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Is Venezuela about to lose Citgo, its most prized foreign asset?

Marianna Parraga

4 min read

By Marianna Parraga

HOUSTON (Reuters) -A U.S. court-organized auction of shares in the parent company of Venezuela-owned Citgo Petroleum has entered its final stages, with bidders submitting improved offers for the U.S. refiner and creditors hoping to recover a portion of the proceeds.

The auction stems from an eight-year-old case that Canadian miner Crystallex initiated in Delaware against Venezuela. The court found Citgo's parent, PDV Holding, liable for Venezuela's debts and expropriations, paving the way for over a dozen other creditors to pursue compensation of nearly $19 billion.

Despite delays, the auction has progressed, especially since last year, through two bidding rounds. A $3.7 billion offer by Contrarian Funds' affiliate, Red Tree Investment, was selected in March as a starting bid and is now being challenged by rivals.

Besides Red Tree, companies competing with improved bids include trading house Vitol, and a consortium including an affiliate of Gold Reserve, Rusoro Mining, and Koch.

Elliott Investment Management's affiliate Amber Energy is also considering whether to submit a bid, following a separate court decision favoring a possible offer, according to a source familiar with the matter.

A court officer overseeing the auction, who last month said new bidders could emerge right before a June 18 deadline to submit offers, must recommend the auction's winner by July 2. The judge and parties in the case are expected to attend a final hearing on August 18.

How big a loss could this be for Venezuela?

If Venezuela, which owns 100% of the refiner and its U.S.-based parent companies, fails to retain some equity, it would lose its most significant overseas asset. The country, with foreign debt reaching $150 billion, has already lost other assets in Europe and Asia to creditors.

Delaware Judge Leonard Stark has left open a possibility for parties representing Venezuela to submit an offer. But boards supervising the seventh-largest U.S. refiner would need to secure backing from politicians in both Caracas and Washington, a challenge given U.S. sanctions on the OPEC nation and otherwise strained ties.

Prior to the sanctions, Citgo's 807,000-barrel-per-day refining network was a primary processor of Venezuela's heavy sour crudes. Since Citgo cut ties with its ultimate parent, Caracas-based PDVSA, in 2019, Venezuela has struggled to find new markets for its oil, while the Houston-based refiner has sourced crude from other suppliers.

Venezuela's opposition has worked for years to retain Citgo, including funding legal defenses and lobbying in Washington. The U.S. Treasury Department, which has shielded Citgo from creditors in recent years, must approve the auction's eventual winner.