纳斯达克


休斯顿,1 月 8 日(路透社)——美国法官周一授予一大批与委内瑞拉有关的债权人参加 1 月份休斯顿炼油商 Citgo Petroleum 母公司股票拍卖的权利。

加拿大矿业公司 Crystallex Corp 提起的一项开创先例的诉讼,正式将委内瑞拉旗下的 Citgo 与这个南美国家的债务联系起来,并为通过拍卖 Citgo 母公司的股份而向这家炼油公司提出约 240 亿美元的索赔打开了大门。唯一的资产是炼油厂。

该决定仍然要求该由 10 家公司组成的集团遵守 1 月 12 日的日期,针对 Citgo 母公司 PDV Holding 的股票发出扣押令。特拉华州法院表示,没有给予额外的时间,也没有计划修改周一发布的新拍卖时间表。美国财政部还保留对任何中标投标做出裁决的权利。

OI Glass  OI.N、Huntington Ingalls  HII.N、ACL1 Investments、Rusoro Mining  RML.V、Koch Industries 和 Gold Reserve  GRZ.V 可以将索赔视为附加判决。美国法官伦纳德·斯塔克(Leonard Stark)裁定,包括西门子能源ENR1n.DE在内的另一组四名债权人也  提出了类似动议,要求指定额外债权人,该动议也获得批准。

如果这起长期案件中最大的两个债权人——矿业公司 Crystallex 和石油公司康菲石油公司 COP.N—— 与委内瑞拉达成和解,这可能会结束这场旷日持久的案件,两家公司曾寻求“全力参与”。诉讼。

几个月来,与因资产征用和违约委内瑞拉债券到期的数十亿美元持有者进行的谈判 断断续续, 寻求解决他们的索赔问题。

其他债权人辩称,他们需要拥有平等的地位,以在交易发生时保护自己的利益,并组织自己的信贷投标,在任何销售中使用他们对购买价格的债权。

最后一刻的结算

委内瑞拉、Crystallex 和 Conoco 之间的和解谈判似乎引发了一系列公司向法庭提交的文件,这些公司希望提高从涉及 Citgo 的资产出售中获得收益的机会。

Citgo 和康菲石油公司拒绝就和解谈判发表评论。Crystallex 的代表和 Citgo 的监督委员会没有回复请求。

“我们仍然致力于寻求一切可用的法律途径来保护我们的权利并获得全面和公平的恢复,”康菲公司发言人在回答有关谈判的问题时表示。

美国最高法院周一单独驳回了委内瑞拉限制参与拍卖的公司数量的举措。

周一的两项决定为任何其他债权人打开了从拍卖收益中分一杯羹的窗口,特别是如果最大的债权人与委内瑞拉达成和解,为其他债权人留下了空间。

“如果销售过程中的任何一方提议解决与委内瑞拉任何一方的分歧,六名债权人、另外四名债权人和任何其他相关实体将有机会就法院是否应批准进行听证“这样的和解,以及如果确实如此,潜在的解决方案或和解可能如何影响销售过程,”斯塔克在他的命令中写道。

随着法院股票拍卖的临近,对和解的预期不断攀升。任何最终谈判都必须由法庭审理。

上周,负责此案的法院官员罗伯特·平卡斯 (Robert Pincus) 表示,在 1 月 12 日接受索赔的最后期限之前,不应加快索赔或给予额外优先权。

平卡斯写道,这样做“可能会扰乱经过仔细考虑并在几个月前经法院命令批准的程序”。急于获得批准将使索赔在十天后到期的股票的第一轮投标中得到考虑。

寻求 17.8 亿美元索赔的对冲基金 Pharo Management 写道,公司可以利用其较高的地位组织对 Citgo 母公司股票的信贷竞标,并“向市场提出商业方满意的建议”。

斯塔克法官优先考虑了 Crystallex 的 9.7 亿美元和康菲石油公司近 100 亿美元的索赔。如果他们得到全额报酬,那么留给其他人的可能就所剩无几了。Citgo 过去的估值在 110 亿至 130 亿美元之间。

寻求约 19 亿美元资金的债券持有人正在特拉华州法院以外的另一起案件中起诉委内瑞拉,并抗议他们可能会被排除在收益之外。


原文链接/oilandgas360

Nasdaq


HOUSTON, Jan 8 (Reuters) – A U.S. judge on Monday granted a large group of Venezuela-linked creditors rights to participate in a January auction of shares in the parent of Houston-based refiner Citgo Petroleum.

