By Jacob Bunge 

Archer Daniels Midland Co.'s first-quarter profit surged, topping analysts' expectations, thanks to a boom in the agricultural company's soybean-processing operations.

Plentiful supplies of the oilseed following last year's record U.S. harvest and prompt marketing of this year's crop by South American farmers kept ADM's processing plants humming and boosted the division's profit by about 46%, ADM said on Tuesday.

"We feel very strongly about the year oilseeds is going to have," said Juan Luciano, ADM's chief executive, on a post-earnings conference call.

Soybean processors already are running near full capacity around the world, and though demand for soybean-based products like vegetable oil and animal feed is on the rise, processors have not added many new plants, Mr. Luciano said.

ADM's buoyant outlook on soybeans comes as the commodities behemoth and its top rivals in crop trading and processing, including Cargill Inc. and Bunge Ltd., keep pace with potential shifts in demand for oilseeds, which are crushed to produce food, feed and fuel products.

Analysts have cited reports that China's pork industry has ramped up hog-slaughtering rates in recent months as a potential dent to that country's demand for soybean-based animal feed. U.S. pork processors are ramping up production in response to fast-expanding hog herds, as farmers move past a virus that killed millions of baby pigs over the past two years.

ADM is adding to its own long-term bets on protein production, Mr. Luciano said, announcing plans on Tuesday to build new feed plants in China and Minnesota.

Chicago-based ADM reported first-quarter earnings of $493 million, or 77 cents a share, up from $267 million, or 40 cents a share, a year earlier. Revenue fell to $17.51 billion from $20.67 billion.

Analysts had projected per-share earnings of 71 cents and revenue of $20.58 billion.

ADM shares were down 41 cents, or 0.8%, to $49.91 in midday trading.

ADM's oilseeds division generated $483 million in profit, up from $330 million a year earlier. The Brazilian real's decline versus the U.S. dollar helped encourage farmers in Brazil to sell crops, boosting the unit's performance, Mr. Luciano said.

Profits from agricultural services, including grain trading, climbed 37% to $194 million. Corn-processing earnings roughly halved to $127 million, partly due to weakness in ADM's ethanol business.

Though sliding crude-oil prices have slashed profit margins for makers of ethanol, which is blended into gasoline, Mr. Luciano said per-barrel profitability improved in April and U.S. transportation-fuel demand is growing as motorists take advantage of low gasoline prices.

ADM expects the U.S. to consume 13.8 billion to 14 billion gallons' worth of ethanol this year, with exports totaling about 800 million gallons, Mr. Luciano said, roughly steady with last year.

--Angela Chen contributed to this article.

Write to Jacob Bunge at jacob.bunge@wsj.com

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