Climate Swings Drive 74% Q4 2025 Profit Drop At Brasilagro
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) BrasilAgro announced on September 3, 2025 that its net income fell 74 percent to R$ 61.3 million ($11 million) in the fourth quarter of the 2024/2025 harvest. Harsh drought in some regions and heavy rains in others reduced yields.
The company also planted fewer acres, and field management under erratic conditions proved difficult. Adjusted EBITDA dropped 73 percent to R$ 72 million ($13 million), and quarterly revenue fell 34 percent to R$ 362.8 million ($66 million).
For the full harvest year, net income declined 39 percent to R$ 138 million ($25 million) even as total revenue rose 12 percent. Higher land-sale proceeds bolstered the top line but could not offset falling grain and cotton volumes.
BrasilAgro buys and sells rural land and grows grains and fibers. Shares of AGRO3 fell on the São Paulo exchange after the results. Analysts noted that land sales alone cannot steady earnings when crop output falters.
The figures expose how sensitive large-scale farming remains to climate swings and planting decisions. BrasilAgro projects a 21 percent increase in grain and cotton production to 443,000 tonnes in 2025/2026.
The company expects more stable weather, tighter operations, and technology investments to restore margins. The real story shows that agribusiness success now depends on balancing land transactions with resilient farming practices.
As global demand for grains and fibers stays strong, firms that manage weather risks and maintain steady output will lead the field.
The company also planted fewer acres, and field management under erratic conditions proved difficult. Adjusted EBITDA dropped 73 percent to R$ 72 million ($13 million), and quarterly revenue fell 34 percent to R$ 362.8 million ($66 million).
For the full harvest year, net income declined 39 percent to R$ 138 million ($25 million) even as total revenue rose 12 percent. Higher land-sale proceeds bolstered the top line but could not offset falling grain and cotton volumes.
BrasilAgro buys and sells rural land and grows grains and fibers. Shares of AGRO3 fell on the São Paulo exchange after the results. Analysts noted that land sales alone cannot steady earnings when crop output falters.
The figures expose how sensitive large-scale farming remains to climate swings and planting decisions. BrasilAgro projects a 21 percent increase in grain and cotton production to 443,000 tonnes in 2025/2026.
The company expects more stable weather, tighter operations, and technology investments to restore margins. The real story shows that agribusiness success now depends on balancing land transactions with resilient farming practices.
As global demand for grains and fibers stays strong, firms that manage weather risks and maintain steady output will lead the field.

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