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ADM

ADM

Hold 2026-04-24
Model
DCF
Price at Report
$70.03
Base IV
$73.35
Bear IV
$26.54
Bull IV
$150.37
Entry Zone: 25-67 · Sell Above: 128
Bore Family Office
Bore Family Office
Valuation Report — Archer-Daniels-Midland Co (ADM) • April 24, 2026
Unlevered DCF (FCFF @ WACC) • Discount Rate: 9.00% • Current Price: $70.03
Prepared by Lurch • Bore Family Office • Data: Finnhub, StockAnalysis.com, S&P Global Market Intelligence
🏢 Business Overview

Archer-Daniels-Midland is one of the world's largest agricultural processors and commodity trading companies, operating across oilseed processing (soybean, canola), carbohydrate solutions (corn wet milling, wheat), nutrition (specialty ingredients, flavors), and agricultural services (grain merchandising, transportation). Founded in 1902, ADM processes >50% of US soybeans and is a critical link in the global food supply chain. The company has raised its dividend for 17 consecutive years, though growth has slowed to ~2% recently. ADM faces cyclical margin compression and an ongoing accounting investigation (2024) that has impaired investor confidence.

Business SegmentRevenue% of TotalYoY GrowthMarginNotes
Ag Services & Oilseeds$42,500M53%-8.0%Grain trading, soybean/canola crushing, tropical oils
Carbohydrate Solutions$18,500M23%-4.0%Corn wet milling, starches, sweeteners, ethanol
Nutrition$8,500M11%-6.0%Specialty ingredients, flavors, proteins, supplements
Other / Corporate$10,769M13%-3.0%Risk management, freight, corporate
Blended Growth Rate100%-6.2%Weighted avg across segments
📊 Business Lifecycle Stage
Business Lifecycle Stage
Stage 1
Startup
Stage 2
Hyper Growth
Stage 3
Self Funding
Stage 4
Operating Leverage
Stage 5
Capital Return
Stage 6
Decline

Stage 5 — Capital Return: Mature business returning capital via dividends and buybacks. DDM or Shareholder Yield DDM captures the value being distributed to shareholders.

Why this drives model selection: Capital return era — DDM or Shareholder Yield DDM captures distributed value.

🔍 Quality Scorecard
MetricValueAssessment
ROIC4.0%<8% weak
FCF Margin5.2%5–10% adequate
Debt / EBITDA3.8x2–4x moderate
Revenue TrendDeclining 3yr3-year directional trend
FCF Margin TrendStable (±1pp)Directional margin trajectory
Analyst RevisionsDownward revisionsLast 90 days consensus direction
⚠️ Elevated value trap risk — verify thesis before acting
📊 Financial Snapshot
Metric20212022202320242025
Revenue ($M)$85,249$101,556$93,935$85,530$80,269
Rev YoY Growth+19.1%-7.5%-8.9%-6.2%
Gross Margin7.0%7.5%8.0%6.8%6.3%
EBITDA ($M)$3,731$4,816$4,598$2,417$1,982
EBITDA Margin4.4%4.7%4.9%2.8%2.5%
Operating Income ($M)$2,735$3,788$3,539$1,276$801
Operating Margin3.2%3.7%3.8%1.5%1.0%
Net Income ($M)$2,709$4,340$3,483$1,800$1,078
Net Margin3.2%4.3%3.7%2.1%1.3%
EPS (diluted)$4.79$7.71$6.43$3.65$2.23
Free Cash Flow ($M)$5,426$2,159$2,966$1,227$4,204
Annual DPS$1.480$1.600$1.800$2.000$2.040
Total Debt ($M)$8,581$8,677$8,260$8,254$7,612
💹 Capital Return & Share Count Analysis
Net Share Change
-14.1% (2021→2025)
📉 Net reduction — buybacks exceed issuances
EPS Amplification
EPS grew -53.4% vs net income -60.2% over the period — +6.8pp of EPS growth amplified by share reduction.
YearDiluted Shares (M)YoY ChangeBuyback Spend ($M)Buyback Yield
2021560.0M$2000.5%
2022563.0M+0.5%$8002.0%
2023542.0M-3.7%$1,2003.2%
2024493.0M-9.0%$1,8005.2%
2025481.0M-2.4%$5001.5%
ADM shares outstanding

ADM accelerated buybacks in 2023-2024, retiring ~14% of shares. 2025 buybacks slowed to ~$500M as cash was prioritized for debt reduction and the dividend. Share count decline is meaningful and consistent.

