Welcome to the Bunge Q3 2022 earnings results review. All participants will be in listen- only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note today's event is being recorded. Now I'd like to turn the call over to your host today, Ruth Ann Wisener. Ms. Wisener, please go ahead.
Thank you, Keith, and thank you for joining us this morning for our third quarter earnings call. Before we get started, I want to let you know that we have slides to accompany our discussion. These can be found in the investors section of our website at bunge.com under Events and Presentations. Reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure are posted on our website as well. I'd like to direct you to slide two and remind you that today's presentation includes forward-looking statements that reflect Bunge's current view with respect to future events, financial performance, and industry conditions. These forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties. Bunge has provided additional information in its reports on file with the SEC concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in this presentation, and we encourage you to review these factors.
On the call this morning are Greg Heckman, Bunge's Chief Executive Officer, and John Neppl, Chief Financial Officer. I'll now turn the call over to Greg.
Thank you, Ruth Ann, and good morning, everyone. I wanna start by thanking the team. Through their outstanding focus and coordination, we delivered strong quarterly results against the backdrop of shifting operating environment. The third quarter once again demonstrates the strength of our team and the power of our global platform. Through our global organizational approach and asset footprint, we've created the ability to adapt quickly to supply and demand disruptions. Whether the markets are driven by inflation, energy costs, weather impacts, conflict, or as in this quarter, all of those factors, the team uses our expertise, relationships, and analysis to deliver for our customers on both ends of the value chain. Looking beyond the current market environment, we continue to focus on growing the business by making disciplined choices, balancing benefits and risks. Take renewable fuels.
The demand for low carbon feedstocks continues to be strong and is expected to increase. We're meeting this demand in part with two partnerships we announced earlier this year. Our renewable feedstocks joint venture with Chevron is going well, and we're excited about our investment in CoverCress and its ability to develop a cover crop to bring a new low CI renewable oilseed to market. Just two weeks ago, we announced a joint venture with Olleco, the renewables division for ABP Food Group, to create a business that encompasses the full life cycle of edible oils. This partnership will expand our portfolio of renewable feedstocks in Europe and help address environmental and energy security challenges in key markets in that region. These partnerships are a great example of Bunge's commitment to finding innovative, sustainable solutions in the renewable space.
As a global leader in oilseeds processing, we see this as our obligation and a significant long-term opportunity. At the same time, we're expanding our origination capabilities in South America with the launch of Orígeo, a partnership with UPL, providing an integrated and complete offering of inputs, services, financing solutions, and agronomic consulting to farmers in Brazil. Turning to third quarter numbers, adjusted core segment EBIT was above last year's results and ahead of our expectations, driven by strong performances in agribusiness and refined and specialty oils. John will go into more detail on the P&L, but I wanna mention the impact of higher energy costs and inflation on Bunge. Like all businesses, we are impacted by inflation or recession, but not in the same manner or magnitude as purely industrial companies due to our place in the center of the supply chain.
Looking ahead, we expect the market to remain dynamic and are moving forward with our usual discipline. Based upon our execution so far and the current environment, we now expect to deliver adjusted EPS of at least $13.50 for the full- year 2022, which would be our third record year in a row. In this market, having a solid balance sheet, strong liquidity, and global optionality are a competitive advantage. We're in a great position with the flexibility to operate our business, invest in our future, and return cash to shareholders in the form of dividends and share repurchases as we did here in the third quarter. With that, I'll hand the call over to John to walk through the results.
Thanks, Greg, and good morning, everyone. Let's turn to the earnings highlights on slide five. Our reported third quarter earnings per share was $2.49, compared to $4.28 in the third quarter of 2021. Our reported results included a negative mark-to-market timing difference of $0.19 per share and a net negative impact of $0.70 per share related to one-time items. Adjusted EPS was $3.45 in the third quarter versus $3.72 in the prior year. Adjusted core segment earnings before interest and taxes for EBIT was $740 million in the quarter versus $698 million last year. The higher results were driven by our refined and specialty oil segment.
In total, agribusiness results of $528 million compared to $533 million last year. In processing, results were essentially flat with last year as increases in North and South America were offset by lower results in Europe, where a combination of a sharp rise in energy costs and increased meal imports pressured margins. Results in China were down primarily due to the impact of pandemic-related lockdowns. Merchandising results of $108 million were down slightly compared to last year, as higher contributions from global grains and financial services were offset by lower results in global oils marketing. In refined and specialty oils, higher results reflect strong performances in our refined oil operations in North and South America, Europe and North America. In milling, higher results in North America were more than offset by lower results in South America.
The decrease in corporate expenses was primarily related to the timing of performance-based compensation accruals. The decrease in other was primarily related to lower gains on investments in Bunge Ventures. Lower results in our non-core sugar and bioenergy joint venture were primarily driven by the combination of lower ethanol volumes and increased costs. Net interest expense was up compared to last year due to higher interest rates, partially offset by lower average debt levels. Also impacting the quarter were foreign currency borrowings in certain countries where interest rates were high. However, the incrementally higher borrowing costs were fully offset with currency hedges that are reported in gross margin. Let's turn to slide six, where you can see our positive EPS and EBIT trends adjusted for notable items and timing differences over the past four years, along with the trailing 12 months.
