Gunvor Management Takes Full Control in Buy-Out and Names New CEO
Gunvor Group has entered a new era after its management team secured full ownership of the company through a long-planned buy-out, ending Torbjörn Törnqvist’s tenure as majority shareholder and installing Houston-based executive Gary Pedersen as the new chief executive.
The deal transitions one of the world’s major physical commodities trading houses into an entirely employee-owned enterprise, with no external shareholders. According to the company, the move is intended to create a “definitive reset” following years of reputational drag tied to legacy perceptions of its early history. Leadership first outlined the concept for the buy-out at a 2022 all-hands retreat, placing continuity and internal control at the center of its long-term strategy.
Pedersen—who joined Gunvor in 2024 as CEO Americas with a built-in succession plan—will split his time between Geneva and Houston as he assumes global leadership. A 30-year trading veteran with experience spanning Koch Industries, Flint Hills Resources, Koch Supply & Trading, and Millennium Management, he brings a deep background in refined products, NGLs, condensates, and logistics across Europe, Asia, and the U.S.
In announcing the transition, Pedersen emphasized that Gunvor remains financially strong and well-positioned to expand amid a generational leadership shift. The company will continue pursuing global growth and diversification across the energy supply chain, with a particular emphasis on U.S. opportunities alongside its existing European and Asian businesses.
The buy-out triggers sweeping governance changes. The Törnqvist family will exit the Board of Directors and Executive Committee, with a refreshed leadership structure expected to be detailed in the coming weeks. The company said the changes aim to streamline decision-making and reinforce alignment between ownership and management as Gunvor shifts deeper into an investment-led growth model.
The transition places Gunvor in a small but influential group of privately held global trading houses—such as Vitol and Mercuria—where employee ownership is seen as a strategic advantage in fast-moving commodity markets. The shift also comes as energy traders face rising scrutiny over transparency, financing practices, and governance structures, making internal consolidation a potentially stabilizing path.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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