Today, and welcome to the Bunge business update conference call. All participants will be in a 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 a touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mark Haden, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Betsy. Thank you for joining us this morning. On the call with me today are Greg Heckman, the CEO, and John Neppl, CFO. Before we get started, I want to let you know that we have slides to accompany our discussion. These can be found at the Investor Center on our website at bunge.com and under Events and Presentations. Reconciliations of our non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure are posted on our website as well. I’d also 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. We encourage you to review these factors. The purpose of today’s call is to provide you additional background on our new segmentation structure, the recast outlook that now includes Viterra’s results, as well as to give you an opportunity to ask questions to help you understand the mechanics of these changes. We felt it was important to get this information out to you in advance of our normal quarterly reporting process. As a result, we will not discuss the current market environment, the drivers of our third-quarter performance, or detailed assumptions in our outlook until we report our third-quarter results on November 5th. Our call this morning will be approximately 30 minutes, so if you have a question, please limit yourself to one. I’ll now turn it over to Greg.
Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. Before I turn the call over to John to walk you through the details of our new segmentation and recast outlook that now reflects the combination with Viterra, I'd like to make a few points in three areas. First, integration is progressing exceptionally well. I'm very pleased with the speed and the discipline of the teams as they identify and capture cost savings and commercial synergies. This is important. We're operating as a unified company, creating greater value and serving our customers at both ends of the value chain. Every day, we're making more progress and reinforcing that this was the right strategic move for long-term growth and shareholder value.
Second, as part of our integration, we have aligned our combined business along end-to-end value chains, which we are confident will enable us to operate with greater agility and deliver value for all our stakeholders. Importantly, this is not a wholesale realignment. Rather, we're incorporating Viterra into our existing proven operating model. As part of that, we are updating our segment reporting to align with our operating structure. This will benefit our investors by providing you with a clear understanding of the drivers of our combined company's results and our value chains. We've always been committed to transparency and candor, and we're taking steps to align fully with those values. Lastly, we have also recast our full-year 2025 outlook, which now includes Viterra. While we are still in the process of closing our third-quarter financial results, there are indications that our team delivered a strong performance.
At the same time, as we enter the fourth quarter, farmers and end customers remain largely spot, reflecting the continued macro, trade, and biofuel policy uncertainty. Based on these estimated results and our view of the current margin and macro environment, we expect full-year 2025 adjusted EPS in the range of approximately $7.30- $7.60, which reflects an expected second half adjusted EPS in the range of $4 to $4.25. Looking ahead, with our greater capabilities, scale, and diversification, we're confident that we are even better positioned to capture opportunities as they present themselves. With that, I'll turn it over to John.
Thanks, Greg, and good morning, everyone. Let's start with the segment reporting changes on slide five. Beginning with our reported financials for the third quarter of 2025, we are changing our reportable segment structure from agribusiness, refined, and specialty oils, and milling to four reportable segments: soybean processing and refining, soft seed processing and refining, other oil seeds processing and refining, and grain merchandising and milling. We will continue to report corporate and other results. The changes in segment reporting reflect the realignment of oil seed operations into processing and refining by commodity type and combining grain merchandising and milling operations into one reportable segment. These changes reflect the tight interconnection of our upstream and downstream operations. For example, over 90% of our non-tropical oil refineries are co-located with crushing plants, and margins often move between origination, crushing, and refining activities depending on market conditions.
While we are combining the reporting of processing and refining activities, we are splitting soy and soft seeds into separate segments. These had been previously aggregated in our agribusiness processing segment. Soy remains the largest contributor to earnings due to our global footprint's greater soy processing and handling capacity. With the addition of Viterra's soft seeds, origination, and merchandising operations in Canada, Australia, and Europe, and the additional global processing capacity that it brings, our soft seeds footprint is now much larger. The new segmentation reflects its more meaningful contribution. We have combined our milling operations with our expanded global grains merchandising footprint, reflecting the tight upstream-downstream relationship with Brazilian wheat mills, which rely on imported wheat, particularly from neighboring Argentina. You may recall that we divested of our U.S. corn milling business earlier this year.