This performance trend demonstrates our team's ability to successfully manage through rapidly changing markets and also the strength of our global platform. As shown on slide seven, year-to-date addressable SG&A has increased modestly year-over-year, reflecting resumption of more normal business activities such as employee travel and related expenses, as well as increasing investment to strengthen our capabilities and drive growth. Slide eight details our capital allocation of approximately $1.8 billion of adjusted funds from operations that we generated year-to-date. After allocating $184 million to sustaining CapEx, which includes maintenance, environmental, health and safety, and $8 million to preferred dividends on shares now converted to common equity, we had approximately $1.6 billion of discretionary cash flow available.
Of this amount, we paid $248 million in common dividends, invested $168 million in growth and productivity CapEx, and repurchased $200 million of common shares during the third quarter. This left us with approximately $1 billion of retained cash flow, which we invested in additional working capital during the year, while also reducing our net debt. We will continue to maintain a disciplined and balanced approach to capital allocation. Moving to slide nine. At quarter end, readily marketable inventories or RMI exceeded our net debt by approximately $2.3 billion. As commodity prices have moderated recently, the cash that has been invested in inventory has been released and deployed toward debt reduction.
To provide additional understanding of how commodity price movements and other factors impact our cash flow from operations, we have posted a presentation in the investors section on our website this morning. Should you have any questions, feel free to reach out to our IR team. Slide 10 highlights our liquidity position, which remains strong. At quarter end, approximately $6.7 billion of our committed credit facilities was unused and available. This provides us ample liquidity to manage our ongoing capital needs in this volatile commodity price environment. As shown on Slide 11, our trailing 12 months adjusted ROIC was 22.2%, 15.6 percentage points over our RMI adjusted weighted average cost of capital of 6.6%. ROIC was 15.2% or 9.2 percentage points over our weighted average cost of capital of 6%.
The spread between these two metrics reflects how we use RMI in our operations as a tool to generate incremental profit. Moving to slide 12. For the trailing twelve months, we produced discretionary cash flow of approximately $2.2 billion and a cash flow yield of 21.7%. Please turn to slide 13 in our 2022 outlook. As Greg mentioned in his remarks, taking into account our third quarter results, the current margin environment and forward curves, we've increased our full-year 2022 adjusted EPS outlook to at least $13.50 per share, a $1.50 per share increase over our previous outlook.
In agribusiness, full year results are expected to be higher than our previous outlook, but down from last year as stronger results in processing are more than offset by lower expected performance in merchandising, which had a particularly strong prior year. In refined and specialty oils, full year results are expected to be up from our previous outlook and significantly higher than last year, driven by our refining operations. In milling, full year results are expected to be in line with our previous outlook and significantly higher than last year. In corporate and other, results are expected to be in line with our previous outlook and last year. In non-core, full year results in our sugar and bioenergy joint venture are expected to be lower than our previous forecast and down slightly from last year. Additionally, the company now estimates the following for 2022.
An adjusted annual effective tax rate of 16%, net interest expense of $300 million, capital expenditures of $600 million, and depreciation amortization of $400 million. We have reduced our CapEx forecast from our previous estimate of $650 million, primarily due to supply chain delays. We would expect to carry this shortfall over into 2023. With that, I'll turn things back over to Greg for closing comments.
Thanks, John. Before turning to Q&A, I wanna offer a few closing thoughts on how we're investing the business to ensure that we're best positioned to capture the growth ahead of us. That's in our physical infrastructure, our technology, and most importantly, our team. First, we're strategically investing in our existing facilities in safety and maintenance projects, as well as in key upgrades to ensure our platform remains strong and efficient and operates at optimal utilization. Second, we're investing in and planning for new projects, both through partnerships as well as greenfield and brownfield opportunities that further our strategic goals and exceed our return requirements. We're also investing aggressively into digital tools. We know we will deliver our greatest impact when our teams are fully empowered to use technology, data, and new ways of working to connect farmers to consumers in smarter, faster, and simpler ways.
This includes investments in interconnectivity, automation, and machine learning to ensure our plants run reliably and at optimal performance. We're also investing in systems to increase real-time insights to help us better anticipate key market trends, manage flows and transactions. This is a great example of our focus on continuous improvement in an area where we feel we already possess industry-leading risk management capabilities for Bunge and our customers. Most importantly, we're investing in our team. Having the right people with the right skills to make the best use of our assets and technology is what leads to our success. We continue investing in learning and development programs to support our strong talent at all levels of the organization.
We're also expanding our intern and trainee programs to ensure that we have a steady and diverse pipeline of the best and brightest talent to develop into the next generation of leaders for this great company. With that, we'll turn to Q&A.
Thank you. At this time, we will begin the question- and- answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble the roster. The first question comes from Benjamin Theurer with Barclays.
Yeah. Good morning. Thank you very much. Good morning, Greg. Good morning, John. Congrats on the results.
Hey. Morning, Ben.
Morning, Ben.
