All right. Our next fireside is gonna be with Corteva. We have Chuck and we have Dave for our fireside chat. Please submit questions on the app. We're at a very interesting time for Corteva. They're expecting to split or are gonna split up later this year. The seed company's gonna be Vylor. Corteva's gonna be New Corteva and happy to have the team here. Chuck, Dave, why don't we maybe just do a bit of state of the union, what's going on at Corteva and looking into the the the break-up later this year?
Okay. Well, hi, everyone. Nice to see you all. Hopefully, you're having a good conference. Let's start with the quarter. Overall, we were very pleased with the first quarter. We saw double-digit growth and growth basically across the board when it comes to both businesses, crop protection and seed. I'd say a pretty clean growth when it comes to price volume. We also have good mix improvement, lower costs. Overall, in almost every region of the world, we're seeing very good growth. We held our guide. I think that's important. We don't typically raise our guide in Q1s. We're feeling very comfortable at the $4.1 billion. I'd say the agricultural backdrop is still relatively mixed. Really good growth and demand when it comes to grains and oilseeds.
Even for biofuels, which will be a record demand again in 2026 versus 2025, and 2025 was a record. Very good, very good growth. Crop prices are up a little bit, which I think is helping farmer economics. I'd say, generally speaking, most of the farmers that we're talking to are focused on maximizing productivity and yield. I did mention in the first quarter call that our top corn hybrids, for example, were completely sold out in the spring. Farmers are looking for technology to drive yield and productivity, which is what we would expect them to do. I'd say the year is shaping up, probably a little better than we thought. The first quarter doesn't make the year. The first half is really, really important.
Our order book looks good for both seed and CP, so that is coming together pretty nicely. Shifting gears to the separation, I'd say everything is on track for a fourth quarter separation, and we've been pretty busy, as you saw some of the announcements. We filed the initial Form 10 with the SEC, which was a lot of effort. We announced the new CEO for New Corteva come October 1st. Luke Kissam will join the company on June 1st, and we announced the two executive leadership teams. Just this week, we announced the two headquarters, which I think is important for our employees to understand that. We announced the name of the seed business and the genetics company, and we're gonna name the company Vylor.
We've been pretty active. I'd say so far, no showstoppers. Things are looking good. The ag fundamentals are something we're keeping an eye on. So far the business is performing very, very well.
Okay, maybe we'll work thanks for that. We'll work top-down a bit. We're obviously in a very volatile environment. We've only seen crop prices start to move more recently, but encouraging. You know, what's kind of your view on corn acres, costs, in this environment?
Yeah. We actually saw the week of our earnings, corn futures touch $5. Usually, there would be some bullishness in the market at $5. Of course, given the Middle East conflict that we're seeing with elevated energy pricing, and we're seeing higher fertilizer and fuel pricing at the farm level. Now, our view, as I mentioned already, is that farmers have seen this market condition before. I'm not suggesting for a second that there isn't challenges 'cause there are, but it is a sustainable market set of conditions and they'll farm like this. From a planted area perspective, Joel, to answer your question, we're expecting about 95 million acres of corn in the U.S., 85 million acres of soybeans.
That's 180 million acres that get planted. That's the mix. We're seeing the right behaviors when it comes to applications for pre-emergent sprays. I've already mentioned the need for technology and seed. Overall, what we're watching carefully is most farmers already had their fertilizer sourced for this spring. I don't think there was a planting decision because of higher energy prices that have shifted in North America. What we're gonna probably see that the first time in LATAM. That's the one area that we're watching with elevated energy pricing, what happens in LATAM. Our view is that we're probably gonna see a 1 million or 2 million hectares of incremental soybean production, just more land going into production.
In the safrinha crop, which is considered a secondary discretionary crop, it's a corn crop, could be flat or modestly down. That's the one area that we're watching quite carefully. There's a little bit of time before we will know that. Overall, I'd say that the impact of sort of the higher energy is being reflected in higher fertilizer and fuel input costs.
