TCLAF (Transcontinental) Property, Plant and Equipment: $153 Mil (As of Apr. 2026)


TCLAF Transcontinental Inc TCLAF
58 GF Score
Price $3.93
GF Value $7.43
Valuation Significantly Undervalued
! 5 Warning Signs
View Full Analysis

What is Transcontinental Property, Plant and Equipment?

Transcontinental TCLAF +10.21% 58 Property, Plant and Equipment is $153 Mil as of Apr. 2026. GuruFocus rates TCLAF with a GF Score™ of 58/100 and a GF Value™ of $7.43 (Significantly Undervalued). The stock has 5 warning signs investors should review.

Transcontinental's quarterly net PPE declined from Oct. 2025 ($589 Mil) to Jan. 2026 ($131 Mil) but then increased from Jan. 2026 ($131 Mil) to Apr. 2026 ($153 Mil).

Transcontinental's annual net PPE declined from Oct. 2023 ($653 Mil) to Oct. 2024 ($619 Mil) and declined from Oct. 2024 ($619 Mil) to Oct. 2025 ($589 Mil).


Transcontinental  (OTCPK:TCLAF) Property, Plant and Equipment Explanation

A company with durable competitive advantage doesn't need to constantly upgrade its equipment to stay competitive. The company replaces when it wears out. On the other hand, a company without any advantages must replace to keep pace.

Difference between a company with a moat and one without is that the company with the competitive advantage finances new equipment through internal cash flows, whereas the no advantage company requires debt to finance.

Producing a consistent product that doesn't change equates to consistent profits. There is no need to upgrade plants which frees up cash for other ventures. Think Coca Cola, Johnson & Johnson etc.


Transcontinental Property, Plant and Equipment Related Terms


Transcontinental Property, Plant and Equipment Historical Data

* Premium members only.

The historical data trend for Transcontinental's Property, Plant and Equipment can be seen below:

* For Operating Data section: All numbers are indicated by the unit behind each term and all currency related amount are in USD.
* For other sections: All numbers are in millions except for per share data, ratio, and percentage. All currency related amount are indicated in the company's associated stock exchange currency.

Transcontinental Property, Plant and Equipment Chart

Transcontinental Annual Data
Trend Oct16 Oct17 Oct18 Oct19 Oct20 Oct21 Oct22 Oct23 Oct24 Oct25
Property, Plant and Equipment
Get a 7-Day Free Trial Premium Member Only Premium Member Only 667.93 655.13 652.79 618.59 589.08

Transcontinental Quarterly Data
Jul21 Oct21 Jan22 Apr22 Jul22 Oct22 Jan23 Apr23 Jul23 Oct23 Jan24 Apr24 Jul24 Oct24 Jan25 Apr25 Jul25 Oct25 Jan26 Apr26
Property, Plant and Equipment Get a 7-Day Free Trial Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only Premium Member Only 583.72 595.21 589.08 130.93 153.34
TCLAF
58GF Score
Transcontinental Inc TCLAF
Property, Plant and Equipment is just one metric. See GF Score™, valuation, warning signs, and more.
View Full Analysis

Transcontinental Property, Plant and Equipment Calculation

Property, Plant and Equipment (PPE) are the fixed assets of the companyFixed assets are also known as non-current assets.

Property, plant, and equipment includes assets that will - in the normal course of business - neither be used up in the next year nor will become a part of any product sold to customers.

Some of the most common parts of property, plant, and equipment are:


Land
Buildings (and leasehold improvements)
Transportation equipment
Manufacturing equipment
Office equipment
Office furniture

Companies with lots of property, plant, and equipment often have special categories. For example, railroad property includes:


Track
Ties
Ballast
Bridges
Tunnels
Signals
Locomotives
Freight Cars

There is often a note in the financial statements - found in a company's 10-K - that will explain the different categories of property a company owns.

The market value of property, plant, and equipment can differ tremendously from the book value of property, plant, and equipment.

For example, when Berkshire Hathaway liquidated its textile mills, it had to pay the buyers of the company's manufacturing equipment to haul the equipment away. That property, plant, and equipment was literally worth less than zero. On the other hand, some companies own thousands of acres of land.

All property, plant, and equipment other than land is depreciated. Land is never depreciated. However, land is not marked up to market value either. Under Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), land is shown on the balance sheet at cost.

