Agchem giant Corteva Inc. has announced plans to split into separate, publicly traded seeds and crop protection companies, as per Chemweek.
The move will “unleash two distinct market leaders” with operating models and capital allocation priorities tailored to support their respective growth outlooks and strategic directions, according to Corteva.
2025 net sales attributable to the crop protection business, dubbed “New Corteva,” are forecast to total $7.8 billion. The seeds business, or “SpinCo,” is expected to post sales of $9.9 billion.
The crop protection market has been grappling with destocking and price competition from Chinese manufacturers, whose lower production costs and aggressive export strategies are pressuring margins across the industry.
“The seed and crop protection markets have evolved, and as a result, we see the opportunities ahead for both companies diverging – this is the right time to act to stay ahead of the market,” said Corteva CEO Chuck Magro. “This separation will allow both businesses to maximize long-term value creation by focusing on their own priorities. As such, we see this separation as the logical next step in their growth trajectory.”
New Corteva will benefit from a stronger strategic and operational focus, including supply chain optimization, organic investment in differentiated solutions, and “disciplined” M&A to expand market positions in attractive portfolios or geographies. As a standalone company, SpinCo’s capital allocation will prioritize targeted M&A, sustained investment in R&D, and the fulfillment of existing opportunities, including out-licensing, hybrid wheat, biofuels and gene editing.
Restructuring has been a hallmark of the agchems industry, especially during periods of economic or regulatory stress.
The last downturn in ag markets in 2015–16 spurred the top-five agchem companies to consolidate into three $10 billion-plus giants. In 2017, Dow Chemical and DuPont merged to set up a 2019 split into three independent pure-play companies, one of which was Corteva. That same year, state-owned ChemChina acquired Syngenta for $43 billion. In 2018, Bayer acquired Monsanto for $63 billion, a deal that required Bayer to offload several of its seeds and crop protection products to BASF for €7.6 billion to obtain antitrust approval. DuPont and FMC also engaged in an asset swap in 2017 through which FMC gained DuPont’s cereal broadleaf herbicides and chewing insecticides portfolios.
More recently, BASF announced that it is preparing an IPO for its agricultural solutions business. The company is targeting the second half of 2027.
Corteva said the tax-free transaction is expected to be completed in the second half of 2026, subject to certain conditions. Lazard and Morgan Stanley & Co., LLC are serving as financial advisors; Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP is acting as legal advisor.
Upon separation, current Corteva Chair Greg Page will become Chair of New Corteva; current Corteva CEO Chuck Magro will become CEO of SpinCo. Full board and management teams of both companies will be announced at a later date.
mrchub.com