It's a structural question. Obviously, you've raised the guidance by about $1.50- $13.50 now, and you just set third record year in a row. I mean, we all know the market environment is really good, and I mean, you've obviously leveraged on that. Could you talk a little bit about what is driving the results? I mean, how much of that increase is structural? How much is in control of Bunge? Also, in light of that, just a few years ago, you made, like, $10 less earnings per share versus what you've been running at, like, last year, this year. Just to understand the magnitude, how much is structural, how much is Bunge itself, and how do you think about this going forward?
Okay. Thanks, Ben. Let me talk about Bunge first and then talk a little bit about the environment. Look, we're running a very different company. If you think about the significant changes that we made here, starting with the portfolio, the number of investments that we've made. You know, we've optimized the footprint. We protected the fact that we have a very global footprint, and that's shown to be very important here. We're approaching how we operate with a completely different level of discipline, and that's not only on the day-to-day risk management of how we operate, but how we think about investments and how we make investments. We focus really on the assets.
You know, these big fixed asset businesses, you need to really be excellent operationally in the way our commercial teams work with our industrial teams. I mean, you can look at our volumes, our capacity utilization, the unplanned downtime continues to get lower. Just the focus around the operational improvements are fantastic and very important. The focus, of course, on the balance sheet, strengthening that, our credit ratings, our liquidity. Then the operating model, right? The operating model and the reward system to support it, that's really led to the agility that allows us to take advantage of a better environment. It's the agility and the alignment of our global team and the speed to act. I think, you know, you saw some of that even in the third quarter.
If you look externally, you know, we've got a lot that's changed, right? If you look back here in what we've done here in the last three years that we were in control of, there are a lot of things we weren't, right? Renewable diesel, that is definitely a tailwind in biofuels in general, globally. With, I think, the energy prices and the volatility we expect going forward, that doesn't look like that's going to change. Global S&Ds have remained tight and that's led to more volatility. Of course, we've had the dislocation from the Ukraine-Russia conflict.
That's going to carry on as well going forward on the dislocation, even if the war ended today because of the lack of trust and because of infrastructure that's been damaged. You've just got geopolitical tension and uncertainty. Again, the climate and the weather extremes, and then add in all the supply chain challenges that started with the pandemic, but seem to not be able to get cured even as the pandemic winds down in most parts of the world. What that leads to is it's more complexity for all. Our business is really helping our customers at both ends of the supply chain manage that complexity and helping solve problems.
I think our global footprint and our way of operating it are showing that in a number of different conditions that we can continue to deliver, and we're really proud of that.
Perfect. Well, that was very clear, and thank you very much for that. Then just one quick follow-up. I mean, when we look into the fourth quarter and what you've basically been guiding for and just in comparison to last year, could you give us a little bit of a more detail versus what the annual guidance is and what you expect from a segment-specific point of view for the fourth quarter in agribusiness, refined, and milling?
I'd start by saying, just reminding you what we do in our outlook is, you know, we look at, one, what the curves are, and then, of course, we look at what we have on the books already. What we are seeing in the refined and specialty oil is a higher percentage booked here for Q4 and even starting out into 2023. Of course, that's the most stable part of the P&L, so that gives us some of the confidence in at least the $13.50. Then we're seeing, you know, no doubt an environment that has been very hard to predict, so it's fairly risk off, I think, globally, if you look at the macros.
You know, we're definitely operating with lower levels of risk, and it's very uncertain how it will play out. But I think, you know, that's what's in our outlook, that and the curves.
Yeah. I would just add, Ben, that, you know, ultimately, you know, we had a very good fourth quarter last year in merchandising, and t hat's the one that's most inherently difficult to predict. We don't certainly forecast, you know, a quarter like what we saw last year, but that's also where the opportunity ends up, you know, when we see volatility. With the at least $13.50, you know, implies that, you know, there could be upside. Certainly if we get it will be most likely in the merchandising segment.
Okay. Perfect. Very clear. Thanks for that clarification. Congrats again.
Thank you. The next question comes from Ben Bienvenu for Stephens.
Hey, thanks. Good morning, everybody.
Good morning.
Hey, morning, Ben.
I wanna ask maybe a follow-on to Ben's question, but in a slightly different way. Just thinking about where the stock is priced today, it looks exceptionally undervalued, either relative to kind of the forward outlook in the next 12-month period or even at your mid-cycle earnings power, baseline earnings power update you gave us as of the last quarter. I'm wondering maybe, given the constructive backdrop that we see and the very visible demand drivers you talked about, what would have to happen for us to go either back to baseline or below that over the next year or couple of years? 'Cause it seems like, you know, there's a fairly draconian outlook on or being implied in the stock price today. I know you guys bought some stock back in the quarter. I think you probably agree it's undervalued.
I'm just curious, like how bad do things need to get? Does it need to be a tail risk? What needs to happen for things to go off of where they are?
