Bunge Global SA
CorpDigest
Bunge Global SA
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2025-07-15 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2025 Revenue
$70.3B
▲ 32.4% vs FY2024 ($53.1B)
Bunge Global SA reported $70.3B in revenue for fiscal year 2025. This represents a growth of 32.4% compared to the 2024 figure of $53.1B.
The revenue history captures commodity price cycles more than anything else: $59.5 billion in 2023, $53.1 billion in 2024, then a surge to $70.3 billion in 2025 as the Viterra consolidation added substantial grain merchandising revenues. None of those swings reflects a meaningful change in the volume of agricultural products Bunge moves. They reflect commodity price levels, crushing margin conditions, and what entities are consolidated in the reporting period. Net income of $1.137 billion in 2024 on $53.1 billion in revenue represents a 2.1% net margin — the economics of a scale business where volume and throughput matter far more than per-unit profitability. Bunge's trade structured finance programs generated $36 million in net returns in 2023 through letters of credit and time deposits, monetizing the financial flows embedded in global grain trade. That $36 million is a rounding error in the income statement but illustrates how the company extracts value from every layer of the agricultural supply chain. The Viterra acquisition cost $8.2 billion and required $233 million in integration costs in fiscal 2025 alone — $216 million in SG&A and $28 million in interest expense. That integration spending is temporary; the structural benefits of combining the world's largest oilseed processor with one of the largest grain merchandisers are permanent. The combined entity controls a portfolio of port terminals, storage facilities, and crushing plants that competitors cannot quickly replicate regardless of capital availability. The U.S. Biofuel policy uncertainty that disrupted North American refined and specialty oils results in 2024 illustrates Bunge's ongoing exposure to regulatory decisions it does not control. Soybean crush economics in North America are directly affected by RFS mandates and renewable diesel demand, making Washington's bioenergy policy as important to Bunge's margins as the weather in the Brazilian cerrado.
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.