Okay. You're probably getting very close to putting out Brazilian seed price cards. How's that going?
We are getting very close. Okay, look, what I would say is our order book looks great, first of all. We did mention that if you expect the acres to be somewhat flat year-over-year. Our price cards will come out, but we're expecting a modest price increase in the corn technology as we price for value with our normal strategy. In soybeans it's really interesting, right?
That's probably one of the largest opportunities that Corteva has today because we actually have If you look at our seed business around the world, we're either number one or number two in every major markets we operate in corn and soybeans. We're building a really interesting and exciting licensing business around the world. The soybean market in LATAM is the one that we are underrepresented and therefore the largest opportunity. We're rolling out our Conkesta E3 technology, so the same technology that we had in the U.S. we're bringing that down to Latin America, and we're seeing just huge demand for that. This year will be the year where we actually cross double digit market penetration for the technology itself.
From a pricing perspective, I'd say we're consistent with the market. The market is probably a little less than corn, so I'd say somewhere around flat, to slightly up. We're seeing very good demand for our next generation of technology, and that's the opportunity. If you recall, what we said is we'd like to have about a third of the Brazilian soybean market by the end of the decade. That's where a lot of our growth is gonna come from. We're pretty excited about that.
Can you walk through the bridge for 2026? I know you held your guidance the other week. You also said, you know, things are trending a little bit better than that. You wait until August to update the, you know, to give a little more official numbers. Can you talk about the bridge in 2026? Moving parts, what's been a little bit better, what's been a little bit worse so far this year?
I'll handle that, Joel. Thank you very much for having us. Yeah, when we step back and look at the pricing we just talked about, that our initial estimates were low single-digit up in seed and low single-digit down in CP. I think generally speaking, that's still our outlook at this point in time. When you look at volumes, Q1 was very strong volumes. You saw that in seed, we believe some of that's just timing. We had some Q4 volume that moved into Q1, we always have this volume component depending on weather between March and April. April's always our largest month, it's always a little bit difficult when you look at Q1 in isolation. That being said, CP, new products, were up 20%.
I think the other thing that's really important about that is we're seeing pricing to be stable, if not up a little bit in new products in CP. I think that's just, again, reflecting that the need for technology and people willing to pay for technology. I think the volume price more or less, Joel, pretty much in line where we thought. When you start looking at things like cost, we had a very good start of the year in productivity. I think if that's one element that could be a little bit favorable going in. However, we are looking at this Iran conflict. We mentioned that that could be a $40 million kind of headwind in the back half of the year.
We also said that there could be some upsides in things like our tariff number that we had originally put in, and we do think currency, we showed that as favorable in Q1, probably a little bit favorable to where we were. We also talked a little bit about royalties, and we said that, you know, going into the year, royalty neutral was where we expected, and right now we think that might be a little bit favorable. You add all that together early in the year, you know, we feel pretty good with our guide and the midpoint being up 7%.
Yep. Fair enough. Maybe we can talk about also, you signed the agreement a few months ago with Bayer. Talk about how that changed some of your plans or accelerated certain plans on the out-licensing.
Yeah. This is probably one of the more exciting growth platforms we have in the seed side of the house. If I just distill it to the highest level, the corn soybean addressable market for licensing in the Americas is about $4 billion, and we have a very small part of that. And as David just mentioned, this will be the first year we're sort of royalty positive, which we're very excited. It is a milestone for us. What we think our journey is now is to create about $1 billion of net licensing revenue over the next decade in corn and soybeans only in the Americas. Really significant growth.
The agreement that we finalized with Bayer, which I think is good for both companies, really allows us to access a part of the market many years earlier than we thought we could, which is what we call the triples, which is herbicide protection and above ground and below ground insect protection in corn. It's about a third of the U.S. corn market. Very, very lucrative market. The reason we're gonna be royalty positive this year is because we're able to at least sell some of that. We have more demand than we have supply today 'cause we now have to create the parent seed to be able to sell to our licensees.
