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ADM 2025 Outlook clouded by biofuel policies and trade tensions

Global grains trader Archer-Daniels-Midland is slashing costs and cutting staff to weather a commodity downturn made more challenging by uncertainty about U.S. biofuels policies and a brewing trade war, the company said on Tuesday.

ADM's problems follow a scandal in accounting that occurred last year, which forced the company twice to revise its financial statements. A federal investigation was also launched.

ADM posted its lowest fourth-quarter profit for six years on Tuesday and predicted that 2025 could see a third consecutive year of earnings decline.

ADM announced that it will eliminate up to 700 positions and cut costs by up to $750,000,000 in the next 3 to 5 years. It is joining rival agribusiness Cargill to tighten its belt.

CEO Juan Luciano stated that it was hard to predict the outcome of ADM's international trading business if President Donald Trump’s orders to increase tariffs on Canada and Mexico, or China, spark widespread retaliation by the top three purchasers of U.S. agricultural goods.

China retaliated with limited tariffs against the new U.S. duties on Chinese products on Tuesday. Beijing's tariffs excluded crops.

Trump has suspended tariffs on Canadian goods and Mexican products for a month.

Luciano added that "the issue" is the retaliatory actions.

He said that ADM was on a list of grain trading companies who could benefit from the current trade turmoil.

ADM can still provide crops from Brazil to a market that has halted its imports of U.S. agricultural products. However, such interruptions may reduce the trading margins.

ADM expanded its global grain distribution and origination footprint in 2018, when China cut its U.S. soya bean purchases. This prompted the company to tap into its Brazilian supply chain for that country.

Luciano stated that ADM, along with other crop processors, were waiting for policy guidance on the size and scope tax credits available to U.S. producers of biofuels. These tax credits could boost oilseed crushing margins and biodiesel production.

ADM, a pioneer in ethanol production and for many years the leading producer of ethanol in the United States, supplies biofuels to Marathon and other companies through its massive processing facilities.

(source: Reuters)