HOUSTON, June 11 (Reuters) - A U.S. federal court
accepted binding offers through Tuesday for shares in the parent
of Venezuela-owned refiner Citgo Petroleum, a crucial step in a
long-running case where 18 creditors are seeking up to $21.3
billion for past expropriations and debt defaults.
The share auction, organized in Delaware to pay creditors
including oil producer ConocoPhillips ( COP ) and several
industrial and mining companies, has attracted investors and
firms with substantial resources, boosting the chances of an
ownership change for the seventh-largest U.S. refiner.
At least one credit bid was submitted to the court. Gold
Reserve ( GDRZF ) said it presented an offer with FJ Management, a
Utah-based private holding company that manages a portfolio of
oil and travel-related assets, including an oil refinery.
A spokesperson for Canada-incorporated Gold Reserve ( GDRZF ) was
unavailable for immediate comment on the offer's details. The
company has a $1 billion claim against Venezuela it can use as
part of its bid.
Credit bids are accepted in some auctions to allow
creditors lining up for the proceeds to acquire the assets or
shares up for auction in exchange for the debt owed. In this
case, credit bids must be combined with cash offers, the court
has said.
Another miner that is a creditor in the case, Rusoro Mining ( RMLFF )
, presented a non-binding offer in January, and in April
retained Rothschild & Co as financial advisor and Kirkland &
Ellis as counsel in the case. The company has not said if it
decided to submit a binding bid in the second round.
Hedge fund Elliott Investment Management has been weighing a
bid, while a group of creditors represented by Centerview
Partners aimed to lure ConocoPhillips ( COP ) to join another offer for
Citgo parent PDV Holding, sources told Reuters in April.
ConocoPhillips ( COP ) declined to comment on whether it submitted a
bid.
Citgo is the largest asset targeted by creditors trying to
get compensation for late President Hugo Chavez'
nationalizations two decades ago and President Nicolas Maduro's
failed debt payments.
Maduro has rejected the auction and said Washington is
trying to steal Venezuela's foreign assets. But his government
has made little effort to honor the country's debts.
A court officer appointed for the case and investment bank
Evercore Group are in charge of receiving and analyzing the
bids. The deadline to complete the sales process, including
awarding the round's winners, is July 15.
Citgo Petroleum, controlled by supervising boards since it
severed ties in 2019 with its ultimate parent, Caracas-based
state oil company PDVSA, is the crown jewel of Venezuela's
foreign assets, processing up to 807,000 barrels of oil per day.
In the last two years, the company has generated $4.8
billion in combined net earnings.
Parties representing Venezuela in Delaware are hopeful that
offers in this second bidding round will be higher than
non-binding bids in the first round in January, which only
reached $7.3 billion, compared with Citgo's valuation of $11
billion to $13 billion.
Venezuela might press the court for a third bidding round if
offers do not approach $10 billion, two sources said on Monday.
As the bidding deadline approached, politicians and envoys
representing Venezuela began doubling down on efforts to halt
the auction. This month, they asked the White House and U.S.
Congress to pause the court process until a presidential
election is completed in Venezuela in July.
The boards supervising Citgo also continue trying to reach
payment agreements with some creditors, including Conoco and the
holders of PDVSA's 2020 bonds, which are collateralized with
another Citgo parent's equity.
Among the highest-ranked creditors that stand to collect
proceeds from the auction are shipbuilder Huntington Ingalls
Industries ( HII ), marine services firm Tidewater,
conglomerate Koch Industries and glass container manufacturer
O-I Glass ( OI ).