Yes, we agree it's very undervalued, Ben. Thanks for calling that out. Look, we don't see an environment here in the next couple years, which is, you know, looking out fairly far for these businesses. If you look at the structural setup on what needs to be done from a production standpoint globally to continue to build the crops to what we see coming on demand. I think S&Ds continue to stay tight, and we talked about the tailwinds from biofuels generally and renewable diesel specifically. You know, we don't see a way back to baseline here for the next couple years. That's not in the cards.
Yeah, Ben, I would agree with that comment from Greg. I think, you know, when you look at just the front-end demand that we have for soybean oil, refined oil today in a market where, you know, perhaps even RD isn't ramping up as quickly as some people would've expected, we're still very tight, and forward demand for soybean oil is very strong. On top of that, you know, there's always the looming, you know, recession discussion. For us, I think if you go back and look over time, our company has performed extremely well historically and generated a lot of cash even in tough environments. We feel very good about the next couple years.
To Greg's point, I don't think we really see a scenario where the 850 baseline even comes into play.
I think the other thing we're, you know, personally struggling with, and I don't think ourselves, our industry.
You know, are specific to that. I think it's kind of broad-based. It's more expensive to build things, to build capacity, and it takes longer to get things done. That all also extends the cycle. Then as we've talked about, you know, I think globalization is done for a period of time. How long, we'll see. What that means is that when we had a supply problem or a demand surge globally, every origin and every destination was available to solve that problem in the past. That's no longer true based on what's happened with the war and with geopolitical tensions. With that not changing, there are fewer ways to solve and which means more volatility.
That also is, you know, creates the opportunity as we have to help people solve problems, to help with food security, and all of that sustains the cycle as well.
Okay, that's great. Just as a follow-up, you did buy back stock in the quarter. What was the catalyst for that? What prompted that? Is that something, I know it's something that you talked about in your, multi-year plan as a part of your capital allocation priorities. Maybe help us think about, expectations around that.
Yeah, Ben, you know, we've talked about kind of in our go forward planning that we're gonna buy back $1.25 billion worth of stock over the next five years. It's really just part of our normal allocation plan. As we look forward, we looked at the amount of cash we're generating and our forward pipeline of projects, both CapEx and M&A, we felt like we, you know, it was a good time to buy, and we're continuing to generate cash. You know, this won't be a one and done. It's gonna be a normal part of going forward. We've said we'll kind of be opportunistic around timing and pricing. You know, as you know, we have windows where we're blacked out around quarter ends and things like that.
We have time, sometimes a limited amount of time to do it in any given quarter. We just felt like it was the right time to step in and do some. You know, we'll continue to look at it every quarter like we always do.
Okay, thanks very much.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from Adam Samuelson with Goldman Sachs.
Yes, thanks. Good morning, everyone.
Good morning, Adam.
Morning. Maybe the first question, just thinking on the fourth quarter outlook a little bit, and maybe in agribusiness, I wanna just think about some of the pieces, 'cause full year agribusiness down, year to date, you're basically flat in the whole segment. Obviously, you talked about merchandising had a good fourth quarter, and you don't always assume that as a baseline. Do we infer just from on the processing and crushing side? I mean, margins, especially in North America, remain excellent right now and would be, I think, ahead of last year's levels. That kind of thinking, processing higher year-over-year, merchandising assumption lower because you see what the market gives you, is kind of the starting assumption. Am I missing something in that buildup?
No, I think that's correct. When you think about merchandising, the backdrop there, of course, is demand down in China with, you know, continued COVID zero policy. That's definitely had some effect, not only on commodity price, but also on freight and the opportunities there. We'll see how that plays out. On the crush side, yeah, North America continues very strong. Of course, we've got the energy challenges in Europe, which has had definitely some effect there on our soy.
Now, that being said, I think the team's done a nice job of managing as margins have been very volatile and whether we've had to ship in from outside the continent from some of our other capacity or if when the margins are there to lock it in so that we can run. Those would be some of the big drivers to watch here.
Yeah, Adam, I'd add to that you know, when you look at kind of where we'll wind up for the year based on our current forecast, you know, we are gonna be up in processing, which when you look at the environment with COVID impact in China, it's been a tough year.
High energy costs in Europe, and the fact that we'll finish up in processing, you know, is pretty exceptional. Merchandising, we just had a phenomenal last year. We're gonna have a good year this year in merchandising. We just had a really unusually strong year last year. Doesn't mean we couldn't repeat it going forward at some point, but we certainly don't predict that here for the remainder of the year. Again, that's where some of the upside is. Then of course, on the refined and specialty oil side, you know, significant overachievement versus a year ago. Milling, you know, with the strong first half we had, we're gonna finish well ahead of last year.
All in all, other than merchandising, which is the piece that, you know, inherently is most difficult to predict and maybe the most opportunistic, the base part of the business, the rest of it is looking to be very strong year-over-year.
All right. No, that's helpful. Then maybe coming back to some of the capital allocation discussion and, you know, obviously the working capital balances came down, the net debt came down. You did buy back some stock, but can you help us frame just what you think of your dry powder today is? I'm thinking also in terms of the committed credit facilities that you have, a couple of those facilities are delayed draw term loans, which you would think are opportunistic funding for potential M&A. Just how do you see that M&A environment and the dry powder broadly that you have, in a balance sheet that to us looks pretty underlevered?