There's about 100 licensees we're working with across the U.S., but $1 billion over the next decade is sort of the bottom line for the licensing business, so it's a pretty exciting growth trajectory. I will make one caveat. We're also launching hybrid wheat in 2027 in the U.S. We're getting started on that. If you think about that, there's been a lot of R&D effort to try to hybridize wheat, and if you recall, we hybridized corn about 100 years ago. Pioneer did that. I think we've cracked the code. We've got some phenomenal technology. That is another $1 billion of growth opportunity, probably not in the next decade, probably in the next 10-15 years as we ramp that up and we take that technology around the world.
That's sort of the, the growth trajectory that we've got for Vylor or for the seed business now, is $1 billion of out licensing and $1 billion of wheat, over the next, 15 years or so.
Also this year, you updated a bit on the CP market, talking about how with what's going on in the war or conflict, you've seen maybe the price of generics, the cost of generics go up, but it's early days, you said. Can you talk about it a little bit in seeing if that's maybe going to help lessen some generic pressures?
It's very early days.
Yes.
I'll just caveat it, footnote it, however else.
Yeah.
We have to describe it. You know, one or two data points, it's hard to say a trend yet. What we're finding, the March data that we referred to on the earnings call was, we're seeing higher pricing because of higher energy pricing coming out of Brazil for actives. What that's prompting is several of the active suppliers from China have increased pricing. David referenced the impact on our P&L most likely in the second half of the year being about $20 million on the CP side. At the same time, we're seeing a slowdown in some of these actives entering Brazil, which I think will have some supply demand tightening effect, probably not until the earliest late this year, it could even go into 2027.
Because there's inventory in the channel, of course, and all of those good things. We're not declaring victory by any stretch of the imagination right now. The trend line seems constructive. I think that that's what the market needs. If you think through our assumption for CP is we, you know, the CP industry over the last three years has been challenged. I don't think that's any secret. Last year was the first year where the industry was flat, and we declared that victory because the prior two years were down. We always thought that 2026 for CP for the industry would be a return to growth year, really driven by volume with negative pricing.
If we can see some stabilization in price in LATAM, I think that sets up maybe even a further recovery in 2027 for the global CP industry.
You would've thought 26 would be more L, but maybe there's a chance it may be, do we call it a V? Whatever we call it.
Yeah. I don't know if I'm really good with the letters.
Slant L. I don't know. Yeah.
I just think that the trend line is slightly better than.
Yeah.
than we thought. We need to see how we get into the second half of the year. How long does this higher energy continue because there are pros and cons to that, but the one thing it will do is it will elevate actives coming out of that part of the world. I think there'll be a supply demand adjustment because of that.
Think of things in the competitive landscape in 2027. You know, on the seed side, one of your competitors are starting to put out two blockbusters in their terms. You know, they've got the short stature corn, Preceon. You've got your own competitive responses. You've got the iconic soybeans. It'll be small. What do you think about the competitive landscape in seeds? How does it look a bit different next year, or does it look different at all?
Yeah, look, the seed landscape's always competitive. There's a lot of great players with tons of phenomenal technology. There are some new technology coming in, but we'll have ours as well. Our reduced corn will be available into the market. Most likely, you know, 2028 is sort of our timeline. We've got a natural version, and we've got a gene-edited version. Depending on which way the market takes us, we'll be ready when the market is ready for reduced corn. I don't think it's gonna be a switch where the entire U.S. market's gonna switch to reduced corn. I think it's a new cropping system, and because it's a new cropping system, it's gonna take a little bit of time for folks to get comfortable with. I really like our lineup.
