Grupo Los Grobo’s financial unraveling began in December 2024, with court filings confirming the agroindustrial titan owes creditors $207 million, including $51.75 million due by mid-2025.
The company’s subsidiaries—Los Grobo Agropecuaria and agrochemical firm Agrofina—defaulted on bank loans, triggering collateral seizures on grain stocks and processing plants.
Founded in 1984 by Adolfo Grobocopatel, Los Grobo once managed 220,000 hectares across Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay, pioneering no-till soybean farming.
Its 2013 sale of Brazilian assets marked a peak before reckless debt accumulation began. By 2025, 90% ownership rested with private equity firm Victoria Capital Partners, leaving the founding family with 10%.
A December 2024 default spiraled into bounced checks and failed payments on a grain-backed loan. Farmers now accuse Los Grobo of asset stripping while owed millions. The company denies claims, blaming unrelated grievances for blocked operations.
Sector-wide pressures deepened the crisis. Soybean prices dropped 18% year-over-year, while unsold herbicides mirrored rival failures. Argentina’s agribusinesses face liquidity crunches, echoing past debt crises.
Export tax cuts on soy, corn, and wheat offered minimal relief. Analysts note dollarized input costs and high inflation still strangle producers. Forecasts predict a GDP contraction, with farming margins barely positive despite reforms.
Los Grobo’s 715 employees and 37 branches face uncertainty as banks seize grain plants and a flour mill. Creditors demand repayment, threatening lawsuits against contracted farmers.
The downfall underscores Argentina’s agri-finance reckoning. Lenders kept extending risky credit despite warnings about Los Grobo’s cash flow and debt structure.
As Victoria Capital negotiates emergency equity injections, industry watchers question if any agribusiness can thrive amid Argentina’s volatile economic mix.