Yeah. I mean, if you look at it today, you know, we've got. If you just look at today where our credit metrics are with the rating agencies, you know, 1.3x for Moody's, for example, you know, that would imply, you know, $3 billion-$4 billion of dry powder and debt capacity alone, not to mention what we expect to continue to generate in cash. We do have a lot of dry powder, and obviously, you know, we're gonna, as we said before, maintain discipline in our approach to capital projects and the timing of those with M&A and the timing of that. You know, certainly, we don't expect to maintain these conservative levels forever. That's not what we wanna do.
You know, we wanna deploy the capital in one way or another. Certainly M&A is opportunistic, and timing of that's, you know, very difficult to predict. You know, we have an eye on that area. CapEx, things are a little slower than what we'd like to see, just given supply chain constraints. You know, we do expect the next couple of years to be, you know, significantly above our historical levels of CapEx. Of course, buybacks, you know, that's gonna be a big part of the mix as well.
Okay. I appreciate all that color. I'll pass it on. Thanks.
You bet .
Thank you. The next question comes from Robert Moskow with Credit Suisse.
All right. Thanks. Two questions, actually. Maybe could you give a little more color on the processing volume that you did in the quarter regionally? Because, you know, your volumes are impressive given the tough conditions. I just wanted to know, you know, where are you up and where are you down? I imagine Europe is down. Secondly, I had a question about your cash flow statement and, you know, cash flow from operations is negative using the accounting rules. But when you give yourself credit for securitized trade receivables, it's, I guess it's very positive. Can you walk me through a little bit more about how that works?
With respect to your share repurchase, is it an obstacle in buying back as much shares as you want, or is it not really relevant to that? Thanks.
Yeah. Thanks, Rob. Yeah, first of all, you know, operationally, when we look at the quarter from a processing standpoint, actually the two places we were down, one was Argentina. We were down slightly year-over-year for the quarter. Then in China. Everywhere else we were flat to up. Actually very strong.
Volume in the U.S. around processing. In Brazil, we were ahead of last year. In Europe, despite the difficulty, we were basically flat year-over-year in terms of volume on processing. With respect to cash flow, you know, that in part why we put a deck out on a portal this morning on our website is to try to help eliminate some of the confusion around the impact of our AR securitization program and how that impacts cash flow. It doesn't really impact cash flow. It impacts the presentation of cash flow.
That's right.
So-
I see it now.
Yeah.
It shows up in the investing activities. Yeah. I see it now.
Right. In fact.
Yeah.
In fact, we're working on a redesign of that program right now and hopeful that if we can do that, it's gonna eliminate the way we have to report it externally, which will go a long way in clarifying our real underlying cash flow. Then you really have to just look at our change in working capital and kinda set that aside to get to our underlying cash flow. Our underlying cash flow, we do an adjusted FFO, and there's a reconciliation in the back of our investor presentation to get to those numbers. That's how we look at it.
Ultimately, the other way to look at it is look at the trend in our working capital, our inventory levels versus our debt, where we've been able to decrease debt over time, but yet we still continue to increase working capital when it's opportunistic. You know, our RMI, our inventory levels have been, you know, up because of prices, but yet we've been able to maintain or reduce our debt over that time period. Ultimately, obviously, that capital will be available to deploy elsewhere. A big part of why our leverage ratios have gone down so much. Then on share repurchases.
Okay.
There's, you know, share repurchase is gonna be, you know, opportunistic for us. We don't really view it as just buy, you know, systematically every week or every month, X amount of shares. We're gonna look at times when we think it makes sense to step in and do it. We are committed to it, as we said before. We would expect that. Especially given our strong cash flow history and expectations going forward, that'll be a part of the mix.
Can I ask how you came to the number for $200 million? You know, why not $400 million? Why not $500 million, given the flex on the balance sheet, you know?
Yeah. You know, look, that's a fair question. I think we just looked at it as, you know, where we were at the time, where we, you know. It just was a number we picked. I don't know if there was any real heavy science behind it other than you know, it's just gonna be part of. We've committed to $250 a year, you know, minimum. You know, we may not do that all in one fell swoop. There could be times going forward where we have a bigger chunk, like what you've mentioned. No particular reason other than we just felt like that was a good number for the quarter.
Okay. Thank you.
I might just brag on the team real quick. I mean, part of the volume, right, is we continue to think about it as a global system.
You know, one, these heavy investment in fixed assets is the team. The industrial team has done a phenomenal job of having the investments in asset health and having the assets up and ready to run. The KPIs are better on important things like unplanned downtime. Then the teams are working globally that even, you know, as tough as margins have been in China in managing that long supply chain, that when the margins have been there on the cash side, they've done a great job of locking those in.
As tough as it's been in Europe, with energy prices being so volatile and margins so volatile, the team has been very agile and done a great job of managing our footprint between North America and South America and Europe in order to lock those margins in and be able to run those assets that the industrial team had ready. The coordination and the agility of the team is how you see those volumes there, and we are very proud of that.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from Thomas Palmer with JPMorgan.
