Strong spring planting, grain shipments buoy CHS profits in otherwise down quarter

The Inver Grove Heights-based cooperative expects continued difficulty in the global grain game.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
July 9, 2025 at 8:47PM
Operations specialist Dave Runde unloads a truck of corn at the CHS grain elevator in Ostrander, Minn., on June 4. (Leila Navidi/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

As commodity prices have continued to fall through the past year, CHS more than covered the gap with increased grain shipments.

Those lower corn, soy and wheat prices are attracting higher demand, the Inver Grove Heights-based cooperative reported as it grew quarterly ag profits 39% in the past year.

The acquisition of West Central Ag Services and a standout spring selling crop inputs and services also boosted CHS’ ag business.

”CHS was well-positioned to meet our owners’ planting needs with products, services and local expertise during the favorable spring weather, resulting in a strong third quarter for our agronomy and retail businesses," CHS Chief Executive Jay Debertin said in a statement Wednesday.

Overall, the picture was mixed, as a major energy sector loss contributed to a 21% profit decline in the spring quarter.

CHS, the nation’s largest agricultural cooperative, reported nearly $9.8 billion in revenue, slightly ahead of last year, and a $232 million profit for the quarter that ended in May.

Maintenance at the company’s Kansas oil refinery, as well as a supply glut and low prices, contributed to the $50 million energy loss, CHS reported.

Ag commodity prices remain near a five-year low after hitting record highs during the pandemic and amid supply-chain challenges of recent years. The outlook for the rest of this year, and into next year, is more of the same.

“We currently expect the trend of significantly reduced margins for energy and agricultural commodities to persist through at least the remainder of fiscal 2025,” CHS wrote in a federal filing this week, adding the company will be “leveraging our financial strength and resilience as we navigate less-favorable market conditions for energy and agricultural commodities.”

about the writer

about the writer

Brooks Johnson

Business Reporter

Brooks Johnson is a business reporter covering Minnesota’s food industry, agribusinesses and 3M.

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