⚙️ WACC Build (DCF)
InputValueNotes
Risk-Free Rate (Rf)4.25%10-yr US Treasury yield
Beta (β)0.560Market beta (Finnhub)
Equity Risk Premium (ERP)5.5%Damodaran US ERP
Cost of Equity (Ke)7.33%Ke = Rf + β × ERP
Pre-Tax Cost of Debt4.50%Interest exp / gross debt
After-Tax Cost of Debt (Kd)3.56%× (1 − 21%)
Weight Equity (We)81.6%Mkt cap $0.0B
Weight Debt (Wd)18.4%Gross debt $0.0B
WACC9.00%DCF discount rate
📈 DCF Scenarios
$27
🔴 Bear
$73
📊 Base
$150
🚀 Bull
$70.03
Current Price
$64
Analyst Avg PT
ScenarioStage 1 (Yrs 1–5)Stage 2 (Yrs 6–10)Terminal gWACCIntrinsic Valuevs Price
🔴 Bear-5.0%0.0%2.0%10.50%$27▼62.1%
📊 Base3.0%2.0%2.5%9.00%$73▲4.7%
🚀 Bull8.0%4.0%3.0%8.00%$150▲114.7%
Intrinsic Value vs PriceFCF Projection
📋 Full 10-Year Projection Tables
Bear Scenario
Stage 1: -5.0%  |  Stage 2: 0.0%  |  Terminal: 2.0%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1 ✦Stage 1$1.80B$1.63B$1.63B
Year 2 ✦Stage 1$1.70B$1.39B$3.02B
Year 3 ✦Stage 1$1.60B$1.19B$4.21B
Year 4 ✦Stage 1$1.50B$1.01B$5.21B
Year 5 ✦Stage 1$1.50B$0.91B$6.12B
Year 6Stage 2$1.50B$0.82B$6.95B
Year 7Stage 2$1.50B$0.75B$7.69B
Year 8Stage 2$1.50B$0.67B$8.37B
Year 9Stage 2$1.50B$0.61B$8.98B
Year 10Stage 2$1.50B$0.55B$9.53B
TerminalTV=$18.0BPV(TV)=$6.6B (41% of EV)EV=$16.2B
Intrinsic ValueEV $16.2B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$27
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (10.50%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (2.0%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $18.0B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $6.6B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($9.5B) + PV of TV ($6.6B) = $16.2B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $12.8B, divided by shares outstanding = $27 per share.
Base Scenario
Stage 1: 3.0%  |  Stage 2: 2.0%  |  Terminal: 2.5%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1 ✦Stage 1$2.50B$2.29B$2.29B
Year 2 ✦Stage 1$2.58B$2.17B$4.47B
Year 3 ✦Stage 1$2.66B$2.05B$6.52B
Year 4 ✦Stage 1$2.74B$1.94B$8.46B
Year 5 ✦Stage 1$2.83B$1.84B$10.30B
Year 6Stage 2$2.89B$1.72B$12.02B
Year 7Stage 2$2.94B$1.61B$13.63B
Year 8Stage 2$3.00B$1.51B$15.14B
Year 9Stage 2$3.06B$1.41B$16.55B
Year 10Stage 2$3.12B$1.32B$17.87B
TerminalTV=$49.3BPV(TV)=$20.8B (54% of EV)EV=$38.7B
Intrinsic ValueEV $38.7B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$73
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (9.00%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (2.5%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $49.3B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $20.8B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($17.9B) + PV of TV ($20.8B) = $38.7B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $35.3B, divided by shares outstanding = $73 per share.
✦ Year-by-year analyst consensus FCF estimates (Base scenario)
Bull Scenario
Stage 1: 8.0%  |  Stage 2: 4.0%  |  Terminal: 3.0%
PeriodStageFCFFPV of FCFFCumulative EV
Year 1 ✦Stage 1$3.00B$2.78B$2.78B
Year 2 ✦Stage 1$3.30B$2.83B$5.61B
Year 3 ✦Stage 1$3.60B$2.86B$8.46B
Year 4 ✦Stage 1$3.90B$2.87B$11.33B
Year 5 ✦Stage 1$4.20B$2.86B$14.19B
Year 6Stage 2$4.37B$2.75B$16.94B
Year 7Stage 2$4.54B$2.65B$19.59B
Year 8Stage 2$4.72B$2.55B$22.15B
Year 9Stage 2$4.91B$2.46B$24.60B
Year 10Stage 2$5.11B$2.37B$26.97B
TerminalTV=$105.3BPV(TV)=$48.8B (64% of EV)EV=$75.7B
Intrinsic ValueEV $75.7B − Net Debt → Equity / Shares$150
How the price per share is derived: Each year's projected free cash flow is discounted back at WACC (8.00%) to get its present value. After Year 10, FCF grows at the terminal rate (3.0%) in perpetuity — the Gordon Growth formula gives a terminal value of FCF11 / (WACC − gT) = $105.3B. That terminal value is discounted back 10 years to today's dollars (PV of TV = $48.8B). Enterprise Value = PV of FCFs ($27.0B) + PV of TV ($48.8B) = $75.7B. Subtracting net debt gives equity value of $72.3B, divided by shares outstanding = $150 per share.
🔲 Sensitivity Table
WACC \ gT1.5%2.0%2.5%3.0%3.5%
7.0%$97$104$112$122$135
7.5%$88$94$100$108$117
8.0%$81$85$90$96$104
8.5%$75$78$82$87$93
9.0%$69$72$75$79$84
9.5%$64$67$69$73$76
10.0%$60$62$64$67$70
10.5%$56$58$60$62$65
11.0%$53$54$56$58$60

