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Louis Dreyfus Results To Gauge Turnaround Effort, Trade-War Fallout

By Steve Wynne-Jones
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Louis Dreyfus Results To Gauge Turnaround Effort, Trade-War Fallout

Agricultural trader Louis Dreyfus Company will be in the spotlight next week as its annual results indicate whether it has recovered from a bruising period in commodities and how well the firm has managed the fallout from a U.S.-China trade dispute.

LDC, known as Dreyfus, is the 'D' of the so-called ABCD quartet of global farming merchants alongside Archer Daniels Midland, Bunge and Cargill.

Its three peers publish on a quarterly basis but LDC discloses results twice a year, drawing extra interest to its interim and annual reports. Its 2018 results are due on Monday.

Farm commodity merchants have been grappling with lower margins in the sourcing and transporting of crops, prompting cutbacks in trading teams and investment down the food chain.

Takeover Target

Investor pressure has centred on Bunge, which has become a takeover target. LDC is under less scrutiny as a private company, but controlling shareholder Margarita Louis-Dreyfus has left the door open to "strategic partnerships" to support future growth.

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The 168-year-old firm sees itself as back on track: its main shareholder has concluded an acrimonious buyout of family minority holdings, its new chief executive has pointed to a stronger second half, while the group has brought in a food innovation head.

LDC also promised to cut its adjusted debt/EBITDA earnings ratio to 3.5-4.0 by the end of 2018, after it surged to 4.6 in the first half from 3.3 at the end of 2017.

Bond Yields

Investors seem reassured, with the group's bond yields falling back from two-year highs during a turbulent autumn that saw a change in CEO and chief financial officer followed by the release of lower first-half profits.

The market will be watching for any surprises, however, after LDC's interim results raised eyebrows with the disclosure of a large dividend and an internal loan to cover a $1 billion bailout of Brazilian sugar unit Biosev.

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After taking over as CEO in late September, company veteran Ian McIntosh said year-to-date results had "significantly improved", suggesting an upturn after a first half sapped by a soy price-hedging effect and emerging trade tensions.

Trade War

The twists and turns of the tariff battle between Washington and Beijing have added to headaches for traders in the past year.

A misstep for Bunge in managing soybean price fluctuations in Brazil during the Sino-U.S. trade war contributed to its fourth-quarter loss.

The divestment of LDC's profitable metal trading unit has put the onus on the group's agricultural businesses, which also include cotton, cereals and coffee, to boost returns.

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Excluding the now-sold metals business, 2017 group net income was $225 million, close to 2015's decade low of $211 million and well below a record $1 billion in 2012.

News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine.

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