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Gunvor's net profit fell dramatically in the year of management buyout

According to financial results released on Tuesday, global commodity trading house Gunvor saw its net profit drop by 85% in 2025 from $108 million to $104 millions.

The sharp drop occurred during the year that Gunvor employees organized a management buyout in order to replace former CEO Torbjorn Tornqvist.

The firm stated that the net profit figure included writedowns and other impairments totaling $462 million, incurred by a 'new management team.

Gunvor was valued at?around $5 billion and Tornqvist provided a loan to employees of more than $400 million in order to complete the deal. In February, it was reported that Gunvor had been valued at?around $5 billion. Tornqvist provided a loan of more than $4 billion?to employees to make the deal happen.

Gunvor, among other commodity?trading firms, struggled to adjust to the lower profit margins following the COVID-19 recovery in demand and Russia-Ukraine War-related market dislocations which drove record earnings in 2022-2023.

Gary Pedersen, CEO of Gunvor, said that the energy markets would remain structurally tight but politically volatile throughout most of 2025. Trading margins will be driven by fragmentation, sanctions and regional dislocations, rather than fundamental supply and demand imbalances.

Pedersen said the company made $1.63 billion in the first quarter, the equivalent to its 2025 'gross profits,' after what he called an increase in "constructive volatilty" late last.year. (Reporting and editing by Joe Bavier, Jan Harvey, and Robert Harvey in London)

(source: Reuters)