Green Plains sues ADM, alleging ethanol market manipulation

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: July 15, 2020

,

(Dave Bedard photo)

Chicago | Reuters — Green Plains Inc., one of the biggest U.S. ethanol producers, sued Archer Daniels Midland on Tuesday, accusing the global grain trader of manipulating the price of the biofuel to profit from its positions in the derivatives market.

Green Plains filed the proposed class action with the U.S. District Court of Nebraska, where it also claimed that senior ADM officials knew of the alleged manipulation.

ADM told Reuters in an email statement that the company does not comment on pending litigation.

Read Also

Exterior of the Chicago Board of Trade building.

U.S. grains: Corn, soybeans rise on yield uncertainty, firming cash markets

U.S. corn futures extended gains into a fourth session on Friday and posted the first weekly rise in a month as slow farmer sales of newly harvested grain and reports of lower-than-expected harvest yields supported the market.

The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages. It follows reporting by Reuters that ADM’s ethanol selling had led traders to complain to S+P Global Platts, which provides benchmark pricing for the physical ethanol contract at different U.S. delivery points.

According to the complaint, ADM was aggressively selling ethanol on the cash market at the Argo terminal just outside of Chicago — and timing such selling 30 minutes ahead of the close of the trading day.

Green Plains also said ADM flooded the terminal with its barges, to choke off competitors’ supplies and influence the price of spot and futures ethanol markets.

ADM “knew that it would take hard-earned money out of the pockets of other ethanol producers by depressing prices at the Argo Terminal, hurting the producers and imposing downstream pain on corn farmers and co-operatives,” according to the complaint.

A similar lawsuit was filed last September by AOT Holding AG, a Swiss company with an energy trading subsidiary, in an Illinois federal court, seeking up to US$6.33 million in damages.

— P.J. Huffstutter reports on agriculture and agribusiness for Reuters from Chicago.

explore

Stories from our other publications