美国新闻


休斯顿/迈阿密(路透社) - 两名知情人士称,美国举行的将决定委内瑞拉炼油商 Citgo Petroleum 命运的股票拍卖中收到的最高出价为 73 亿美元,仅够支付法院批准的索赔的三分之一。此事说。

特拉华州的一家联邦法院正在拍卖委内瑞拉外国皇冠上的明珠、总部位于休斯敦的 Citgo 母公司的股票,法院认为 Citgo 对这个南美国家的债务违约和征用负有责任。债权人纷纷涌向特拉华州,要求索赔总计 213 亿美元,该案件由矿商 Crystallex 于近七年前首次提起。

然而,一月份第一轮招标的结果显示,销售过程不太可能为债权人或 Citgo 当前所有者提供令人满意的结果。分析师和消息人士警告说,迄今为止,在这起打破主权豁免新法律基础的案件中收到的要约将使许多索赔未获赔付。

知情人士称,法院可能不得不修改销售程序,或者考虑委内瑞拉起草的替代方案,该方案将为债权人提供更大的赔付,并将收益分摊到几年内,同时保留委内瑞拉在该公司的部分股权。

知情人士称,负责此案的法官伦纳德·斯塔克拒绝考虑委内瑞拉的付款提议。目前尚不清楚他是否会重新考虑在首轮竞标中提出的最高报价仅涵盖他已接受的 18 名债权人提出的 26 项债权中的 14 项。

最初的出价疲软,低于法院任命的专家对这些股票的 130 亿至 140 亿美元估值。这一缺口促使 Citgo 的母公司和董事会再次提出今年早些时候提出的一项要约:随着时间的推移,从 Citgo 的利润、股权和借款中支付 100 亿美元。

加时赛

这次拍卖引起了石油巨头康菲石油公司和科赫工业集团旗下子公司的兴趣,两家公司都通过对资产的信贷竞标向委内瑞拉提出索赔。

知情人士称,其他报价来自能源公司和私人投资者,他们希望收购 PDV Holding 的股份,以控制这家美国第七大炼油厂(按产量计算)。

康菲石油公司、Citgo 和监管该炼油厂的董事会的发言人拒绝发表评论。科赫工业公司和负责监督拍卖的法院官员的律师没有回复置评请求。

PDV Holding 唯一的资产是 Citgo,该公司拥有三座美国炼油厂、石油储存码头和管道,并控制着零售分销网络。

Citgo 利润丰厚,过去两年赚取了 48 亿美元的利润。

然而,1 月份收到的 12 份不具约束力的报价,反映出人们对碳足迹高的炼油厂未来价值的担忧,以及 Citgo 与委内瑞拉国家石油公司 PDVSA 之间的紧张关系,该公司仍受社会主义总统尼古拉斯·马杜罗 (Nicolas Maduro) 的控制。人们说。

Citgo 的代表律师称第一轮竞标“令人失望”。

知情人士补充说,预计法院很快将启动第二轮具有约束力的诉讼,但出价高于不具约束力的 73 亿美元的可能性很小。

一位了解拍卖过程的人士表示,参与此案的法院官员“需要与委内瑞拉坐下来商讨一些有意义的事情”。

委内瑞拉提出的 100 亿美元提案将在三年内向债权人提供 Citgo 的现金、证券和股票组合。最终,委内瑞拉将保留大约一半的所有权。

“到目前为止,我们只进行了损害控制。一位了解委内瑞拉提案的人士表示,我们希望推动事情向前推进,比赛还没有结束。

政治导弹

由于马杜罗政府拒绝撤销反对派候选人玛丽亚·科里纳·马查多竞选总统的禁令,从而关闭了西方国家眼中的民主之路,监管 Citgo 的委内瑞拉实体希望将付款计划与美国对炼油商提供更强有力的保护,使其免受债权人的侵害联系起来。在委内瑞拉。

这个想法包括将与委内瑞拉有关的索赔从法庭案件中撤出,并提交给美国外国索赔解决委员会(FCSC),这是司法部内的一个准司法独立机构,以便更好地解决委内瑞拉所有债权人的问题。

计划倡导者预计将在 4 月 18 日美国放宽对委内瑞拉能源部门制裁的许可证到期之前与美国官员讨论该提案,其中可能包括国务卿安东尼·布林肯。

然而,消息人士承认,将委内瑞拉激烈的反对派统一到一项提案上是很麻烦的,而且说服华盛顿可能更具挑战性。一些政界人士和 Citgo 监事会成员认为,马查多的同意将使该公司更有机会赢得美国的支持。

周三晚间,马查多在卡拉沃沃州中部举行集会后对记者表示,“未来它的价值将会更高。” “因此,对所有债务和账户进行有组织的重组过程将比当前的拍卖给债权人带来更多好处。”

该计划还要求去年为拍卖开绿灯的美国财政部同意这一提议,特拉华州法院可能被迫停止或冻结其极力推进的销售流程。

代表反对党与马杜罗政府谈判的杰拉尔多·布莱德的发言人没有发表评论。美国国务院和财政部没有立即发表评论。

“这次需要采取防弹措施,”该想法背后的一位人士表示,他指的是让与华盛顿有密切联系的反对派高层政治人物来领导这一倡议。

 

(玛丽安娜·帕拉加报道,维维安·塞克拉补充报道;加里·麦克威廉姆斯和玛格丽塔·蔡编辑)

主要图片(来源:路透社)


原文链接/oilandgas360

US News


HOUSTON/MIAMI (Reuters) -The highest bid received in a U.S. auction of shares that will decide the fate of Venezuela-owned oil refiner Citgo Petroleum was $7.3 billion, enough to cover only a third of court-approved claims, two people familiar with the matter said.

