AgroGalaxy deepens restructuring with store closures and seed unit shutdown

AgroGalaxy is intensifying its restructuring by closing additional retail outlets across Brazil and suspending operations at its seed subsidiary, Sementes Campeã, underscoring the depth of the crisis facing one of the country’s largest agricultural input distributors.
In a brief statement, the company cited “challenging market prospects for 2026” as justification for suspending the seed business and further “rightsizing” its operations. The goal, AgroGalaxy said, is to generate sufficient revenue to honor commitments to customers, suppliers, partners, creditors and remaining employees.
While the company did not disclose the number of stores affected, industry sources said units in Minas Gerais were among the hardest hit, alongside additional closures in southern Brazil and the Cerrado region. The latest round of cuts comes despite AgroGalaxy having already shuttered more than 75 locations and suffering a roughly 70% contraction in revenue following its judicial reorganization.
Less than three months ago, the Aqua Capital–controlled group announced a branding overhaul, reviving the Agro100, Rural Brasil and AgroCat banners to rebuild ties with farmers. At the time, chief executive Eron Martins said the network had reached an “ideal number” of 65 stores. This week’s closures go beyond that target.
Job losses are expected to exceed 100, according to industry estimates. Sementes Campeã alone employed at least 80 people.
The shutdown of Sementes Campeã is the most emblematic move in the latest restructuring phase. Beyond highlighting the strain on Brazilian seed producers—grappling with excess inventories and tighter credit—the decision illustrates how quickly valuable assets can erode in a downturn.
Two years ago, AgroGalaxy mandated Santander to seek a buyer for the seed unit, a sale that could have provided fresh capital to stabilize the retail network. Vinci Compass’ private equity arm expressed interest, but Aqua Capital declined the approach. One executive estimated the unit’s value at about R$250 million at the time.
The seed sector’s difficulties reflect broader pressures across Brazilian agribusiness. Strong 2022–23 demand forecasts prompted aggressive production and stocking. When commodity prices softened and farm profitability weakened, demand failed to materialize, leaving companies with historically high carryover inventories entering 2024. As credit conditions tightened, financing those stocks became increasingly difficult.
AgroGalaxy’s retrenchment also highlights consolidation pressures in Brazil’s fragmented agricultural input distribution market, where thin margins, long payment cycles and heavy working capital needs leave operators highly exposed to shifts in farm income and credit availability.
The suspension of Sementes Campeã, approved at a board meeting on January 13th, took effect January 14th and formed part of its court-supervised judicial reorganization. Alongside operational cuts, governance changes are under way. Directors Mônica da Cruz Lamas, Tomas Agustin Romero and Eron Martins resigned from the board and its committees. An extraordinary shareholders’ meeting in February will vote on reducing the board to three members and electing a new director.
For now, AgroGalaxy says it is prioritizing units with stronger efficiency and lower capital requirements. The scale of the retrenchment, however, suggests that stabilizing the business in Brazil’s difficult farm economy remains an uncertain task.

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