Accounting probe hits ADM as crop glut, lower margins point to tough
2024
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[January 23, 2024] By
Karl Plume
CHICAGO (Reuters) - An investigation into accounting practices in
Archer-Daniels-Midland's Nutrition segment could not come at a worse
time for the company as sinking crop prices look set to erode profit for
its core grain trading and processing businesses this year.
Before news of the accounting issues broke and sent ADM shares tumbling
24% on Monday, the biggest fall since 1929 according to the Center for
Research in Security Prices, the company had been forecasting the
Nutrition unit it has been expanding for much of the past decade would
return to profit growth in 2024.
The recovery in the business segment that generated about 11% of profit
for ADM in 2022 would have helped cushion the blow from thinning margins
in soybean crushing and ethanol, and from lower crop prices as global
supplies of corn and soy rise, analysts said.
"It is now uncertain whether Nutrition operating profits will return to
(year-over-year) growth in 2024," said Arun Sundaram, senior equity
analyst at CFRA Research.
"We expect the investigation and uncertain outlook to cast a shadow over
ADM's shares, as the Nutrition segment was once the fastest growing and
most profitable segment," he said.
CFRA cut its 12-month price target for ADM to $61 a share from $76
previously, one of several analysts that downgraded ADM share targets
Monday.
ADM and its crop processing and trading rivals cashed in on historically
wide soy crushing margins over the past two years due to strong demand
for vegetable oil to make biofuel, and reduced soy product supplies from
drought-hit Argentina. Those margins are now thinning due to expanded
U.S. processing capacity and a projected crop rebound in Argentina.
Meanwhile, margins for producing ethanol biofuel, a cornerstone of ADM's
portfolio, have narrowed and a global grain glut has curbed crop exports
from the United States, home to the bulk of ADM's operations.
Rivals including Bunge have more of an export base in Argentina and
Brazil.
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Archer Daniels Midland Co (ADM) logo is seen displayed in this
illustration taken, April 10, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
Photo
LOWERED OUTLOOK
ADM on Sunday put its CFO Vikram Luthar on administrative leave and
postponed the upcoming release of fourth-quarter results and its
annual 10-K filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC).
It also cut its adjusted earnings forecast to $6.90 per share for
2023 from an "excess of $7 a share" view earlier and withdrew all of
its forward-looking outlooks for Nutrition.
ADM has invested billions of dollars over the past decade in
Nutrition, the smallest yet fastest growing of its three main
business units, starting with its $3 billion acquisition of WILD
Flavors in 2014. In that time, annual adjusted earnings per share
swelled from $2 to $3 a share to a record $7.85 in 2022.
ADM executives frequently tout the segment as the future of the
company, aiming to capitalize on healthier eating trends and rising
consumer demand for natural ingredients and flavorings.
The unit also provided more earnings stability as company results
were tied less directly to the highly cyclical commodities market.
It was unclear if two recent Nutrition unit acquisitions due to
close early this year would be impacted. ADM announced the purchase
of Revela Foods, a Wisconsin-based developer and manufacturer of
dairy flavor ingredients, and UK-based flavor and ingredient firm
FDL late last year. Analysts also struggled to gauge future returns
for the Nutrition segment.
"If we can't rely on the financial statements, it's hard to judge
the return that they are getting for all these acquisitions if there
is going to be a massive restate of profits that affects multiple
years," said Seth Goldstein, strategist with Morningstar.
(Reporting by Karl Plume in Chicago; Additional reporting by David
Gaffen; Editing by Chris Reese)
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