A precedent-setting lawsuit by Canadian miner Crystallex Corp formally tied Venezuela-owned Citgo to the South American country’s debts and opened the door to some $24 billion in claims being applied to the refining firm through an auction of shares in a Citgo parent whose only asset is the oil refiner.

The decision still requires the group, formed by 10 companies, to comply with a Jan 12 dateline to have writs of attachments issued against shares in Citgo’s parent, PDV Holding. No extra time was granted, and a new auction schedule issued on Monday is not planned to be modified, the court in Delaware said. The U.S. Treasury also has reserved the right to rule on any winning bid.

O-I Glass OI.N, Huntington Ingalls HII.N, ACL1 Investments, Rusoro Mining RML.V, Koch Industries and Gold Reserve GRZ.V can have claims considered as additional judgments. Another group of four creditors including Siemens Energy ENR1n.DE that had filed a similar motion to be designated additional creditors were also green-lit, U.S. Judge Leonard Stark ruled.

The companies had sought to participate “with full force and effect” in the event two of the largest creditors in the long-running case – miner Crystallex and oil firm ConocoPhillips COP.N – reach settlements with Venezuela that could end the lawsuit.

Talks have been on and off for months with holders of billions of dollars due for asset expropriations and defaulted Venezuelan bonds seeking to settle their claims.

The additional creditors had argued they needed to have equal status to protect their interests in event of a deal and to organize their own credit bids, using their claims against the purchase price in any sale.

LAST-MINUTE SETTLEMENTS

Settlement talks between Venezuela, Crystallex and Conoco appear to have sparked a flurry of court filings by companies hoping to improve their chances of receiving proceeds from asset sales involving Citgo.

Citgo and Conoco declined to comment on settlement talks. A representative for Crystallex and a board supervising Citgo did not reply to requests.

“We remain committed to pursuing all available legal avenues to protect our rights and obtain a full and fair recovery,” a Conoco spokesperson said in response to questions about the talks.

The U.S. Supreme Court separately on Monday rejected Venezuela’s move to limit the number of companies that could participate in the auction.

Both Monday decisions open a window for any additional creditors to get a slice of the auction’s proceeds, especially if the largest creditors settle with Venezuela, leaving room for others.

“In the event that any of the sale process parties proposes to settle its differences with any of the Venezuela parties, the six creditors, the four more creditors and any other interested entity will have an opportunity to be heard on whether the court should approve such a settlement and, if it does, on how the potential resolution or settlement might affect the sale process,” Stark wrote in his order.

Expectations of a settlement have climbed as the court-auction of shares draws near. Any final negotiation must be heard by the court.

Last week, the court official designated for the case, Robert Pincus, said claims should not be expedited or given additional priority ahead of a deadline for claims to be accepted, set for Jan. 12.

To do so “would disrupt a process carefully considered … and months-ago approved by order of the court,” Pincus wrote. The rush to win approvals would allow claims to be considered in first-round bids for the shares due ten days later.

Companies could use their higher status to organize credit bids for the Citgo parent’s shares and “approach the market with proposals that commercial parties are comfortable with,” wrote hedge fund Pharo Management, which seeks $1.78 billion in claims.

Judge Stark has given priority to Crystallex’s $970 million and Conoco’s nearly $10 billion in claims. If they are fully paid, it could leave little for others. Citgo has been valued at between $11 billion and $13 billion in the past.

Bondholders seeking about $1.9 billion are pursuing Venezuela in a case separate from the Delaware court and have protested they could be shut out of proceeds.