纳斯达克


休斯顿 - 过去四年来,美国保护炼油商 Citgo Petroleum 免遭债权人索要数十亿美元的债权,以夺取委内瑞拉这颗外国皇冠上的明珠。但周一,一名美国法官将启动拍卖,预计这家总部位于休斯顿的公司将落入竞争对手或投资者手中。

委内瑞拉 Citgo 前往美国拍卖的挫折故事 - 石油和天然气 360

资料来源:路透社

这次拍卖可能会为这家拥有 113 年历史的公司开启新的篇章,该公司已被委内瑞拉拥有近 40 年。未知的是拜登政府上周决定放松对 委内瑞拉的能源制裁 是否能让该国偿还债权人并结束诉讼。

美国国务院一名高级官员上周在华盛顿的一份简报中表示,制裁的放松不应影响拍卖。美国单独 将 Citgo 对债权人的保护延长至一月份。

据最密切相关的人士透露,明年 Citgo 可能最终会落入美国一家或多家最大的炼油厂手中,这可能会让委内瑞拉一无所有。

此次拍卖可能成为有史以来规模最大的法庭拍卖。预计竞标者包括马拉松石油公司 (Marathon Petroleum)  MPC.N、沙特拥有的 Motiva Enterprises、Valero Energy  VLO.N 和科赫工业公司 (Koch Industries)。据知情人士透露,基础设施投资者也可能会竞标。

Motiva、Valero 和 Citgo 的最终母公司、委内瑞拉国家石油公司 PDVSA 没有回复置评请求。Marathon、Citgo 和美国财政部均拒绝置评。

金融公司 Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. 炼油研究董事总经理马修·布莱尔 (Matthew Blair) 表示,价格标签和反垄断问题将限制整个公司的竞标者数量。

“预计它必须被拆散,”他说。此外,“这些资产带有一些批发/零售汽油风险,这可能会让外国买家处境艰难,”布莱尔表示。

专家表示,委内瑞拉保留 Citgo 部分股份的机会非常渺茫。2014 年出售时,该公司的估值接近 120 亿美元,此后其盈利能力的大幅提高可能会吸引更高的出价。但该国的 外债 超过 900 亿美元。

“它将会丢失。” 现在的问题只是拍卖需要多长时间。委内瑞拉前总检察长何塞·伊格纳西奥·埃尔南德斯说:“我们甚至无法找到剩下的东西。”

坚定的法官

2019 年,特拉华州美国地方法院法官 Leonard Stark 认定 PDVSA 是委内瑞拉的另一个自我 ,这是一项罕见的法院裁决,为 Crystallex International 收购 Citgo 母公司之一 PDV Holding 的股份以弥补委内瑞拉损失打开了大门。檚没收其资产。

委内瑞拉曾认为自己不会受到债权人预付款的影响,因为美国法院通常将公司与其所有者分开对待。自 2019 年 Citgo 与 PDVSA 断绝关系以来,美国政府认可了委内瑞拉反对派领导的国民议会及其前主席胡安·瓜伊多任命的一系列监事会。

“设立特设委员会很有帮助,”Wilk Auslander 律师事务所的诉讼合伙人 Natalie Shkolnik 表示,她撰写了有关这一发现的文章。“这还不足以避免另一个自我的发现。”

委内瑞拉总统尼古拉斯·马杜罗 (Nicolas Maduro) 反对委员会的任命,最近表示 Citgo 已被美国“绑架”

54 岁的斯塔克聘请了一家投资银行并任命一名法院官员与保护 Citgo 的美国机构打交道,有条不紊地为周一的拍卖奠定了基础。

他在 2018 年的另一个自我裁决首次将 PDV Holding 与委内瑞拉的债务联系起来,委内瑞拉的律师继续在美国最高法院进行抗争。上诉仍在审理中。

斯塔克在 2022 年晋升到上诉法院后拒绝将案件移交给另一位法官。今年,他聘请了投资银行家 Evercore Group 来整理财务数据并推销该公司。

Evercore 正在征求潜在投标或初步投标,该投标可能会在本周披露。此类投标可能包括 拥有大量仲裁裁决的公司包括 康菲石油公司COP.N 和埃克森美孚 XOM.N。

康菲石油公司表示,它正在“寻求一切可用的法律途径”来领取三项奖项。埃克森美孚拒绝置评。

斯塔克很早就认识到此案的影响范围比 Citgo 更广泛。他派了一名法庭官员前往美国财政部外国资产控制办公室,该办公室长期以来一直阻止针对 Citgo 的索赔,并获得了拍卖的预先许可。

斯塔克没有回复提交给法庭的采访请求。投标人应向 Evercore 提交保密报价。

“这次拍卖不是一个公平或公正的过程。只有第一批到达的人才会通过销毁资产来获得报酬,”负责监督 Citgo 的董事会之一的奥拉西奥·梅迪纳 (Horacio Medina) 说。他告诉路透社,“游戏还没有结束”,并表示与债权人就缩小拍卖范围进行的谈判正在进行中。

Carlos Jorda 是 Citgo 备受尊敬的首席执行官,于 2019 年由委内瑞拉国会任命,他解决了多年来被其位于加拉加斯的母公司忽视的维护不善问题,削减了债务并改善了财务状况。

乔达通过发言人拒绝接受采访。

但如果 Citgo 及其董事会未能 在明年宣布中标者之前达成付款协议 ,那么收购 Citgo 以推行国际战略的委内瑞拉将空手而归。

Citgo 每天 807,000 桶的炼油网络专门用于加工委内瑞拉的重质原油,如今与 PDVSA 收购该公司时一样至关重要。

“itgo 将在未来 20-25 年对委内瑞拉具有战略意义,不仅作为一家炼油公司,而且还将发挥更大的作用,”董事梅迪纳表示。有一天,该公司可能会通过在委内瑞拉拥有生产资产的垂直一体化石油公司的方式与 PDVSA 竞争。

如今,这似乎希望渺茫。

前总检察长埃尔南德斯表示,“它的损失将对委内瑞拉人造成巨大的道德损失,并且不会给许多人带来好处,除了少数可能挤进拍卖的幸运债权人。”


原文链接/oilandgas360

Nasdaq


HOUSTON- For the past four years, the United States protected oil refiner Citgo Petroleum from creditors seeking to seize Venezuela’s foreign crown jewel for billions of dollars in claims. But on Monday, a U.S. judge will kick off an auction expected to place the Houston-based company in the hands of rivals or investors.

