We recently published a list of 10 Best Paper Stocks to Buy According to Hedge Funds. In this article, we are going to take a look at where International Paper Company (NYSE:IP) 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.”
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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.
Our Methodology
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 (see more details here).

A close-up view of a hand assembling boxes of industrial packaging on an assembly line.
International Paper Company (NYSE:IP)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 54
International Paper Company (NYSE:IP) is a leading global producer of fiber-based packaging and pulp products, operating manufacturing facilities across North America, Europe, Latin America, and Africa. IP’s primary business segments include industrial packaging (producing containerboard and corrugated boxes) and pulp, which supplies fluff, paper-grade, and specialty pulps. The company’s client base spans across industries like e-commerce, retail, and consumer goods.
Through the recent acquisition of DS Smith in 2025, International Paper Company (NYSE:IP) is positioned to become a global leader in sustainable packaging solutions focused on North America and EMEA markets. The company is implementing significant cost reduction initiatives, targeting $1.2 billion in net cost improvements, with approximately $120 million in annual corporate cost reductions and $110 million from facility closures already announced. IP’s commercial strategy reset is progressing as planned, with volume trends stabilizing and expected to show improvement in the latter half of 2025.
International Paper Company (NYSE:IP) is also making strategic investments to enhance its competitive position, including a new greenfield box plant in Iowa designed to deliver 20% lower costs and improved product quality. Management is focused on improving mill reliability and operational performance, addressing approximately $350 million in performance-related costs from 2024. The implementation of an 80/20 strategy has shown promising results in pilot locations, with 20% productivity gains, and will be expanded to 22 more box plants in 2025. These initiatives are part of a broader transformation aimed at creating a performance-driven, customer-centric culture to achieve $4 billion in EBITDA in the medium term.
Overall, IP ranks 1st on our list of best paper stocks to buy according to hedge funds. While we acknowledge the potential of IP 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 IP but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock.
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Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.