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Billionaire Louis-Dreyfus Gets $457 Million From Trading Giant

Billionaire Louis-Dreyfus Gets $457 Million From Trading Giant

Just over a year ago, Margarita Louis-Dreyfus’s financial outlook looked grim. 

The Russian-born heiress was trying to sell a stake in Louis Dreyfus Co., one of the world’s biggest agricultural commodity trading houses, after she borrowed more than $1 billion from Credit Suisse Group AG to buy out family members. More than $400 million of debt was coming due by the end of 2020. 

Since then, Louis-Dreyfus, 59, has sold 45% of Louis Dreyfus Co. to an Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, and the firm has profited from volatile and higher agricultural commodity prices during the pandemic. 

Read more: Louis Dreyfus Profit Jumps on Higher Prices and Volatility

Her main holding company, Akira BV, received a $52 million dividend in May and another $405 million on the day of the deal’s completion in September, filings showed this month. Her net worth has increased to $3.3 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

Her latest payout may help ease her debt burden after she borrowed to buy out her in-laws and honor her late husband’s wish of preserving the closely held trading business for his heirs. While the price of the Abu Dhabi sale wasn’t disclosed, people familiar with the matter said when it was announced in 2020 that it was roughly based on the company’s book value.

A representative for Rotterdam-based Louis Dreyfus Co. declined to comment. 

Billionaire Louis-Dreyfus Gets $457 Million From Trading Giant

It’s been a dramatic period for Louis-Dreyfus, who now lives in Switzerland. She inherited a stake in the trading house after the 2009 death of her husband Robert, a great-grandson of the founder and the person who turned around the 171-year-old business in the early 2000s.

In 2011, she became chairman of the firm’s holding company and often paid high prices to increase her stake from about 50% at the time of Robert’s death to 96% by November 2020.

She increasingly used dividends in recent years to help repay the loans and pledged some of her shares in Louis Dreyfus Co. against the debt. Her stake sale to Abu Dhabi’s ADQ opened the family business to outside ownership for the first time.

Louis-Dreyfus told Swiss business magazine Bilanz in November 2020 that she planned to use some of the proceeds from that disposal to settle her debts with Credit Suisse.

In September, Akira opened a new credit line with the Swiss bank and drew down $240.7 million. Another family holding company, Ruethiers, owed $65 million to creditors at the end of 2020, with most of it due after more than one year, filings show.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.