A tale of setbacks as Venezuela's Citgo heads to US auction- oil and gas 360

Source: Reuters

The auction could start a new chapter for the 113-year-old company, which has been owned by Venezuela for almost 40 years. An unknown is whether Biden administration’s decision last week to ease energy sanctions on Venezuela could allow the country to repay creditors and end the lawsuit.

A senior U.S. State Department official in Washington last week said in a briefing the sanctions easing should not affect the auction. The U.S. separately extended Citgo’s protection from creditors until January.

Citgo likely will end up next year in the hands of one or more of the largest refiners operating in the U.S., potentially leaving Venezuela with nothing, according to the people most closely involved.

The sale could become the biggest court auction ever held. Bidders are expected to include Marathon Petroleum MPC.N, Saudi-owned Motiva Enterprises, Valero Energy VLO.N and Koch Industries. Infrastructure investors might also place bids, according to people close to the matter.

Motiva, Valero and Citgo’s ultimate parent, Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA, did not reply to requests for comment. Marathon, Citgo and the U.S. Treasury Department declined to comment.

The price tag and anti-trust concerns will limit the pool of bidders for the entire company, said Matthew Blair, managing director for refining research at financial firm Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co.

“We expect it will have to be broken up,” he said. In addition, “the assets come with some wholesale/retail gasoline exposure, which could make it tough for foreign buyers,” Blair said.

Venezuela’s chance of retaining some stake in Citgo is very slim, according to experts. When offered for sale in 2014, the company was valued at nearly $12 billion, and its sharply improved profitability since then likely will draw higher bids. But the nation’s foreign debt surpasses $90 billion.

“Citgo will be lost. It is now just a matter of how long the auction will take. We won’t be able to even find the leftovers,” said Venezuela’s former attorney general Jose Ignacio Hernandez.

DETERMINED JUDGE

U.S. District Court Judge Leonard Stark in Delaware in 2019 found PDVSA was the alter ego of Venezuela, a rare court ruling that opened the door for Crystallex International to pursue shares in one of Citgo’s parents, PDV Holding, to recoup losses from Venezuela’s expropriation of its assets.

Venezuela had believed it was shielded from creditors’ advances because U.S. courts generally treat corporations as separate from their owners. Since Citgo severed ties with PDVSA in 2019, the U.S. government has recognized a series of supervisory boards appointed by Venezuela’s opposition-led National Assembly and its former head Juan Guaido.

“It was helpful to have the ad-hoc board,” said Natalie Shkolnik, a litigation partner at law firm Wilk Auslander who has written about the finding. “It just wasn’t enough to avoid the alter ego finding.”

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro fought the boards’ appointments, and recently said Citgo had been “kidnapped” by the U.S.

Stark, 54, methodically laid the groundwork for Monday’s auction by hiring an investment bank and naming a court official to deal with U.S. agencies that protect Citgo.

His 2018 alter ego ruling for the first time tied PDV Holding to Venezuela’s debts, a ruling Venezuela’s lawyers continue to fight before the U.S. Supreme Court. The appeal is pending.

Stark declined to hand off the case to another judge after being promoted in 2022 to an appeals court. He this year hired investment banker Evercore Group to put financial data together and market the company.

Evercore is soliciting a stalking horse bid, or an initial bid, that could be disclosed this week. Such a bid could include firms with large arbitration awards, including ConocoPhillipsCOP.N and Exxon Mobil XOM.N.

Conoco said it is “pursuing all available legal avenues” to collect its three awards. Exxon declined to comment.

Stark early on recognized the case had broader reach than Citgo. He sent a court officer to the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, which has long blocked claims against Citgo, and received pre-clearance for the auction.

Stark did not reply to a request submitted to the court to be interviewed. Bidders are expected to submit confidential offers to Evercore.

“This auction is not an equitable or fair process. Only the first ones to arrive would be paid through the destruction of an asset,” said Horacio Medina, who leads one of the boards overseeing Citgo. “The game is not over,” he told Reuters, saying talks with creditors to reduce the auction’s scope are ongoing.

Carlos Jorda, Citgo’s well-respected CEO who was appointed in 2019 by Venezuela’s congress, tackled years of poor maintenance that had been ignored by its Caracas-based parent, cut debt and improved finances.

Jorda declined through a spokesperson to be interviewed.

But if Citgo and its boards fail to reach payment agreements before the winner bidders are declared next year, Venezuela, which bought Citgo to pursue an international strategy, will wind up empty-handed.

Citgo’s 807,000 barrel per day refining network, which is geared toward processing Venezuela’s heavy crude, is as critical today as when PDVSA acquired the company.

“Citgo will be strategic for Venezuela in the next 20-25 years, not only as a refining company, but with an expanded role,” director Medina said. The company one day might compete with PDVSA by operating as a vertically integrated oil company with production assets in Venezuela.

Today, that appears a slim hope.

“Citgo’s loss will cause a big moral damage to Venezuelans and will not bring benefits to many, except to a handful of lucky creditors that might squeeze into the auction,” former attorney general Hernandez said.