Turning to slide six for a more detailed look at the activities within each segment, I'll highlight a few things. Fertilizer results, which had been previously reported in agribusiness processing, will be reported in soy processing and refining due to its tight linkage with the soybean origination in South America, where it is common practice to barter crop input supplies in exchange for crops. Second, origination and distribution of soybeans and soft seeds, which Viterra brings as a global leader due to its broad network of handling and logistics assets, will be reported in the applicable soy and soft seed processing and refining segments. Lastly, origination and distribution of corn, wheat, barley, and other grains, as well as cotton and sugar, will be reported in our grain merchandising and milling segment. Slide seven shows our new volume reporting methodology.
We will be increasing the visibility of our oilseed processing and refining volumes by providing them by commodity, by type, as well as related merchandising of soybeans and seeds not directed to our processing plants. We believe our new segmentation and expanded volume disclosure will provide you with the tools to understand and evaluate the drivers of our global business. Please turn to slide eight in our outlook. As Greg Heckman mentioned in his remarks, while we are still in the process of finalizing our third-quarter results, the indications are that our team delivered a strong performance. Taking third-quarter estimated results into account, shares issued as part of the transaction, less shares repurchased through the third quarter, and the current margin and macro environment of forward curves, we expect full-year 2025 adjusted EPS for the combined company to be in the range of approximately $7.30- $7.60 a share.
This estimate reflects an expected second half EPS in the range of $4.00- $4.25. The difference in EPS ranges of $0.30 for the full year and $0.25 for the second half is due to different weighted average share counts used in the respective calculations. We will provide a more detailed discussion of the specific drivers of our better-than-expected third-quarter results and full-year outlook, as well as the market environment on our third-quarter earnings conference call, which is scheduled for November 5th. That will open the lineup for your questions.
We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your touch-tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star, then two. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question today comes from Thomas Palmer with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and thanks for the question.
Morning.
I know you're not addressing guidance in a broader way, but I wanted to ask on a couple of things in terms of disclosures. First, is there a plan for more detailed historic financials at some point? I think historically you provide things like sales and gross margin and SG&A. On that forward outlook, if you could, any update on kind of interest expense, tax rate, or what's assumed for share repo in that outlook? I know you don't want to discuss some of the industry trends, but maybe those types of items we could get some added detail on. Thank you. Yeah.
This is John. I'll start, Tom, and Greg can jump in. From a history standpoint, we did provide in here a look at some of the prior history realigned for Bunge. In our filings that we'll do for the end of the year or for third quarter, fourth quarter, and full year, we will provide restated history from a segmentation standpoint, but it'll be Bunge-only history, given the fact that we didn't own Viterra, number one. Number two, we have not gone back and done the work to split up their historical information. With respect to some of the key points and drivers, if you look at our tax rate, we had guided originally to 21%- 25% on a Bunge-only standpoint. I think we're looking at the higher end of that range for the combined company. You'd expect to see a higher effective tax rate in Q3, Q4.
We'll talk more about 2026 as we move forward. From a net interest expense standpoint, we expect the second half to increase about $175 million. Full year going from about $220 million, prior guidance, up to about $395 million for this year, given the significant footprint that Viterra brings and the merchandising and handling business. From a share count, from a share standpoint, we did repurchase shares during the third quarter, about 6.7 million shares. That has an impact on the weighting of our share count for Q3, Q4. Obviously, as we go forward, we'll remain committed to repurchasing the balance of the shares that we had indicated we would.
The next question comes from Heather Jones with Heather Jones Research. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and thanks for the question. I think really my only question left, based on things that y'all are discussing today, is on the share count. I think, and correct me if I'm wrong, I think when y'all did pro forma or at least pro forma in July, you were putting the pro forma share count at 213, and now you're saying about 197 for the back half, and you did 6.7 during Q3. Am I doing my math right that your guidance for second half share count and EPS assumes a very dramatic step up in share repo for Q4? Am I missing something along the way?
