Minnesota-based Cargill did not immediately provide further
specifics around the layoffs. But a 2024 annual report from the
company noted that it had more than 160,000 employees worldwide,
meaning the latest job cuts would be set to impact around 8,000
workers.
As a privately-held company, Cargill doesn’t regularly publish
its finances publicly. A 2024 report from the company, however,
notes that it operates in 70 countries and sells to 125 markets
— raking in some $160 billion in annual revenue. That's down
from $177 billion in revenues seen the year prior.
This week's layoff announcement arrives while much of the
agricultural industry continues to face dropping prices for the
commodities they trade, with the costs of anything from wheat to
vegetable oil coming down from record surges seen during the
COVID-19 pandemic and global conflicts such as Russia's war in
Ukraine. While sticker prices for consumers are still higher
than they were just several years ago, that shift has added
pressures on food giants like Cargill.
“As the world around us changes, we are committed to
transforming even faster to deliver for our customers and fulfil
our purpose of nourishing the world,” Cargill stated Tuesday.
The company added that its workforce reductions are a result of
a “difficult decision (that) was not made lightly.”
According to an internal memo seen by Bloomberg, which first
reported on Cargill's layoffs Monday, Chief Executive Officer
Brian Sikes told employees that the majority of these reductions
will take place this year. Citing unnamed sources familiar with
the matter, the outlet also reported that the job cuts won't
impact Cargill's executive team, but a number of other senior
leaders will be included.
Despite recent revenue declines, Forbes again named Cargill the
largest private company in the U.S. this year — marking the
fourth consecutive year the company has held this title, and
37th time overall since Forbes began its rankings in 1985.
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