BusinessMirror

Nutrien boosts outlook for potash sales

- Bloomberg News

NUtrien Ltd., the world’s largest fertilizer company, boosted its outlook for profit growth and cash flow, saying it plans to sell more potash as crop-nutrient prices soar.

The company is projecting earnings-per-share of $16.20 to $18.70 on an adjusted basis; the previous target was $10.20 to $11.80. nutrien and other fertilizer companies have benefited from record prices as major exporter russia’s invasion of Ukraine and sanctions on Belarus threaten a massive portion of global fertilizer supply.

Mosaic co., the world’s largest phosphate producer, reported firstquart­er earnings that missed analyst estimates. total potash production is expected to exceed recent historical levels for the remainder of 2022, the company said Monday in a statement.

Nutrien has said it will increase potash production to fill a worldwide deficit. russia and Belarus account for about 40 percent of global potash output and exports, and sanctions and other restrictio­ns imposed on the countries have “significan­tly constraine­d supply,” the company said Monday in a statement.

Nutrien has raised 2022 potash sales volume guidance to between 14.5 to 15.1 million tons, with the majority of the extra capacity to be produced in the second half of the year.

“We are estimating a wider than normal range of global potash shipments given the level of uncertaint­y of supply from russia and Belarus,” according to the statement.

Nutrien has yet to name a permanent successor to former chief executive officer Mayo Schmidt, who was fired just eight months after his April 2021 hiring to succeed chuck Magro, who is now ceo of agribusine­ss giant corteva inc.

Nutrien paid Schmidt $9.4 million and another $4.8 million in severance, according to the company’s proxy circular. Magro received $18.5 million, in addition to $8.1 million in severance, according to company documents.

Corteva paid nutrien a lump sum of $18.7 million for allowing Magro to breach restrictiv­e covenants and work for a rival.

“While we have gone through two ceo changes this past year, the decisions made were both necessary and in the best long-term interests of the company and its shareholde­rs,” the company said in a proxy circular to shareholde­rs in April. the board intends to announce a permanent ceo during the second half of 2022.

 ?? Photograph­er: James macdonald/bloomberg ?? Piles of refined potash sit in a storage barn at the Nutrien ltd. Cory potash facility in saskatoon, saskatchew­an, Canada, on Monday, August 12, 2019.
Photograph­er: James macdonald/bloomberg Piles of refined potash sit in a storage barn at the Nutrien ltd. Cory potash facility in saskatoon, saskatchew­an, Canada, on Monday, August 12, 2019.

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