I would say that our seed pipeline has probably never been as strong as it is today. Even well before my time, the veterans of our company would say we have got a phenomenal lineup. I think our whole mission is just to keep driving genetic gain. We're placing a significant amount of capital bet on the advent of gene-edited technology, which if you've heard me talk before, we fundamentally believe that that could be more impactful, more powerful than biotechnology was 25 years ago. Not to oversell it, I don't know if we've seen the limits on what gene-edited technology can do. We're seeing higher yields. I think we're able to bring more disease resistance into the genome. We think we can bring insect resistance into the genome.
We can also make healthier, more nutritious food with the manipulation of the genome. There's a lot to like here when it comes to gene-edited technology. We are one of the leading patent estate holders in the world. We've made an early bet in the first corn hybrid that we will bring into the market. We're very excited about this. It will be what we call a disease super locus. It'll be a gene-edited corn hybrid that will have significant disease resistance built into the genome. We're gonna bring that into the market in 2028 and put that in the hands of growers around the world.
In fact, let's talk about gene editing because is it such a way, is it gonna be in a way that we're gonna change how we develop innovation, new products, revenue models? How does Vylor have to adapt? Please don't do it, Vylor.
Okay.
Yeah.
It's a good question, Joel. Look, I think the short answer is we're not sure yet. The traditional way that we price for our seed is we price for value. We've got this massive breeding machine, you know, on the seed side of the house. We spend $1 billion a year in R&D. It's enormous. What that gives us is it allows us to drive genetic gain on the farm every single year. The way we price for the seed is if we give a farmer three bushels per acre, we wanna share that. Disproportionately to the favor of the farmer, we price for that genetic gain.
Now you have to think about, okay, well, what happens if we were able to really crack that model where we're not getting three, but we're getting a lot more than that? What happens if we can eliminate complete fungicide application sprays? That's worth incrementally more. We're not sure how to price for that yet. We're obviously talking to our customers. We're running some models. I think that that is just a win-win for us as a technology company, but more importantly for farmers. If we can drive up profit per acre that significantly and then allow them to enter new markets, so think about biofuels with gene-edited technology, driving as we talked about last night, driving the oil content, for example, up very significantly. We can have multiple sources of revenues for farmers.
Yes, we'll get paid for that, but it diversifies their business, and it allows them to make more profit per acre with the modification of the genetics. I think that is huge. It's not only a win for us and a win for farmers, I think it takes global food security to the next level, which is, you know, really why our company exists today.
Okay. Let's talk about the breakup a bit. Maybe you can give a bit about.
It's not a breakup, it's a separation.
Separation.
It's a separation, okay.
We still like each other.
Oh, okay.
Exactly.
Okay. Talk about some of the rationale for the separation.
Okay. Well, I think, look, this is probably old news by now when it comes to the separation.
It's a leading question, we know.
it is. Okay. Look, I think when we started to look at this some time ago, we were looking at the future of crop protection and where the industry most likely is going to head. We were looking at the future of the seed technology business, and we just talked about gene editing and new technology that we're able to kinda undertake there. Both of them are very exciting futures with significant growth opportunities, but the overlap is becoming less and less today. You've got this company that we built and the decision to create Corteva was absolutely the right decision at the right time.
The reason I say that is if you just look at the Enlist platform, which is a proprietary herbicide technology platform, it's created enormous amount of value for farmers and for our stakeholders. When you think about the future now and what it's gonna take to be successful in the kind of the next-gen of technology, those are primarily gonna be more open source technology, and farmers are gonna need multiple modes of action. The days of having sorta one herbicide-tolerant technology in a set of genetics, they're long gone now. You're gonna have to have multiple modes of action, which means that the industry is gonna have to collaborate more together. That's our thesis. How do you do that?
If you think about what it takes to invent a biotech trait today, it's hundreds of millions and 15 years of development and regulatory. To develop a new active ingredients, it's almost the same amount of money, and it's close to 12 years to get it developed and bringing it to the market. That's a lot of risk for companies to take, and we think that when we separate, there'll be more opportunities to partner like for like companies and de-risk some of this innovation, which I think will bring costs down for us and at the farm level. This is super important. The reason that we're separating isn't one thing, and it certainly wasn't to create some short-term lift.
