Nutrien Is Quietly Positioning Itself for the Future of Agriculture

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Global fertilizer industries have mined, manufactured, and shipped agricultural nutrients to the world's breadbaskets harvest after harvest for much of the last century. Seeing how farmers will always need to supply their crops with nitrogen, potassium, phosphorus, and other nutrients, it may be tempting to think that the markets will continue on a predictable trajectory for the foreseeable future. But that seems increasingly unlikely thanks to a handful of emerging technologies.

Farms from America's Corn Belt to Brazil are leveraging digital tools to plan each harvest, including more efficient use of inputs such as seeds, water, and fertilizers. Meanwhile, next-generation biotech products in development today are seeking to boost agricultural yields, protect crops from pests, and even displace synthetic fertilizers altogether.

While fertilizer companies generally have been slow to address the growing threats from these emerging technologies, Nutrien (NYSE: NTR) has quietly begun positioning its business for the future of agriculture. Investors shouldn't ignore the shift.

Aerial view of corn field.
Aerial view of corn field.

Image source: Getty Images.

Pouncing on a long-awaited opening

Nutrien is the result of a huge merger between Agrium and PotashCorp, which consolidated following a nasty fertilizer market correction brought on by years of unchecked supply expansion and the dissolution of a major potash cartel in Eastern Europe in 2013. Today, more than a half decade later, markets are finally beginning to rebalance -- and the $31-billion fertilizer titan sees an opening.

A combination of rising selling prices, cost savings from the merger, and a significantly increased global footprint have Nutrien on solid financial footing. Free cash flow jumped 53% year-over-year to settle at $2 billion in 2018. Adjusted EBITDA climbed from $3 billion in 2017 to $3.94 billion in 2018. Management's initial full-year 2019 guidance estimates that the business will generate adjusted EBITDA of roughly $4.65 billion this year.

Strengthening operations are coming at an opportune time. Global trade authorities approved its merger on the condition that Nutrien sell its nearly 24% equity stake in Sociedad Química y Minera de Chile S.A. (SQM), one of the world's largest lithium producers (large amounts of potash are produced from South America's lithium brines). That sale resulted in net proceeds of $5.3 billion. While a significant amount of that will be spent on increased dividend payments and a generous share repurchase program, management has also plowed over $1 billion into acquisitions and investments aimed at future-proofing its single-largest segment: retail.


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