AgFlow
AgFlow is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at AgFlow.
AgFlow is a company.
Key people at AgFlow.
Key people at AgFlow.
AgFlow is a Geneva-based agribusiness market intelligence provider that digitalizes agricultural markets by delivering comprehensive data on price discovery, supply & demand, freight rates, and forward curves for grains, oilseeds, and vegoils.[1][2][4][6] It serves traders, analysts, risk managers, purchasing managers, brokers, and investors globally through a web-based platform and APIs, solving the problem of fragmented, hard-to-access market data by aggregating, cleaning, and standardizing information from over 115 exclusive sources across 192 countries.[1][2][4] This enables efficient decision-making, risk management, and forecasting, with features like real-time Incoterms prices (FOB, CIF, domestic), vessel line-ups from 150+ export ports, and historical datasets for AI-augmented analysis.[2][4] Since a 2019 management refresh, AgFlow has expanded offerings and gained trust from over 200 organizations, positioning it as the "Bloomberg of Agriculture."[6]
Founded in 2013 in Geneva, Switzerland—at the heart of the commodities industry—AgFlow initially focused on cash prices for agricultural commodities, sourcing from transparent private networks including over 100 brokers.[2][6] The idea emerged to address inefficiencies in data collection for agribusiness, evolving to include import-export flows, freight indications, and complete 12-month cash forward curves, culminating in the launch of its RiskMgmt API.[2] A pivotal moment came in September 2019 with a new management team that revitalized operations, broadened products, and accelerated growth, building on early traction like participation in Venture Leaders South Africa 2020 and strategic investments such as from SGS (a Fintech boost).[1][6] This evolution has made AgFlow a one-of-a-kind, trusted name in physical market data analysis.[2][3]
AgFlow rides the wave of agricultural digitalization, where fragmented physical markets meet rising demands for real-time data amid climate volatility, supply chain disruptions, and geopolitical tensions affecting grains, oilseeds, and vegoils.[1][2][4] Timing is ideal: post-2019 revitalization aligns with AI-driven analytics, fintech-commodities convergence (e.g., SGS investment), and partnerships expanding into risk tools for energy/ag shipping sectors.[1][3][6] Market forces like global food security needs, export port tracking for 150+ locations, and the push for mechanized farming (echoed in related AgFlow Farms efforts) favor its position.[2][5] It influences the ecosystem by setting data benchmarks, enabling better forecasting/risk management for traders/investors, and fostering innovations like API integrations that democratize privileged insights in a $trillion agribusiness.[4][6]
AgFlow's trajectory points to dominance as the go-to intelligence hub, with expansions into AI-enhanced datasets, deeper API ecosystems, and potential ventures like farm mechanization to vertically integrate data with on-ground impact.[2][4][5][6] Trends like precision ag, sustainable supply chains, and climate-resilient trading will propel it, especially as commodities face weather extremes and trade wars. Its influence could evolve from data provider to ecosystem orchestrator, powering global decisions in a digitalized ag world—much like its opening mission to become agriculture's Bloomberg, now within reach through grit and network scale.[1][6]