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Raízen Blames Selic and Argentina for Debt Surge After Expansion Cycle

Raízen Blames Selic and Argentina for Debt Surge After Expansion Cycle

Published:
2026-03-12 14:15:02
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Brazilian energy giant Raízen has pointed to high Selic rates and economic turmoil in Argentina as key drivers behind its rising debt levels following a period of aggressive expansion. The company, a joint venture between Cosan and Shell, faces financial headwinds despite strong operational performance. This analysis dives into the macroeconomic factors, Raízen’s strategic moves, and expert perspectives on navigating the challenges.

Why Is Raízen’s Debt Rising Despite Expansion Success?

Raízen’s recent financial disclosures reveal a paradox: robust operational growth paired with escalating debt. The company attributes this to Brazil’s benchmark Selic rate, which has remained stubbornly high at 13.75% since early 2026, squeezing refinancing costs. Meanwhile, its Argentine operations—a critical market—have been hammered by the peso’s 40% devaluation against the dollar this year. "It’s like running on a treadmill that keeps speeding up," remarked a BTCC analyst, noting that 22% of Raízen’s revenue comes from Argentina.

How Did the Expansion Cycle Backfire?

Between 2023 and 2025, Raízen invested $4.2 billion in acquisitions and biofuel projects, including the landmark purchase of Biosev. While these moves doubled its ethanol capacity, the timing proved unfortunate. "They bet big on low-interest environments," says energy economist Carla Mendes. "Now, servicing $8.9 billion in net debt consumes 35% of EBITDA." The company’s leverage ratio (Net Debt/EBITDA) now sits at 3.2x—above the 2.5x industry comfort zone.

Argentina’s Economic Crisis: A Perfect Storm

Raízen’s 1,500 Argentine service stations face triple jeopardy:

  1. Currency controls limiting profit repatriation
  2. Local fuel price caps eroding margins
  3. Dollar-denominated supply contracts
The government’s recent wheat export ban—aimed at curbing domestic inflation—has also spiked feedstock costs for Raízen’s biofuel plants. TradingView data shows Argentine ethanol prices plunging 18% year-to-date.

Can Raízen Rebalance Its Financial Ship?

CEO Ricardo Mussa outlines a three-pronged approach:

  • Asset rotation: Divesting non-core logistics assets could raise $1.1 billion
  • Hedging: Increasing forex coverage from 40% to 70% of exposures
  • Debt reprofiling: Pushing maturities beyond 2028
Market reaction has been cautious—Raízen’s 2029 bonds still yield 9.3%, 380bps above Petrobras equivalents.

Expert Takeaways: Lessons for Energy Investors

"This underscores emerging markets’ double-edged sword," notes the BTCC research team. While Raízen’s integrated model (from sugarcane to service stations) provides resilience, overexposure to policy volatility remains risky. Investors should monitor:

MetricThresholdRaízen (2026)
USD Debt %63%
Argentine Revenue22%
Interest Coverage>4x2.8x
Source: Company filings, CoinMarketCap macro indices

FAQs: Raízen’s Debt Challenges

What’s driving Raízen’s debt increase?

Primarily high Selic rates increasing borrowing costs and Argentine peso devaluation impacting dollar-denominated obligations.

How exposed is Raízen to Argentina?

22% of revenue comes from Argentina, with $1.3 billion in assets stranded due to currency controls.

What’s Raízen’s plan to reduce leverage?

Asset sales, extended debt maturities, and operational efficiencies targeting 2.5x Net Debt/EBITDA by 2027.

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