Good morning. Thank you for the question.
Morning, Tom.
I guess just to kick off, I wanted to get your thoughts on how shipping delays on the Mississippi River affect your business, both opportunities and headwinds.
Yeah, it's, you know, it's definitely adding more complexity to an already complex situation. Of course, it's not unique to us, and that is part of having a global system. Of course, it's, you know, shifted things to the PNW. It has also shifted things to South America. I mean, this is, you know, one of the things that with what's happening in the Black Sea and now with the logistical problems with the river here in North America, you know, our strong South American footprint, which is always really important to us, but it's never been more important. We, you know, we saw that even when the farmer in Argentina was liquidating soybeans earlier through the soy dollar, that those exports then were able to get to China when things were tight in North America.
It is about flexing that global system. You know, the margins are already good in North America. Of course, where product can't move to export, we're running as hard as we can to process and to be able to continue to have the bids out there for the farmers.
Great. Thank you. Then I wanted to ask on the soybean oil demand side. We heard yesterday from a large renewable diesel operator that their plant has started using soybean oil as feedstock. There are a variety of plants either ramping production or nearing completion on the RD side. What are you seeing in terms of soybean oil demand? Is it kind of steady state over the past couple quarters? Are you starting to see increased demand pull from the biofuels industry? It sounds like you've got some visibility at least a couple quarters out here in terms of your book. Or are you seeing any signs of demand destruction from the food industry to offset that increased biofuels pull?
Yeah,
Yeah, I can take that, Tom. Yeah, we haven't really seen any decline even on the food side. You know, energy continues to inch up a little bit as a percentage of the total refined that we're selling, but it hasn't been a dramatic shift yet. What's more interesting is there's more demand further out on the curve for soybean oil. When you look out and typically look at where, you know, we lock in the crush going forward, you know, X amount per quarter, and usually there's not a lot locked, you know, out beyond, say, one quarter or two. There's been a lot of interest in soybean oil pricing out beyond the next quarter or two, and probably more than we've seen.
Obviously we're being very deliberate about what we're willing to price when, but the demand is out there and it does continue to grow steadily. We haven't seen any, you know, decline or lack of interest from either the energy or the food industry at this point. We're pretty optimistic about, you know, the trend of where we're at here.
Great. Thank you.
You bet.
Thank you. The next question comes from Steve Byrne with Bank of America.
Good morning. This is Salvatore Tiano filling in for Steve. Hi, Greg. Hi, John.
Hey, good morning.
My first question is a little bit following up on the renewable fuels. The Inflation Reduction Act is kind of changing the credit structure from 2025. I think moving to a more CI-based credit as opposed to flat amount for renewable fuels. Do you think that this will change the demand for different vegetable oils like soybean or even incentivize ethanol as an option? How do you see this changing the landscape for demand in the next few years?
Yeah. All of the Inflation Reduction Act hasn't played out yet. I think mid-November, we're gonna see some of the final word from EPA. It net-net feels friendly to biofuels in general. Then I think the other thing we're watching is, you know, canola oil out of Canada. Of course, there's big strong demand from the food side, and that continues to work down and into the U.S. Seeing if canola ends up getting a pathway into renewable diesel, which would also be friendly overall demand. We'll see how all the details play out, but right now feels net-net positive, and expect that to continue.
Yeah. I would just add that, you know, the lower CI feedstocks, if you think about primarily used cooking oil and animal fats, tallow, things like that. There is a limited amount of that. You know, ultimately, as all this renewable diesel ramps up, the one certainty that they have would be supply of soybean oil on a large scale. Ultimately, you know, everything will price probably off a CI score, but soybean oil is gonna be a big demand, a big supply base for the industry. To Greg's point, you know, canola oil finds a pathway that's good for us, because we're a big Canola processor in Canada, and we handle a lot of Canola oil.
Ultimately, you know, the consistency of supply to be able to provide large volume to these massive renewable diesel production facilities is gonna be important. We're positioned obviously very well to take advantage of that.
Okay, perfect. I also wanted to touch base on the price of soybean oil. I mean, it's more than double what it was, I guess, in normalized days years ago. The curve still has it going down to the 50s cents per pound by 2024. You discussed how there's more demand, there seems to be more demand emerging further out for oil than usual. Do you think that actually the prices a couple of years out can stay higher at current levels of around 70 cents? Or is the curve pricing soybean oil correctly?
Well, I think, you know, as we look in our outlook, right, we're not going to say we're smarter than the market. The market is the market. Now, you do need to look not only at the futures, but you need to look at what the cash markets are doing. You know, ag markets in general are always more liquid and probably a better predictor in the 90-180-day market as the economics become more clear and as there's, you know, less certainty, you know, the market reflects that at times. You know, the market is the market.
Yeah, I would just add, you know, that far out, there's really no liquidity, so it's probably not a real indicator of ultimately where things will end up. You know, as you look at the curves generally has been inverted on the crush. But when you get into the cash, things have been extremely robust as it's rolled forward. It's pretty hard to imagine and impossible to predict that far out. You know, to Greg's point, I think we expect to see strong demand further out, and obviously the market will adjust to whatever the S&Ds are at the time.