We think that the paths for the two companies fundamentally are not gonna overlap as much, and it's gonna actually open up other partnerships and availability in terms of working with other companies to leverage the strengths of either company. That was the thesis, Joel. I think when after we announced the separation, I went on the road, and I went through Latin America, and I went through Europe, and then of course through the U.S., and I checked with our channel partners and our farmer customers. They see this as a non-event. They just want access to the best technology, whether it's in one company or not. They're really indifferent about.
I think that from a customer perspective, this is gonna be neutral, maybe even positive. From us to unlock value, I think there's gonna be a lot of great opportunity here.
I mean, the dis-synergy's, kinda low. I mean, decent, and I think there was some doubt that you could hold it there, but you've been able to. Maybe talk about some of the work on that.
Yeah. I'll handle that one. When we first announced our separation, it was, we said we had put in a net dis-synergy number of $100 million. I think in some cases, some people were thinking that was a little skeptical. It was pretty low. I think it's a reflection on the fact that the businesses today do operate somewhat separately, and I'll go through some of the examples. The seed business today is very much a local, regional business. When you look at the CP business, it's fundamentally a global functional business.
When you think about how you operate that under one umbrella as Corteva, we had a layer of management, so on and so forth, to keep the glue together, to keep those businesses together. As we start looking at how do we take our 22,000 employees and separate them into purpose-built organizations, we found opportunities to save some money that said that we don't need that glue anymore, and then we can make these organizations very specific to the needs of those individual businesses. When you look at that, we know that the non-headcount number will be a dis-synergy. You know, we have certain corporate costs and so on and so forth that will be more expensive. As we sit here today, we're about halfway through, you know, six-plus months in, we're saying that we're actually trending a little favorable to that net $100 million number.
We feel really good about that. Probably one other thing too, Joel, we said on timing, I think a lot of folks were a little bit skeptical again about how fast we could do this, and I say we're right on target. The reason why we're able to do that, when you think about separations, some of the longer lead time items usually are things like systems, that we already had our ERP system separate. In some cases, there might be co-minglement around manufacturing or what have you. Our manufacturing's 100% completely separate. When we're looking through the details, there's really literally a handful of agreements that we're gonna need between the two businesses to go forward.
Thinking about the separation, a couple things. On the CP side, in the Pioneer channel, you do a bit of CP. Talk about the opportunity it might be to do a little more CP in the channel, in the Pioneer channel, and maybe open the door up to even more from third parties.
Yep. The way the Pioneer agency model works, it's a direct-to-farmer model. We have local independent business owners that are Pioneer reps, and we allow them access to our seed technology, and they work directly with farmers to sell seed. A lot of these are really good business people, and they sell many other things. About 20%-25% of them will sell crop protection. They usually don't do the order fulfillment. They usually work with a local retailer in some capacity. The model I'm describing is an American model. It's a U.S.-based model. Of course our crop protection would be part of that. We've never, ever mandated, even inside of Corteva, that they can only do this or that with CP.
We just don't feel that that is for us to do. We want the Pioneer agents first to focus on seed, but if they wanna do something else, they obviously they can sell our crop protection. We would allow that and help them. They can sell every other crop protection as well. Once we separate, I don't think there's a lot of change here on either side of the house necessarily initially. I think where you're going, Joel, is that you've gotta imagine that what we have in the U.S. is we have a relationship with about the, well, the top growers in the U.S. with about 65 million acres that grow corn or soybeans every year. These relationships run deep. They're strong.
The question is, okay, well, should we as a seed company then invite others to have access to that channel? Is that good for farmers? Is that good for the Pioneer reps? Is that good for Vylor? Those are interesting questions that are in the early days today. We'll probably have a little bit more to talk about that in September, but it is an interesting when you think about that channel and how powerful it could be, what could go through that channel, it has some interesting questions. These are just, I'd say today, musings more than anything.
