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Failed ventures fuel grain company failure 

Todd Neeley, DTN environmental editor
Nov. 21, 2025 5 minutes read
Failed ventures fuel grain company failure 

A provision in the new tax law could end up causing farmers to deliver their grain and other commodities largely to cooperatives at the expense of private grain companies.

A series of failed business ventures and the Trump administration’s implementation of tariffs this past year are among the main reasons for the ultimate failure and filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection by Omaha-based Hansen-Mueller Co., according to a declaration filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court of Nebraska by the chief restructuring officer for the company. 

In addition, as Hansen-Mueller moves toward selling its assets, the company told the court it has identified more than 30 potential buyers. 

The company’s troubles began to surface late this summer into the fall when farmers across the country began to report not being paid by the company for grain.  

According to court documents, Hansen-Mueller reports owing creditors in 34 states with Kansas being hit the hardest with at least 128 creditors, followed by Nebraska with 87 and Texas with 72, Minnesota at 62, and Missouri, 52.  

Chief restructuring officer Michael Compton outlined for the court what brought on Hansen-Mueller’s difficulties. In a declaration filed with the court, Compton said the company has “struggled financially” during the past few years primarily because of a series of unsuccessful business ventures.  

That includes the “unsuccessful conversion” of a pasta plant in Fremont, NE, that Hansen-Mueller bought in 2017, operated in 2019-21 and then sold for a “$15 million loss” in 2022. In addition, Compton said the company lost about $11 million on the unsuccessful development and implementation of a proprietary trading software platform. 

Also, he said Hansen-Mueller was unable to integrate eight elevators it purchased in 2016-17, at a loss of about $10 million. Compton said the company also lost about $3.5 million in arbitrations.  

“Like many other companies with significant exports, the debtor also has experienced challenges with the president’s tariffs, causing debtor simply to run out of working capital and, therefore, time,” Compton said in the declaration. “Despite the challenges faced by the debtor, it has at all times—and continues to be—mindful of their commitments to stakeholders and their obligation to preserve and maximize value.” 

Before filing for Chapter 11, Compton said the company in September hired Ascendant Consulting Partners LLC, an investment banker, to market Hansen-Mueller’s assets to potential interested parties.  

Compton said the company was hopeful that it would be “afforded enough time” to complete a sale outside of bankruptcy.  

“The debtor’s tenuous financial position has deteriorated more rapidly than expected after the Nebraska Public Service Commission (PSC) temporarily suspended its grain trading license on Oct. 24, 2025,” Compton said, “forcing the debtor to field numerous inquiries from different state agencies in which it operates and provide an unprecedented amount of resources toward providing information to creditors and such state agencies, consuming a large portion of debtor’s executive team’s attention and distracting it from its core business and the sale process.” 

The Nebraska PSC suspended Hansen-Mueller’s grain dealer license at the end of October when 38 Nebraska farmers were not paid for about $2.1 million in grain deliveries to the company. The company reached an agreement with the state to pay those farmers. 

Cash collateral on hand 

The company has about $6 million in cash on hand and a credit facility of about $50.8 million, according to court documents. In addition, the company filed a series of motions with the court asking for permission to continue to pay operating expenses during bankruptcy proceedings and eventual sale of assets. 

Hansen-Mueller told the court it will need access to cash collateral to fund day-to-day operations. Those expenses include bi-weekly payroll of about $340,000, plus $90,000 of payroll including benefits for employees paid as part of a joint venture. In addition, Hansen-Mueller has monthly rent expenses of about $180,000. 

Hansen-Mueller operates nine elevators including five along Interstate 29, with grain storage capacity of about 30 million bushels, according to court records. 

The company operates four terminals in Duluth, MN; Houston, TX; Superior, WI; and Toledo, OH. Hansen-Mueller owns an oats processing plant in Toledo that produces pet food and animal feeds, and leases trading offices in Toledo, OH; Omaha, NE; Salina, KS; Kansas City, MO; Tallulah, LA; Grand Island, NE; and Alabaster, AL. 

As Hansen-Mueller moves toward the sale of assets, Compton said it has cut back the number of employees to a “bare minimum” of around 120.  

“Because HM recently has not been operating in a cash-flow positive manner, the terms of the proposed use of cash collateral essentially reduce, on a dollar-for-dollar basis, the value that will be available for distribution to stakeholders by the costs necessary to operate the debtor until a sale is consummated,” Compton told the court. “Accordingly, time is of the essence in this case. To that end, the debtor has commenced this Chapter 11 case to facilitate a timely and efficient process that will monetize the debtor’s assets and maximize the value available to stakeholders.” 

As part of the Chapter 11 filing, Hansen-Mueller released a list of the top 20 unsecured creditors who are owed a total of about $22.9 million. It is typical in Chapter 11 cases that unsecured creditors are not fully paid what they’re owed, as they are at the bottom of the pecking order of creditors paid. — Todd Neeley, DTN environmental editor 

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