The property, plant, and equipment line shown on the balance sheet is usually net property, plant, and equipment. This means it is the cost of the property, plant, and equipment less accumulated depreciation.

What does a Property, Plant and Equipment of $153 Mil mean?
Transcontinental (TCLAF) has a Property, Plant and Equipment of $153 Mil as of Apr. 2026. The total property, plant and equipment recorded on a company's balance sheet less accumulated depreciation. View historical data on Transcontinental and its competitors.
Is Transcontinental's Property, Plant and Equipment too high?
Transcontinental's current Property, Plant and Equipment is $153 Mil. Overall, Transcontinental has a GF Score™ of 58/100 and is considered Significantly Undervalued, reflecting its overall financial health beyond just this single metric.
How does Transcontinental's Property, Plant and Equipment compare to SW and PKG?
Transcontinental's Property, Plant and Equipment of $153 Mil can be compared against companies in the Packaging & Containers industry. See the competitive comparison table and distribution chart on this page for a detailed peer-by-peer breakdown.
What is a good Property, Plant and Equipment for a Packaging & Containers company?
A good Property, Plant and Equipment depends on the Packaging & Containers industry context. However, Property, Plant and Equipment should not be evaluated in isolation — investors should consider it alongside profitability, growth, and financial strength metrics. Use the industry distribution chart on this page to see where any company falls relative to its peers.
What does a high Property, Plant and Equipment mean?
A high Property, Plant and Equipment can signal that a stock is expensive relative to its fundamentals. The total property, plant and equipment recorded on a company's balance sheet less accumulated depreciation. View historical data on Transcontinental and its competitors. Transcontinental's current Property, Plant and Equipment is $153 Mil. However, context matters — high-growth companies often justify higher valuations. Always evaluate alongside other metrics like GF Score™ and GF Value™.
Is Transcontinental stock overvalued right now?
Based on GuruFocus' analysis, Transcontinental (TCLAF) is currently considered Significantly Undervalued. The stock's GF Value™ is $7.43, compared to a current price of $3.93 — trading 47% below its estimated fair value. The current Property, Plant and Equipment is $153 Mil. Transcontinental's overall GF Score™ is 58/100 with 5 warning signs to review. Investors should evaluate multiple metrics — including profitability, growth, and financial strength — before making a decision.
How is Property, Plant and Equipment calculated?
Property, Plant and Equipment is calculated from a company's financial statements. For Transcontinental (TCLAF), the current Property, Plant and Equipment is $153 Mil as of Apr. 2026. GuruFocus calculates this using data sourced from SEC filings and annual reports. See the calculation section and 30-year financial data on this page for the full breakdown.

Is Transcontinental (TCLAF) Overvalued in 2026?

Based on GuruFocus' analysis, Transcontinental stock appears to be undervalued. The current stock price of $3.93 is trading 47% below its estimated GF Value™ of $7.43. GuruFocus considers Transcontinental to be Significantly Undervalued.

Key valuation signals for TCLAF:

  • Property, Plant and Equipment: $153 Mil
  • GF Value™: $7.43 vs. price of $3.93 (47% below fair value)
  • GF Score™: 58/100 with 5 warning signs

No single metric tells the full story. See the TCLAF stock analysis page for a complete view including 30-year financials, guru trades, and insider activity.


Transcontinental Business Description

Address 1 Place Ville Marie, Suite 3240, Affaires Juridiques, A/s Caroline Hamel, Montreal, QC, CAN, H3B 0G1
Transcontinental Inc operates in flexible packaging, retail marketing services, printing, and French-language educational publishing across Canada, the United States, Latin America, and the United Kingdom. Its Packaging Sector provides extrusion, lamination, printing, and converting of flexible plastic products, including rollstock, labels, die cut lids, shrink films, bags, pouches, and coatings. The Retail Services and Printing Sector offers content solutions, marketing and media services, flyer printing, digital flyer solutions, in-store marketing and print solutions for newspapers, magazines and 4-colour books, and the Other column includes the Media Sector, which publishes print and digital educational, supplemental and professional books, along with head office costs and eliminations.
58GF Score

Get the complete analysis for TCLAF

Property, Plant and Equipment is just one metric. See GF Value™, 30-year financials, guru trades, warning signs, and more.

$3.93
Price
$7.43
GF Value