What we're gonna really focus on right now is making sure that we're putting the best seed in the hands of growers so that they can, you know, produce really high-quality crops.
You're separating, BASF is separating crop science. Bayer could separate their crop science. FMC's got lots of stuff going on, where maybe they'll start separating some assets from themselves, as they try to shore up their balance sheet. The world that we know it and this landscape could be a lot different in two, three, four years, or will be. You know, how do you see that? How do you think of you know, I guess New Corteva in the CP space, a pure-play, being an aggregator, being aggregated, like what will its role be in that new world? I know it's for Luke to answer.
Yeah.
He's not here.
Yeah.
You're here.
I don't wanna speak for Luke.
Yeah.
Let me tell you how the setup, what we're gonna give Luke. We're gonna give Luke a ton of options and strength, is how I would describe it. The first thing I need to say right up front is we plan to do nothing that will impact the separation. Our first job is to deliver 2026 the way we've committed it, and the other first job is to separate in the fourth quarter. That's really important. Beyond that, though, David's gonna ensure that both companies have very strong balance sheets, and we've already committed to being investment grade on both sides of the house.
By definition, our crop protection business will have the financial strength, and it's got very good margins, it generates a lot of free cash flow, and it's gonna have a wonderful balance sheet. It will have the strength to grow. Now, my view is that the primary mechanism for growth in CP will be through that multi-billion dollar pipeline that we've already invested in. Just to talk a little bit about the CP pipeline is in the next decade, we have seven new active ingredients that will come into the market. Not quite one a year, but one every year and a little bit. Plus, we have a entire biologicals portfolio on top of that, those seven actives are chemical actives, to bring into the market. When I start thinking about the growth for New Corteva.
I think it's gonna be organically driven for the record. If it chooses to participate in M&A because there's a consolidation event or there's portfolio assets available, it'll have the strength to do that, for sure.
Okay. Just the new world order of CP and seed companies. Do you have any thoughts on that?
No. I think it's all natural and healthy on what's happening across the industry. I certainly believe that my view is that the two halves of our company, so Corteva and Vylor are gonna be very, very well-positioned. I do think the industry needs to collaborate more together. I've said it many, many times. I come out of the commodity world, where in the commodity world because costs are so important, the industry is just naturally built to collaborate more together. What I find a little odd in this industry is that there's more tension when it comes to sharing and collaborating in areas where it makes sense, and it's usually to de-risk technology because technology is so darn expensive to bring to market.
I'm hoping that with the adjustments that are being made, that the industry will find a way to co-collaborate on big technology to allow productivity and costs to come through to farmers. That's my vision of the future.
The Justice Department put out a statement this week about wanting everybody to share IP and be more collaborative. Is that the way you interpret it?
Look, I think that certainly when it comes to our seed technology, there's already a lot of commercial relationship. As I mentioned, right now we license our seed technology to 100 licensees in the U.S. There's lots of access to the best technology. We also spend $1 billion a year to continue that and ensure that that technology in the seed side is the best it can be. It's one of these interesting things, right? If you're gonna make an investment like that, you need to be able to have a sufficient return. We do make the technology available to those that wanna license it and want to brand it as their own. I think that allows for us to have large companies that are innovating.
We have smaller companies that are innovating, and we have companies that don't have the innovation engine, but want access to the latest and greatest. Certainly we're supportive of all of those things. We think it is very, very important that we have a highly competitive industry, access to technology. Where we don't want the industry to go, though, is where we have companies that have not invested the money into the innovation, they try to access it inappropriately.
Have you thought about the dividend structures of the two separated entities?
