoolMay 13, 2026 12:05 PM
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Key Points

  • Graphic Packaging looks less like a collapsing business and more like a cyclical industrial company going through a painful reset.

  • Food and beverage companies are moving away from plastic and tightening sustainability standards.

  • Graphic Packaging is positioned with paper-based packaging solutions and strong consumer-brand relationships.

One stock at the crossroads of consumer brands and sustainability looks mispriced after a brutal year. Graphic Packaging (NYSE: GPK) has seen its share price cut in half -- over 54% since May 2025 -- yet its core role in how consumer goods reach shelves gives the business more resilience and optionality than the stock price suggests.

Graphic Packaging is a niche company, and you probably haven't heard of it. The company designs and produces paperboard cartons and other packaging for food, beverage, household, and broader consumer products across the Americas, Europe, and Asia‑Pacific. The company focuses on packaging made from renewable or recycled materials, positioning it with brand owners who want to reduce plastic use and meet tighter sustainability targets.

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Boxes line a conveyor belt.

Image source: Getty Images.

The stock is down over the last 12 months, even though the company still generates over $8 billion in annual sales and holds a market value of around $3 billion. That disconnect creates an entry point in a business that sits inside the supply chains of many household brands and still expects positive revenue and earnings for 2026.

In its first‑quarter 2026 results release, Graphic Packaging reported net sales of $2.156 billion, up 2% year over year, with volume growth offsetting price pressure and currency swings. Management still expects 2026 net sales between $8.4 billion and $8.6 billion and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) between $1.05 billion and $1.25 billion, despite recent margin compression.

Graphic Packaging's business review is a reason to buy

After a 90‑day business review, Graphic Packaging instituted a leadership change and laid out a plan that targets both cost structure and capital intensity rather than simple volume growth. The company plans to achieve $60 million in cost reductions, including eliminating or leaving unfilled more than 500 salaried roles, and is selling non-core assets, such as its Croatian business.

Management canceled low‑return projects that would have required more than $200 million in future capital expenditures and cut 2026 capex guidance to roughly $450 million, down from $922 million in 2025. Lower capital needs and working‑capital initiatives, including inventory reduction, support a 2026 adjusted cash‑flow target of $700 million and $800 million, which would help the company reduce net leverage to 4.4 times.

Packaging tends to be capital-heavy and cyclical, and long periods of high capex can trap shareholders in low‑return expansions. By resetting spending and focusing on high‑return projects, Graphic Packaging seeks to convert a larger share of revenue into free cash flow rather than only chasing volume or market share.

Innovation and ethics in a consumer‑goods world

The 2026 Consumer Products Industry Outlook from Deloitte highlights how packaging has moved from a cost line item to a strategic lever as brands face new regulations, retailer standards, and automation needs. Against that backdrop, Graphic Packaging reported $42 million in "Innovation Sales Growth" in the first quarter and filed 13 new patents, bringing its patent portfolio to roughly 3,100.

Graphic Packaging still looks like an undervalued long-term buy to me. Its sustainable packaging leadership, strong relationships with major food and beverage brands, improving cash flow outlook, and growing role in helping companies meet tougher environmental and retail standards outweigh any 50% stock dip.

Should you buy stock in Graphic Packaging right now?

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Micah Zimmerman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: The information provided on this website is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice.

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