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Louis Dreyfus Chair Owes Credit Suisse $240m After ADQ Deal

By Dayeeta Das
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Louis Dreyfus Chair Owes Credit Suisse $240m After ADQ Deal

Margarita Louis-Dreyfus, chairperson and main shareholder of Louis Dreyfus Company, borrowed about $240 million (€212.5 million) from Credit Suisse in a reduced loan arrangement following the sale of a stake in LDC, an annual company report showed.

Louis-Dreyfus told Swiss business magazine Bilanz in late 2020 she planned to use the proceeds of the sale of a 45% stake in LDC to Abu Dhabi investment firm ADQ to settle a $1 billion (€890 million) loan from Credit Suisse, taken in early 2019 to buy out minority family shareholders.

The overall value of the deal with ADQ - which became the first outside investor in the 170-year-old commodity merchant controlled by Louis-Dreyfus via the Akira trust - has not been disclosed.

LDC later announced it had allowed the repayment of a separate $1.051 billion loan that it had granted to its parent company.

Akira's 2020 report filed last week showed the trust owed Credit Suisse $718.4 million of the original loan at the end of 2020, of which a further $50 million was repaid in May 2021.

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New Agreement With Credit Suisse

On 9 September 2021, Akira and allied family shareholding entity Ruethiers entered a new agreement with Credit Suisse to replace the previous one, drawing down $240.7 million the following day, when the closing of ADQ's stake purchase was announced, the report showed.

Also on 10 September, Akira received a $405.3 million dividend from LDC's holding as well as a $47 million share premium reimbursement from Ruethiers, the filing said.

The money received by Akira at the time of the ADQ deal, along with the repayment of the separate $1.051 billion loan, suggests that ADQ invested at least $1.5 billion in its stake.

LDC said in an emailed response that the financial terms of the ADQ deal remained confidential and its value could not be deduced from Akira's filing.

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Akira does not take media queries and discloses any public information in its filings, LDC added.

ADQ did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Financial pressure on LDC has also been eased by improved earnings from rising commodity prices and strong demand for staple crops during the COVID-19 pandemic.

News by Reuters, edited by ESM. For more Supply Chain news, click here. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine.

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