© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Bunge Ltd logo is seen displayed in this illustration taken, April 10, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
CHICAGO (Reuters) -U.S. grains merchant Bunge (NYSE:) and Glencore-backed Viterra are merging to create a roughly $34 billion agricultural trading giant, the companies said on Tuesday, in a deal that will likely draw close regulatory scrutiny.
The deal brings Bunge closer in global scale to leading rivals Archer-Daniels-Midland and Cargill.
Shares of Bunge fell 2.5% to $91.45 in premarket trading.
Under the deal, Viterra shareholders will get about 65.6 million shares of Bunge stock, carrying a value of about $6.2 billion, and about $2 billion in cash.
Bunge will also assume $9.8 billion of Viterra’s debt, according to the statement.
Bunge is already the world’s largest oilseed processor and analysts said it and Viterra’s crushing businesses could face regulatory scrutiny in Canada and Argentina.
Last year, Bunge was the largest corn and soybean exporter from Brazil, the world’s top source of the staple crops for making animal feed and biofuels, according to data from shipping agent Cargonave. Viterra was the third-largest corn exporter and No. 7 soybean shipper.
Combined, the companies accounted for about 23.7% of Brazil corn exports in 2022 and 20.9% of Brazil soybean exports, Cargonave data showed.
In the United States, Viterra’s business of buying and selling grain expanded via its purchase of Gavilon last year. The merger would enhance Bunge’s grain exporting and oilseed processing businesses in the world’s No. 2 corn and soy exporter, where it has a smaller presence than ADM and Cargill.
The deal also expands Bunge’s physical grain storage and handling capacity in major wheat exporter Australia, where the company currently operates just two grain elevators and a port terminal in the western part of the country. Viterra has 55 storage sites in South Australia and western Victoria and six bulk grain export terminals.
Bunge’s management team, led by CEO Greg Heckman who took over the top role in 2019 when the company itself was a takeover target, will oversee the combined entity.
Heckman oversaw a portfolio review that led Bunge to scale back or sell underperforming operations such as South American sugar and Mexican wheat milling, and invest in its core edible oils business. The company reported record earnings last year after a string of quarterly losses in 2018. Heckman previously led Gavilon from 2008 to 2015.
Bunge said it plans to repurchase $2 billion of its stock to enhance accretion from the deal to adjusted profit.
Viterra shareholders will own 30% of the combined company following the deal’s expected close in mid-2024, and about 33% after completion of the repurchase plan.
The world’s top vegetable oils producer Bunge had also entered partnerships with oil major Chevron (NYSE:) and seeds and chemicals giant Bayer (OTC:) to pursue soaring demand for renewable fuels feedstocks.
In Ukraine, the world’s top sunflower producer and largest supplier of sunflower oil, a combined Bunge-Viterra would have three oilseed processing plants across the country’s south and east – in Kharkiv, Dnipro and Mykolaiv.
Acquiring Viterra would bring Bunge’s revenue, which was $67.2 billion in 2022, more in line with that of ADM, which registered sales of nearly $102 billion last year.
In early 2017, Viterra, then known as Glencore (OTC:) Agriculture, attempted a takeover of Bunge, which was then valued at $11 billion. The attempt was rebuffed.
The merger is expected to generate about $250 million of annual gross pre-tax operational synergies within three years.
This story originally appeared on Investing