Packaging & Containers

Packaging & Containers

Raw material costs for resin, pulp, and metals dominate production economics with limited short-term pass-through, while bulky formats require proximity to customers where freight costs can exceed product value.

Companies that manufacture packaging materials and containers from paper, plastic, glass, and metal to enable product containment, protection, and transport through supply chains.

The packaging and containers industry converts raw substrates into the physical materials that enclose, protect, and present products through supply chains. The transformation spans multiple material systems: corrugated cardboard for shipping, paperboard for consumer cartons, plastic containers and films for food and household goods, glass bottles and jars, and metal cans. Each substrate involves distinct manufacturing processes, equipment, and cost structures, but all serve the shared function of enabling products to be stored, transported, and sold without damage or contamination.

The cost structure is dominated by raw material inputs, typically representing the majority of total production costs. This creates an asymmetric margin dynamic: when resin, pulp, or metal prices rise, contractual pass-through mechanisms lag, compressing margins in the interim. Customer relationships tend toward operational integration rather than transactional purchasing, as package design co-development, food safety qualification, and filling-line calibration create switching costs that increase with packaging complexity and product-contact requirements.

As a midstream converter, the industry sits between upstream raw material suppliers and downstream product manufacturers. Regulatory pressure around recycled content, single-use plastic restrictions, and extended producer responsibility is reshaping substrate economics and driving capital reallocation toward recyclable and recycled-content formats. Proximity to customers remains structurally important for bulky or heavy packaging where freight costs can exceed the value of the packaging itself.

Structural Role

Provides the physical containment, protection, and transport layer that enables goods to move from production through distribution to consumption without degradation, functioning as the material interface between products and supply chains across food, beverage, industrial, and consumer goods sectors.

Scale Differentiation

Large packaging companies operate multi-substrate, multi-plant networks serving major consumer goods companies that require consistent quality and supply across geographies. Mid-size producers specialize in specific substrates or end markets where technical capability in barrier coatings, custom forming, or rapid design iteration supports differentiation. Smaller converters serve local or regional accounts where short runs, quick turnaround, and flexibility matter more than volume pricing.