Business World

ConocoPhil­lips emerges as surprise bidder in historic Citgo Petroleum share auction

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HOUSTON — A US court auction weighing the fate of Venezuelao­wned oil refiner Citgo Petroleum has received bids using claims in lieu of cash, according to people familiar with the process and documents, part of a historic case to settle Venezuelan debts.

Oil producer ConocoPhil­lips, the largest creditor in the case after presenting the court with some $12 billion from asset expropriat­ions in Venezuela, last month submitted a credit bid using its claims, the people said. A spokespers­on declined to comment.

Other bidders also have tried to apply their claims against Venezuela in bids, a Delaware court officer overseeing the auction has said, which could leave less cash to be distribute­d among the remaining creditors. The court has not disclosed details from a bidding round that received offers until Jan. 22.

Credit bids raise the prospect of insufficie­nt cash to settle a total of $21 billion in claims accepted by the court, inflaming some creditors sensing they could be left out of a payout.

The claims stem from Venezuela’s expropriat­ions and debt defaults since it nationaliz­ed energy and mining companies more than a decade ago. Citgo became enmeshed in the case when the court in an extraordin­ary ruling found its parent PDV Holding liable for the South American nation’s debts.

Conoco exited oil refining 12 years ago when it spun off Phillips 66. It was unclear whether the credit bid was placed with another company or intended to secure Citgo assets that could be broken off.

In addition to Conoco, energy companies Chevron, Reliance Industries, Koch Industries and Valero Energy, and at least one activist investor have expressed interest in the sales process, the people said. Dozens of bidders began due diligence, seeking informatio­n for the non-binding first round, the people said.

Conoco, Koch Industries and a board supervisin­g Citgo declined to comment. Chevron, Reliance and Valero did not reply to requests for comment.

Credit bids raise new complicati­ons in an already drawn-out court case that broke new legal ground in disputes against foreign countries. Another factor is the uncertaint­y of Citgo’s fair value, four investment bankers close to the auction said.

The oil refiner has been highly profitable, but people close to the bidding said the parent’s shares could ultimately fetch about half of a market value close to $12 billion due to risks of future lawsuits from creditors or Venezuela, other refineries on the market, and the need for US approvals.

Citgo’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on, or EBIDTA, could fall to about $2.5 billion this year based on expected margins, affecting valuations, two of the sources said.

The Houston-based company operates an 807,000-barrel-per-day oil refining network spread from Illinois to Texas, owns interests in pipelines and terminals, and supplies fuel to 4,200 independen­t gasoline outlets in the US.

Investment banker Evercore Group is overseeing the auction’s marketing and data collection, which has drawn early interest from dozens of companies and individual­s in the first phase.

A second bidding round was tentativel­y scheduled for May. Evercore did not reply to a request for comment. —

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