Green = >10% above current price. Red = >10% below. Gold = within ±10%.

Sensitivity Heatmap
📉 Long-Term Price Trend Channel

Log-linear trend fitted to full price history. ±1.5σ bands. Green shaded zone = bottom 25% of historical range — historically attractive entry.

Long-Term Trend Channel
🏦 Comparable Valuation
CompanyTickerP/EEV/EBITDAP/FCFDiv YieldNotes
BungeBG11.5x7.8x14.0x2.8%Oilseed peer; being acquired by Glencore
CargillPrivate~2.5%Private peer; similar commodity exposure
IngredionINGR14.2x10.5x16.0x2.6%Corn processing; higher margin
Tyson FoodsTSN15.0x9.2x18.0x3.2%Protein processor; cyclical
ADM 5yr AvgADM14.5x9.0x15.0x2.6%Own history: trading at discount to avg
💰 Dividend / Distribution Analysis
MetricValue
Annual DPS$2.040
Current Yield2.91%
Consecutive Growth Years17
1-yr DPS CAGR+2.0%
3-yr DPS CAGR+4.2%
5-yr DPS CAGR+5.0%
10-yr DPS CAGR+6.0%
Payout Ratio (DPS/EPS)91.5% ⚠️
FCF Payout Ratio23.3%
Sustainability VerdictWatch
17-year growth streak, but payout ratio of 91% on GAAP EPS is elevated. FCF payout of 23% is very healthy — the dividend is well-covered by cash flow. Recent 2% growth rate (vs 5-10% historically) signals management is prioritizing caution during the downturn. Dividend is safe but growth may remain muted until margins recover.
Dividend History
🔮 Analyst Forecast Section
(a) EPS Consensus
YearLow / ActualAvgHigh# AnalystsType
2021$4.79Actual
2022$7.71Actual
2023$6.43Actual
2024$3.65Actual
2025$2.23Actual
2026$3.68$4.24$5.3315Estimate
2027$4.02$4.91$6.2014Estimate
(b) Revenue Consensus
YearLow / ActualAvgHigh# AnalystsType
2021$85.2BActual
2022$101.6BActual
2023$93.9BActual
2024$85.5BActual
2025$80.3BActual
2026$79.0B$84.1B$90.8B15Estimate
2027$79.9B$86.5B$94.7B14Estimate
(c) Individual Analyst Price Targets
AnalystFirmRatingPTUpside
Dushyant AilaniJefferiesHold$77+10.0%
Benjamin TheurerBarclaysHold$77+10.0%
Thomas PalmerJP MorganSell$65-7.2%
Analyst Forecast Confidence
Analyst Price Targets
💡 Investment Thesis
  • Deep value on trough earnings: At 16.5× forward EPS and 2.9% yield, ADM prices in continued margin deterioration. Any stabilization in crush margins drives a sharp re-rating.
  • Essential infrastructure: ADM's processing assets are irreplaceable infrastructure — 50%+ US soybean crush capacity and a global logistics network create a wide moat.
  • 17-year dividend growth streak: Even through the current downturn, ADM has maintained and grown the dividend. FCF of $4.2B covers the $980M dividend with ample room.
  • Key risk — accounting investigation: The 2024 accounting probe into Nutrition segment intersegment transfers has eroded investor trust. CFO resigned. Multiple class-action lawsuits pending.
👔 Management Quality & Culture
CEO: Juan Luciano  ·  Tenure: Since 2011 (~15 yrs)
Net Insider Buys (12m)
-370,825 shares
Incentive Alignment
⚠️ Moderate