A federal court in Delaware is auctioning the shares of a parent of Venezuela’s foreign crown jewel, Houston-based Citgo, that it found liable for the South American country’s debt defaults and expropriations. Creditors have flocked to Delaware to press claims totaling $21.3 billion in a case first brought nearly seven years ago by miner Crystallex.

Results from the first bidding round in January, however, show a sales process that is unlikely to provide a satisfactory outcome for creditors or Citgo’s current owners. Offers received thus far in a case that broke new legal ground in sovereign immunity would leave many claims unpaid, analysts and sources warned.

The court may have to revamp the sales process, or consider an alternative being drafted by Venezuela, which would offer creditors a larger payout with proceeds spread over several years, while retaining some of Venezuela’s stake in the company, the people said.

Judge Leonard Stark, who is overseeing the case, has declined to consider Venezuela’s payment proposals, the people said. It is unclear if he would reconsider with the highest offer in the initial bidding round covering only 14 of the 26 claims that he has accepted from 18 creditors.

The weak initial bids were below the $13 billion to $14 billion value specialists appointed by the court had estimated for the shares. That shortfall is prompting Citgo’s parent companies and boards to reprise an offer presented earlier this year: a $10 billion payment funded over time from Citgo profits, equity and borrowings.

EXTRA INNINGS

The auction has drawn interest from oil giant ConocoPhillips and units of conglomerate Koch Industries, both putting their claims against Venezuela via credit bids for the assets.

Other offers came from energy companies and private investors wanting to acquire the PDV Holding shares to gain control of the seventh-largest U.S. oil refiner by volume, the people said.

Spokespeople for Conoco, Citgo and boards supervising the refiner declined to comment. Koch Industries and attorneys for the court official overseeing the auction did not reply to requests for comment.

PDV Holding’s only asset is Citgo, which owns three U.S. refineries, oil storage terminals and pipelines, and controls a retail distribution network.

Citgo has been highly profitable, earning $4.8 billion in profits in the last two years.

The 12 non-binding offers received in January, however, reflect concerns over the future value of refiners with intense carbon footprints and Citgo’s troubled ties with Venezuela’s state oil firm PDVSA, which remains under socialist President Nicolas Maduro’s grip, the people said.

A lawyer representing Citgo had called the first bidding round “disappointing.”

The court is expected soon to set a second, binding round, but prospects of an offer higher than the non-binding $7.3 billion are slim, the people added.

Court officials involved in the case “will need to sit down with Venezuela and get together something that will make sense,” said a person close to the auction process.

Venezuela’s $10 billion proposal would provide creditors with a combination of cash, securities and shares in Citgo over a three-year period. It would ultimately allow Venezuela to retain about half ownership.

“We have only been doing damage control so far. We want to move the ball forward, the game has not finished,” one of the people familiar with Venezuela’s proposal said.

POLITICAL MISSILES

Venezuelan entities overseeing Citgo want to tie the payment plan to stronger U.S. protection for the refiner from creditors as Maduro’s government refuses to reverse a ban on opposition candidate Maria Corina Machado from running for president, closing what Western countries saw as a path towards democracy in Venezuela.

The idea includes pulling the Venezuela-related claims out of the court case and into the U.S. Foreign Claims Settlement Commission (FCSC), a quasi-judicial independent agency within the Justice Department, for better addressing all of Venezuela’s creditors.

Plan advocates are expected to discuss the proposal with U.S. officials, possibly including Secretary of State Antony Blinken ahead of the April 18 expiry of a U.S. license that relaxed sanctions on Venezuela’s energy sector.

Unifying Venezuela’s fractious opposition around a proposal, however, has been cumbersome and convincing Washington could be even more challenging, the sources acknowledged. Some politicians and members of Citgo’s supervising boards believe that having Machado in agreement would give the company a better chance of winning U.S. support.

“Citgo will be even more valuable in the future,” Machado told reporters late Wednesday after a rally in central Carabobo state. “Hence, an organized restructuring process of all debts and accounts will benefit creditors more than the current auction.”

The plan also would require the U.S. Treasury Department, which last year green-lit the auction, to agree to the offer, and the Delaware court could be forced to halt or freeze a sales process it fought hard to advance.

Spokespeople for Gerardo Blyde, who represents opposition parties negotiating with the Maduro administration, did not provide comment. The U.S. State and Treasury departments did not immediately provide comment.

“We need a bullet-proof effort this time,” one of the people behind the ideas said referring to getting top opposition politicians well connected to Washington to lead the initiative.

 

(Reporting by Marianna Parraga, additional reporting by Vivian Sequera; editing by Gary McWilliams and Marguerita Choy)

Lead image (Credit: Reuters)