Okay, great. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from Steven Haynes with Morgan Stanley.
Hi. Good morning, everybody, and thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if we could just hear your thoughts on the Brazil-China corn agreement and, you know, just any kind of thoughts on how that would impact your footprint and, you know, broader kind of trade dynamics. Thank you.
Sure. Look, I think it makes complete sense for China to add another origin of being able to have Brazil corn available. The corn crop continues to grow in Brazil, and I think we believe those volumes will grow long term. We really, you know, we love our South American footprint in Brazil and Argentina. We'll be prepared to serve, you know, them from there when the market works. You know, as part of a global system, we want every origin and every destination to be available because that's what's best for both the farmers and the consuming customers. That'll be a positive over the long term, and we think it makes sense.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from Sam Margolin with Wolfe Research.
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question.
Morning, Sam.
Morning, Sam.
I wanted to ask about processing and more on the RD theme and sort of an unusual environment going on two years now with soybeans and processing, where the oil's really carrying a lot of the value and meal is almost sort of subsidized by oil. I wanna know if, you know, you think that's sustainable or if, you know, meal has to catch up and, you know, bridge an even higher crush margin, or if this is kind of a new normal because, you know, the energy market is now such a big demand center for the commodity.
Yeah, Sam. Thanks. This is John. You know, oil certainly has become a bigger part of the crush. It's probably been hovering, say, in the 45% range in terms of contribution to the overall crush, whereas historically, it was much less than that. I think over time, you know, our expectation has been that oil will continue to be, and perhaps could even be a bigger part of the crush going forward as demand increases around renewable diesel production. Meal's certainly not a laggard today by any means, and meal demand has been very strong as well. That's why you're seeing, especially in the U.S., you know, incredibly strong crush margins overall because both oil demand and meal demand have been robust.
Yeah, over time, that mix will move around a little bit here and there. I think sometimes we see it get as high as 48% on oil contribution and down in the low 40s, but it's been, you know, above 40 here for a while. You know, could it go over 50 in the future? Maybe. Hard to predict today, but it'll depend certainly on meal demand will be the driver for that.
Okay, thanks. Then I was wondering if I could ask for a little more detail about China since it's come up a couple times on the call and specifically with merchandising. You know, you mentioned that merchandising had a really strong fourth quarter last year. You know, incidentally, China was experiencing kind of a very rapid reopening throughout the second half of 2021. I was wondering if, you know, maybe if China really accounts for the entirety of your sort of year-over-year view on merchandising and, you know, maybe a little more caution into the end of this year. If so, you know, what does that mean for merchandising if we get a China reopening next year, and, you know, a faster pace of demand recovery?
Yeah. I think there's probably two big drivers. China's definitely one of them. Of course, they're an important part of the global demand picture, and so when they are slowed down as they have been, it definitely has a trickle-down effect. Yeah, you got to believe we'll get beyond the COVID policy there eventually and see demand rebound. Yeah, that should be constructive. The other is just the amount of uncertainty in markets overall. Things like even the corridor in Ukraine, will it remain open? What does that mean to the flows, where they're coming from a supply and demand? That uncertainty has really driven buyers and sellers to be much more spot, which also is a tougher environment, I think, for merchandising.
I think if we get some direction around some of these things, then you maybe start to see, buyers and sellers go out farther on the curve, and start to see maybe that demand growth, out of China, and then both of those could be positive.
Got it. Thanks so much.
Thank you. Yeah. Thanks, Sam.
Thank you. The next question comes from Chris Shaw with Monness, Crespi, Hardt & Co.
Hey, good morning, everyone. How are you doing?
Good morning. Good, Chris. Good morning.
I'm just curious on, you know, you touched on it just very briefly, the Argentine soy dollar program. I assume that might have been the source of why you had lower crush volumes in Argentina. But just more broadly, how did that whole program, what sort of impact did it have on the quarter for both, you know, the overall South American business, maybe just the market in general? And is there any sort of lingering effects of that? It seemed like I just didn't fully understand what the, you know, what the impacts of that were, and how that just for the market and for you guys specifically.
Yeah. It definitely had a big impact, right? The farmer had not been commercializing their soybeans. That had been hard on volume. What we saw with the soy dollar program was that the farmer commercialized a lot more beans than anyone expected. That allowed not only ourselves and the industry to reestablish the quantities we needed for crushing here going forward, but that also saw them move into the export chain. Saw some export of beans happen. That was helpful on the near term. Of course, now the farmer, once they've had that opportunity, now they've completely quit selling. We're a little dry over there. That also will have them holding onto crops. Now they'll wait and see what's next.
We pulled forward some of that selling. You know, we've got ourselves, you know, positioned to be able to crush here for a while. If you look at the replacement margins, they're, of course, not good right now. We'll see when the next wave of selling comes, and that'll either be, you know, government-driven or something improving in the weather and the farmer feeling better about overall S&Ds going forward.
When they had the program, did that then depress business in Brazil just because that there was so much coming out of Argentina, including exports, or?
