CEO: Archer Daniels Midland To Cut 1,000 Jobs
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this photo taken July, 2009, the ADM logo is seen on a rail car that carries grain at the Archer Daniels Midland Company plant in Decatur, Ill. Agribusiness conglomerate Archer Daniels Midland Co. announced plans Wednesday, Jan. 11. 2012 to cut 1,000 jobs, or about 3 percent of its total workforce, with the majority of the positions being salaried staff. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)(Credit: AP)DECATUR, Ill. (AP) — Agribusiness conglomerate Archer Daniels Midland Co. announced plans Wednesday to cut 1,000 mostly salaried jobs as it navigates volatile global crops markets.
The move will cut 15 percent of the Decatur-based company’s corporate staff, about 3 percent of its total workforce, CEO Patricia Woertz said in statement.
Archer Daniels Midland reported $2.03 billion in profits for the last fiscal year alone, but crops markets can make for unpredictable revenue. Corn and soybean prices have seesawed violently this year, hitting near-record levels only to plunge again in a matter of months. Such swings can quickly wipe out profits, so ADM is looking to cut as much overhead costs as it can.
Woertz said the job cuts will help the company be more competitive in the modern food industry. It expects to save about $100 million in annual expenses from the cuts, along with other cost-cutting measures. The job cuts will cost between $50 and $75 million during the third quarter of the company’s current fiscal year.
ADM said it first will offer employees a chance to voluntarily retire early if they are at least 57 years old and meet other requirements. Employees have until the end of January to take the retirement package. After that, the company will cut the remaining number of jobs needed to meet the 1,000 mark.
ADM employs 30,000 people worldwide with corporate offices in Switzerland, Brazil and China. But news of the reductions could still have a big impact on hometown Decatur.
The company is the largest employer in the city of about 76,000, with about 4,000 workers, and offers some of the highest-paid local positions. City Manager Ryan McCrady said local officials learned of the cuts from media reports, but that after talking with ADM Wednesday, remained hopeful the job losses would be widely spread rather than focused in town.
“I’m optimistic that they’re talking about a global reduction, that may buffer some of the impacts at the local level,” McCrady said.
Even some ADM employees like Cade Grimm, 35, were caught off guard.
“I hate to see anyone lose their job,” the hourly worker from Bethany said upon returning to work from several days off. “This is pretty frightening, actually, because it usually rolls downhill.”
Gov. Pat Quinn’s office spoke with ADM Wednesday “about doing anything we can to protect Illinois jobs as the company makes its international business decisions,” Quinn spokeswoman Marcelyn Love said.




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