Yeah, I'm not Heather, this is John. I'm not sure the 211 sounds right to me. I don't have it in front of me. Where we are right now, we were, for Q3, weighted average about 199 million shares. I think we were just over 200 million shares coming into the quarter. We bought throughout August and September, so it took the weighted average down to 198, I believe the number is, and then we'll be closer to 195 for Q4. Overall weighting about 197 for the second half.
The next question comes from Benjamin Theurer with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Greg, John, thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to, if you can, maybe tell us a little bit about the progress you have made so far in terms of the integration, understanding the business, analysis of kind of bottom-up and what Viterra brings to the equation. Clearly, you're breaking out the new soft seed segment, and that's obviously something new for us. Anything you can help us with on how we should think about this business going forward from a bottom-up perspective, as this seems to be predominantly what's coming in from Viterra, that would be my one question, just to understand this business better.
Sure, I'll start. I would just say, you know, progressing very well. Really pleased with how the teams are working together. I think we talked in the past that the cultures were very similar, especially commercially, and that was the area that we couldn't work together until close. They're really attacking what's a difficult and challenging market environment together as one team. You've got a real nice global network of assets, customers, and information that we can now share and work on these opportunities across the regions, the segments, and all the activities that we've got. I think those insights are helping us manage the business. Now, it's early, right? We're not all the way to bright, but I think off to a good start. Synergies, we had longer to work on the integration planning and the synergies. We're really early stages there, right?
We're continuing to formalize those plans now and identify and start working on capturing those, and really formalizing and sharpening some of the targets going forward. The low-hanging fruit, things that got around logistics, freight, and where it really, where, you know, this is, remember, this is kind of a vertical merger. Where we've been able to connect origination, granularity to our processing or some of the granularity in the distribution to our processing or to the merchandising or flow businesses, there's some low-hanging fruit, and the team has been capturing some of those right off the bat. Very, very pleased. Good start. Lots more to do. Lots more upside.
Ben, maybe I'll just add, when you think about the impact of Viterra on the results, I think where you're going to see the biggest change, soft seed certainly is going to become more meaningful. They have a pretty big soft seed footprint and have merchandised a lot more seed than we typically did. That's why we're breaking out the origination and merchandising portion in soy and soft seeds separately where we sell to third parties, because it is a significantly higher volume than what we did on our own. On the merchandising side, that's going to grow substantially with the combined company, really driven by, you know, they handle a lot more corn, wheat, and barley than we did historically. You're going to see a big increase there.
Finally, Greg kind of mentioned it, but on the ocean freight side, we're essentially doubling the chartering capacity that we have globally, and that's going to have a bigger impact on ocean freight results.
The next question comes from Salvator Tiano with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Yes, good morning. I just want to ask specifically about how you treat the depreciation in the adjusted EPS here. Specifically, was there a significant write-up of assets of PP&E, and is this the extra depreciation included in your adjusted EPS construct now, or are you taking out that step up?
We are still in the finalization, obviously, of our opening balance sheet and the step up of results. We will have a step up in the depreciation that's reflected in the numbers for the second half forecast. It's going to be our overall depreciation for the back half of the year, or I'm sorry, on a full-year basis for Bunge and a half year for Viterra is going to be about $700 million. That does include some step up in there. We'll provide more details on the third quarter calls as we finalize some of our opening balance sheet items where we expect that to be. A little bit of shuffling still around as we're doing final analysis. There is a step up assumed at this point, and we have that baked into the forecast for the second half.