Compensation: Equity-based compensation present

CEO Background & Track Record
Archer Daniels Midland - Wikipedia
Dwayne Andreas was named CEO of ADM in 1970, and two years later was elected chairman of the company's board. Under his leadership, Archer Daniels Midland acquired many smaller agricultural companies and expanded into
Archer Daniels Midland CEO and Key Executive Team | Craft.co
Archer Daniels Midland's Chairman of the Board of Directors, President, Chief Executive Officer is Juan R. Luciano. Archer Daniels Midland's key executives include Juan R.
Juan R. Luciano - Illinois Economic Development Corporation
Mr. Luciano joined ADM in 2011 as Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer. He was named President in February 2014, and in January 2015 became the ninth Chief Executive in ADM’s 112-year history.
Capital Allocation & Strategy
Archer-Daniels-Midland (ADM) Q4 2024 Earnings Call Transcrip
In 2024, the company returned $3.3 billion in the form of dividends and share repurchases, allocated $1.6 billion to capital expenditures to support the reliability of our assets and cost efficiencies, and approximately $1
Archer Daniels Midland Co (ADM) 10K Annual Reports & 10Q SEC
Cash flows from operations before working capital is cash flows from operating activities of $2,780 million excluding the changes in working capital of $(519) million in YTD 2024.
Employee Ratings
Overall Rating
3.4/5 ★★★☆☆
Reviews
1,212
Culture Signal
Positive
✅ Strengths
  • work-life balance
  • recommend
Employee Review Excerpts
Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) Reviews | Glassdoor
79% of Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) employees would recommend working there to a friend based on Glassdoor reviews. Employees also rated Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) 3.4 out of 5 for work life balance, 3.7 for culture and values
Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) - Status Matters | Glassdoor
Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) See All Reviews (1301)See All (1301) April 4, 2017 · StarStarStarStarStar · Work/Life Balance · Culture & Values · Career Opportunities · Compensation and Benefits · Senior Management · Former Employee - Tax
Archer Daniels Midland Reviews & Ratings by 45 Employees | C
According to reviews on CareerBliss, employees commonly rated the pros of working at Archer Daniels Midland to be Company Culture, Growth Opportunities, People You Work With and Person You Work For, and no cons.
Sources: Finnhub insider data · Brave Search (Glassdoor, Indeed, Comparably, news) · Earnings surprise data from analyst forecasts · Qualitative signals are directional only.
⚖️ DCF Verdict: Hold — Archer-Daniels-Midland Co (ADM)
Current price: $70.03 | Analyst Avg PT: $64.00
$27
🔴 Bear
$73
📊 Base
$150
🚀 Bull
TierPriceAction
Tier 1 — Starter≤$67Begin position
Tier 2 — Add≤$50Add on weakness
Tier 3 — Full≤$25Full allocation
Sell Alert≥$128Above fair value — consider trimming
How tiers are set: Tier 1 = Base IV × 0.92 (8% discount to base case). Tier 2 = midpoint of Bear & Base IV (building on meaningful weakness). Tier 3 = Bear IV × 1.05 (just above worst-case — maximum margin of safety). Sell alert = Bull IV × 0.85 (15% discount to bull case — above fair value range).

Verdict: Hold. ADM is a deep-value cyclical at trough margins, but the accounting investigation overhang and margin uncertainty warrant patience. The 2.9% yield is well-covered. Add below $60 on further weakness; full position below $50. Becomes a trim above $80.

🔧 Model Notes & Calibration
AssumptionRationale / Notes
Model SelectionDCF — ADM has a 17-year dividend streak but DPS growth has slowed to 2% and the company is cyclical with thin margins. DCF on FCF better captures the cyclical cash flow profile than DDM on a slowly growing DPS.
FCF BaseNormalized to $2.5B mid-cycle FCF. FY2025 reported FCF of $4.2B is inflated by ~$1.7B working capital release and reduced capex. Mid-cycle FCF of $2-3B is the sustainable base (consistent with EBITDA of $2B and 6% thin-margin economics).
Accounting OverhangThe 2024 Nutrition segment accounting investigation (intersegment transfer pricing) led to CFO resignation and restated financials. This is a real governance risk that justifies a discount. Models cannot fully capture this — noted as qualitative risk.
LifecycleClassifier failed — analyst judgment: Stage 5 (Mature Cash Cow). ADM is a mature processor with cyclical margins, moderate growth, and a reliable but slow-growing dividend. The business generates real cash but is not a growth story.
Bore Family Office • Analysis generated by Lurch • Not investment advice.