In This Article:
(Bloomberg) -- A top court in Argentina is set to decide whether crop giants Bunge Global SA and Viterra Inc. will be allowed to take over a company that was once the crown jewel of the country’s massive soybean-processing industry.
Most Read from Bloomberg
The ruling on Vicentin SAIC is expected as soon as this month and has broad significance for global soy trading, since Argentina is the largest supplier of processed meal and oil. A go-ahead for a plan to rescue Vicentin, which filed for bankruptcy protection nearly five years ago, would further solidify Bunge-Viterra’s share of world soy-crush capacity. Meanwhile, a rejection would throw open an opportunity for competing proposals.
Vicentin was a rare success story in crisis-strewn Argentina, built up over decades by the Vicentin family dynasty that took on the might of commodity trading houses like Cargill Inc. and Louis Dreyfus Co. That all unraveled in 2019 as the company defaulted on some $1.5 billion of debt and entered bankruptcy proceedings — upending the crop-dealing industry in South America’s oldest grains exporter.
Vicentin family directors sought to keep the company alive, winning creditor approval for a rescue featuring a takeover of its assets led by Bunge and Glencore-backed Viterra, which are completing a merger. After years of legal wrangling between Vicentin and hostile creditors, the fate of the company now lies with the supreme court of Santa Fe, the province which contains Rosario — a riverside hub for shipping much of the world’s soy — and Avellaneda, the small town where Vicentin was founded nearly a century ago.
Prize Resource
If the justices agree to the takeover by Bunge, Viterra and local co-operative ACA, the group would win assets including a stake in Renova SA. That’s a prized resource in soy trading as its Timbues plant in the Rosario hub can crush far more beans a day than any other facility in the world.
Viterra already controls 67% of Renova. It was first to broker the rescue plan with Vicentin, in which many creditors would get back only about 30% of their money. Bunge joined later.
Bunge’s $8.2 billion acquisition of Viterra is expected to finalize in the next few months. It’s unclear how much extra Argentine antitrust scrutiny a takeover of Vicentin would draw.