The next question comes from Steven Haynes with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning. I guess in terms of maybe what's left to discuss, I don't know if you're going to be able to talk towards this, but can you help us think a bit about how the EBIT split might look in the third and fourth quarter kind of by segment? Also, anything you can provide in terms of the weighting between the two. I know you're not providing much on forward look, but just might be helpful to understand given that Viterra is going to bring a larger merchandising and soft seed versus what the historical data you provided, just kind of how that might look in the back half as it relates to your updated guide. Thank you.
Yeah, I think Stephen will probably provide more details on the upcoming call. If you want to just think about calendarization between Q3 and Q4, we provide a second half guidance. We're thinking about 55/45 weighting of Q3 and Q4 from a result standpoint. We'll obviously go through a lot more of the drivers and details as we get into the call in three weeks.
The next question comes from Andrew Strelzik with BMO. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I was hoping that you could help us think about the typical kind of first half, back half cadence of profits for Viterra. I guess what I'm trying to think through is, you know, is it fair to take the $4- $4.25 back half and annualize that and start to think about that as kind of a starting point to build for next year? Just as we have to work through our models now, is that not the right way to approach it? Thank you.
Yeah, I think it's, you know, Andrew, we'll think more about that as we get into the Q3 call. I think, you know, certainly it reflects good performance on the part of both businesses, certainly better on the Viterra side than maybe what you had seen previously. There's a lot of moving pieces right now. As you know, biofuel policy is notwithstanding that, and trade issues and things, we're really trying to navigate how we feel about next year. We really don't plan to provide specific guidance on 2026 until we get into the first of the year. On the upcoming call, we'll give a sense of how we feel like this forecast is from a sustainable standpoint. I should think about the second half going forward.
The next question comes from Pooran Sharma with Stephens. Please go ahead.
Thanks for the question. Just sticking to kind of the mechanics here, I was just wondering, in terms of the $7.30- $7.60 adjusted EPS guidance, I was wanting to dive into that a little bit and understand, you know, how much are you guys integrated? Is this $7.30- $7.60? Does that forecast, does it, are you guys like fully integrated, kind of operating as one, or is this kind of still more of a top-down blend of two separate plans? Just wanted to understand where you are kind of in your integration process.
Yeah, thanks for the question. You know, the $7.30- $7.60 reflects almost no synergy capture at this point from a cost standpoint. We're obviously moving along well on integration. I think the commercial teams are working well together, and Greg can touch on that in a second. From a cost perspective, we're still working through org design and still working through a lot of that. We've maybe captured some modest small cost savings so far. We obviously have pretty big plans for the first half and really all of 2026. That's where we're going to see a big move in the cost structure, hopefully. That's our plan. This first six months is really about stabilization and getting our feet on the ground. The $7.30 - $7.60 reflects virtually no cost savings and synergy capture on the cost side. On the commercial side, I'll let Greg maybe touch on that.
Yeah, the fact here for a little bit, right, we're running on multiple systems and processes because that takes some time to get to close before we can start to integrate those. We're off to a good start. We're in the very front end, but the team's doing a great job executing against those plans. From that standpoint, it's a little more cumbersome, and you need a few more people to execute it. Now, as far as working as one team, we're absolutely going to market to our consuming customers with one voice and with coordination as one company. We're also going to market to our farmer customers on the origination side as one company and with one voice.
The commercial teams are working as one company, even though they're having to work through a little bit of complexity on multiple systems and processes here, until we work through all the integration work. Really, really pleased with the talent that we have got globally, the way people are working together, the way they're communicating, and the way that we're staying focused on our external customers, off to a very, very good start. These things are hard to do. There are lots of details that have to be managed every day. I've had the opportunity to get out and travel here in North America and Europe, and I'll be headed to South America and Asia here soon. It's just great getting out in the plants and seeing the people and getting in the offices and seeing the people and hearing about the progress that we're making.
There's really real excitement out there and real teamwork. Very, very pleased with where we're at and look forward to speaking to you all here in three weeks, at our Q3, on November 5th.
This concludes our question- and- answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over for any closing remarks.
Thank you for your time today and for your interest in Bunge. Have a great day.
The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.