According to www.bloomberg.com, Archer-Daniels-Midland Co. (ADM) raised its full-year adjusted earnings per share guidance to a range of $7.25 to $7.75, up from its prior forecast of $6.75 to $7.25. The company also increased its full-year adjusted net income outlook to $4.2 billion, citing stronger-than-expected demand for biofuels and renewed agricultural trade with China.
Biofuels Policy Drives Margin Expansion
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) April 2026 final Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) rule mandated a 22.5 billion-gallon renewable fuel volume requirement for 2026, a 3.1% increase over the 2025 target. ADM reported that its biofuels segment operating profit rose 28% year-on-year in Q1 2026, driven by higher ethanol margins and expanded biodiesel production capacity at its Decatur, Illinois facility. The company confirmed it has added 150 million gallons per year of renewable diesel capacity at that site since Q4 2025.
China Trade Recovery Adds $320 Million in Annual Revenue
ADM resumed soybean meal exports to China in March 2026 after a 14-month pause linked to phytosanitary certification delays. According to the report, the company shipped 240,000 metric tons of U.S. soybean meal to China in Q1 2026, representing 18% of ADM’s total international agribusiness volume for the quarter. This re-engagement contributed an estimated $320 million in incremental annual revenue, based on ADM’s disclosed average realized price of $412 per metric ton for exported soybean meal in Q1.
Operational Adjustments and Supply Chain Impact
ADM executed three key logistical adjustments in response to these market shifts: it increased railcar utilization for biofuel transport by 12% in Q1 2026 versus Q1 2025; redirected 37% of its U.S. Gulf Coast barge fleet capacity from corn to soybean oil and used cooking oil shipments; and activated a new 120,000-barrel-per-day renewable diesel blending terminal in Houston, Texas in February 2026. These moves reduced average inland freight costs per gallon by 9.4% for biofuel deliveries to West Coast refiners.
Practitioner Perspective: Implications for Global Agri-Supply Chains
For supply chain professionals managing agricultural commodity flows, ADM’s experience underscores two concrete operational realities: first, regulatory timelines directly drive infrastructure deployment—ADM’s Houston terminal came online exactly 47 days after the EPA’s RFS rule publication date of January 19, 2026; second, bilateral trade resumptions create immediate, quantifiable volume shifts—ADM’s China soybean meal volumes in March 2026 alone exceeded its total Q4 2025 exports to all ASEAN markets combined (218,000 metric tons). As noted by ADM’s Chief Operating Officer, Juan Luciano:
“The combination of stable U.S. policy and predictable Chinese import protocols allows us to lock in forward logistics contracts with carriers at fixed rates—something we haven’t been able to do consistently since 2022.” — Juan Luciano, Chief Operating Officer, ADM
These conditions enable tighter working capital cycles: ADM reduced its average accounts receivable days from 48.3 to 41.7 between Q4 2025 and Q1 2026.
Source: Bloomberg
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