Yeah. One thing I should mention is in September, mid-September, we're gonna have two investor days, one for each company. During that period of time, we'll be giving an outlook out to 2029 with the financials. We'll also be going through basically deciding what the capital deployment strategy will be for each company. Right now, Joel, we've really been spending our time on capital structure. Like Chuck mentioned, we expect both companies to have an investment-grade metrics for both. I think you saw the announcement that we invested $1.5 billion essentially into our pension plan that would have remained or will remain with New Corteva. That de-risks a lot of liabilities on that side of the balance sheet. That's really where we've been spending the time.
I think the more important thing is Corteva has a very strong balance sheet today. Both companies, we expect to have strong balance sheets going forward, which I think will give them the flexibility to do whatever they want whenever it comes to capital deployment.
Talk a little more about hybrid wheat. You're rolling out, I think is also another competitor, KWS, rolling out some next year. Do you think about the hybrid wheat's been a tough nut to crack forever? Talk about why it's been hard and now you and another player are trying to get in the market. What it's gonna be like?
The challenge is, obviously, the companies that are working on this understand hybridization. The challenge has been that the hybridization models that exist today prior to our technology have been cumbersome. What that means is that the cost to produce the seed is very expensive. Once we try to get an appropriate margin and we have to price that at the farm level, a farmer is looking at the yield advantage and the price that they're paying, and it doesn't work. It's not like we haven't been able to, we haven't tried, but we've never been able to make the economics work at the farm level. What's different?
We have a now a proprietary production system for our hybrid wheat, and it's the first of its kind, and we have patented it. What that's gonna allow us to do is the very first set of hybrids that we're producing right now is showing 10%-15% yield improvement in wheat production. You gotta think about that for a minute, right? That's the worst it's ever gonna be 'cause it's the first hybrid coming out of the pipeline. It's just gonna get better from there with breeding. It's really powerful. The difference is the cost of production is lower. We're able to charge an appropriate price at the farm level where a farmer can look at it and the economics will make sense.
What we're hoping for is if they see a higher yield and then most importantly, a higher profit per acre, they'll invest in that seed technology because it's better for them. We're going to roll this out in 2027. It's going to be a small launch, then we're going to take this technology, I'd say around the world, but only around the world where we have the IP protected. There are some parts of the world that don't protect the IP, just like corn and soybeans, we won't sell in that area. We may sell the seed when we have access to the right germplasm, but we may just license the IP to other germplasm holders in other parts of the world. That's the work that's underway right now, but it's a pretty exciting future for us.
If you think about wheat, why it's so important. Wheat is the largest row crop in the world, and it's also 20% of the calories we consume as humanity. It can go a long way. Yes, we talk about profit and we talk about yield at the farm level, but this can move the needle when it comes to global food security because the most insecure parts of the world actually rely on wheat more than others. This is an area where we can really move the needle, I think, with feeding people.
I have a different question. In thinking about your separation, I mean, what should you know, high quality seed, pure play seed company, top innovator, what type of multiple should that company trade at? What type of multiple should a high quality, you know, CP company like New Corteva trade at, you think, on the market?
Yeah. I'm not gonna give you a number. Joel, that's your job.
Numbers. Two numbers.
I, let me just say this, okay, for Vylor, what we're gonna try to articulate for you in September is a company that is gonna grow the bottom line at mid to high single digits. It's gonna have like 25%+ EBITDA margins, and it's gonna convert an awful lot of its EBITDA to cash flow. You can put the multiple on that. To me, it's a pretty special business. At the same time, if you look about the CP business, it's a specialty chemical business that has a large part of its portfolio protected by IP and innovation.
I would take the specialty multiple and start looking up from whatever that is, because it's got the IP around it, and it's got a pipeline around it, and it's gonna invest about 6%-7% of its revenue in R&D and create next generation technology. The answer is more, higher. We also recognize that our jobs as officers of these companies are to execute and to deliver. You guys will decide how much it's worth, but to me, the opportunity for both is gonna be very, very exciting.
Thank you, gentlemen.
All right.
Thank you.