You know, there's always a little interplay between Argentina and Brazil, but that was kind of right at the time where things were tightening up in North America and the concerns about North America because of the dryness in the Mississippi River system. I think we saw river levels the lowest or lower than actually back to 2012. Some of that export that got pushed out actually was filling that gap where some of that North American export now may be pushed out later. Things kind of actually fell, you know, from a global standpoint, kind of fell into line. Although I don't think there was any careful planning. It was a little bit fortuitous.
Got it. I appreciate the color. Thanks.
Yeah. Thanks, Chris.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from Ken Zaslow with Bank of Montreal.
Hey, good morning, guys.
Morning, Ken.
I wanna touch base on the refined oil margin. Can you talk about how that progresses over the next couple of years? Then when I think about it, I look at your baseline number of $400 million, and you're at a run rate of $750 million-$800 million. Trying to figure out how those two kinda align. It just seems like you I would actually think that there's a possibility that that margin can actually go higher, but you're kind of indicating that, you know, $400 million baseline. I was just trying to figure that out.
Yeah. Ken, you know, the $400 baseline was built on a premise that at some point, refining margins are gonna go back to historical levels. And that's not. We're not necessarily predicting that we're just saying that in our baseline, that's our assumption that it will. Certainly, we don't expect that to happen in the next couple of years, certainly.
In fact, I think to your point, it's not a straight line, and I think we do expect, you know, a pretty robust margin environment for refined oil here for the foreseeable future. We may very well have to revisit that at some point, but right now we're just saying that, you know, if all the production gets built and S&Ds get more in balance down the road, you know, and the refiners build their own pretreatment capability, you know, we could see that margin, you know, decline to more historical levels. It may not. We'll see. I mean, I think things have been a little bit slower on the pretreatment side.
That's good for us, you know, and it gives us an opportunity to continue to get closer to those customers and work with them on alternatives other than building their own.
Yeah, I think, you know, we talked a little. John talked a little bit about it, but yeah, costing more to build pretreatment and taking longer to build it. Costs more, the economics are different on whether they should build it or not. Those are some of the rumors we've heard of projects being at least delayed, if not, you know, if not stopped. That's what gives us some of the confidence and pushes that out into the future. Then I think, you know, this is really a new industry that's developing. I think as they figure out how these different feedstocks work and work in their refineries and affect their catalysts and, you know, affect their economics, that we'll continue to see the market develop.
You know, we've got all the oils, we've got the match quantity, we're working with multiple parties. You know, we like where we're positioned.
When you renegotiate, 'cause my understanding is that you go through a process, right? That there's a negotiation process for the refined oil, and you guys lock it in, I think, for a period of time. Will there be another reset as you kind of go to the next negotiation? I don't know if it's in three months, six months, 12 months, whatever it is. Is there another process or how does that play out? It just seems like there is actually more opportunity.
Well, I don't think of the fuel customers you think about them a lot different than feed customers or food customers, right? I think it depends on the company, on whether they're more comfortable buying spot or whether they wanna lock in the overages or whether they wanna lock in flat price or how far out on the curve they are. I don't think we can generalize. It's really company by company. You've constantly got business rolling. You know, at times sometimes it'll extend depending on, you know, their end markets and/or our markets, on feedstock where it can go shorter and be more spot or go out farther. It's kinda continually going forward.
You know, what we have right now is on the refined and specialty oil side is slightly more than normal booked there in Q4. We've got more volumes and price booked out into 2023 than normal. That's some of our confidence in calling it at least $13.50.
My last question is, on capacity utilization rates, was there any place around the globe that you thought you were underutilized? Was your capacity, you know, largely used during the quarters? How do you kinda think about that? 'Cause I think your competitor said that there were some, you know, shutdowns and idling of plants around the world. Did you guys have the same impact? And just how you guys were, 'cause you said that you were operating a little bit more efficiently. Just wanted to touch base on that, and then I'll leave it there.
Yeah. You know, we look at the total globally. So globally, yeah, we're proud of the total volume we ran, the total capacity utilization. But yeah, sure, it can always be better, right? We're shut down in Ukraine. Margins have been tough in China. We've got more capacity we could have ran there if margins had been better. You know, we're seeing animal margins start to return there in China, so we do expect that to be better and that demand we'll see coming into 2023. You know, then in Argentina, right? As we talked about because of the farmer marketing, we had not ran quite as hard. Then managing some of the energy volatility in Europe, we didn't run quite as hard.
That being said, when you add it up in total, I think the way our team executed and took advantage of the opportunities that were there was fantastic. You know, we're proud of that, and we'll continue to stay focused in what's a very dynamic and challenging world to help people manage food security and help our customers at both ends of the value chain be successful.
Great. I appreciate it. Thank you, guys.
Thank you, Ken.
Thank you. This concludes the question and answer session. I would like to turn the floor to Greg Heckman for any closing comments.
Thank you. I'd just say we continue to be so proud of the team's commitment and their execution, especially in light of the current market environment. Very proud of the model we've got here at Bunge and our ability to continue to capitalize on the opportunities. Thank you very much, and everyone, have a great day.
Thank you. The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.