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Reuters: Commodity trader Cargill restructures, cuts jobs

November 16, 2015
Consumer Packaged Goods

(Reuters) – Cargill Inc [CARG.UL], one of the world’s largest privately held corporations, has launched a restructuring that includes job cuts, one company source and four industry sources said on Friday, the latest casualty of a downturn in the farm economy.

The 150-year-old company, a top commodities trader, is also closing offices, two of the industry sources said.

The cutbacks at the Minnesota-based company come as global agricultural companies are under pressure from slumping commodity prices, slowing demand in China and weakness in emerging markets where Cargill has significant investments.

Cargill may eliminate as many as 4,000 jobs, which would represent about 2.5 percent of its employees, one of the industry sources said.

The company is “working on recalibrating their business,” said another industry source, a banker.

A Cargill spokesman initially declined to comment, saying “we typically don’t comment on rumors.” He later added that he had not “heard anything along the lines of the layoff numbers you mentioned or office closings.”

Cargill is among four “ABCD” companies that dominate the flow of agricultural goods around the world, competing against rivals Archer Daniels Midland Co, Bunge Ltd and Louis Dreyfus Corp.

Recently, the companies have faced new competition from trading houses in Asia.

“It seems like they’re trying to adapt and be a little bit leaner and faster,” one U.S. grain trader who interacts with Cargill said about the company.

Chief Executive David MacLennan, who took the reins two years ago, has already taken steps to change the company. In the last six months, Cargill has sold its U.S. hog business to Brazilian meat packer JBS SA for $1.45 billion and paid about $1.5 billion to buy Norwegian fish feed maker Ewos.

The company has said it will split the company’s hedge fund arm, Black River Asset Management, into three separate employee-owned firms.

Other agricultural companies are cutting back and looking to consolidate to save money. Last month, Monsanto Co, the world’s biggest seed company, said it was slashing 2,600 jobs and restructuring operations.

Deere & Co, the largest maker of farm equipment, also has eliminated jobs.

Last month, Cargill reported a 20-percent gain in profits for its fiscal first quarter ended Aug. 31, following a loss in the fourth quarter that the company attributed in part to slowing economies in emerging markets.

Cargill’s last substantial restructuring was about 15 years ago and aimed at moving employees into positions built around product lines instead of their geographic locations, said Ken Morrison, who worked for the company for 27 years until 2003.

“Headcount reduction and Cargill just don’t go in the same sentence,” Morrison said.

Separately, Cargill said on Friday that two vice chairmen with a combined 74 years of experience at the company will retire.

(Writing and additional reporting by Tom Polansek in Chicago; Editing by Alden Bentley and Chris Reese)

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