Exclusive: U.S. investors seek to acquire
Russia's Rosneft lien in Citgo
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[February 27, 2018]
By Alexandra Ulmer
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group of U.S.
investors is seeking Washington's approval to acquire the nearly 50
percent collateral in U.S. refiner Citgo held by Russia's largest
state-owned energy firm Rosneft, one of the investors said.
The move would prevent Moscow from seizing a large part of the U.S.
refiner in the event of a full-blown default by its current owner,
Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA. Texas-based Citgo operates a 749,000
barrel per day refining network in the United States.
With Venezuela’s economy devastated by five years of recession,
President Nicolas Maduro's socialist government has increasingly turned
to ally Russia for the cash and credit it needs to survive – offering
prized state-owned oil assets in return.
Rosneft has snapped up some coveted oil fields in the OPEC nation,
giving it growing control over Venezuelan crude exports and a stronger
foothold in energy markets across the Americas.
Venezuela handed Rosneft ROSN.MM the 49.9 percent collateral in Citgo
PDVSAC.UL in return for a $1.5 billion loan two years ago. The remaining
50.1 percent of shares in Citgo is collateral to holders of PDVSA's 2020
bond.
A steady decline in oil output, Venezuela's main source of hard
currency, has contributed to making the country chronically late on its
bond payments in recent months.
The Russian state oil company has been under U.S. sanctions put in place
in 2014 to punish Moscow for aggression in Ukraine. Some U.S. senators
have warned those sanctions could be violated should Russia take a stake
in Citgo.
Amid the outcry, Rosneft and PDVSA PDVSA.UL were negotiating swapping
the collateral to avoid complications stemming from the sanctions. The
talks do not appear to have prospered.
Some Caracas-based oil sources said cash-strapped PDVSA was unable to
offer anything attractive enough to Rosneft in return.
In the meantime, the group of U.S. investors has applied for a license
from the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to
assume the lien, according to the U.S. investor and documents seen by
Reuters.
The investor asked to remain anonymous to avoid compromising a potential
deal.
The request to OFAC, submitted in early October, has received basic
technical approval but the group has yet to receive an answer from the
Trump administration.
"The administration should recognize that if it doesn't do something
pro-active here, it will face...limited options under almost any
scenario, whether it is an attempt to foreclose by the current
lienholder, further restrictions on Venezuelan crude oil imports into
the U.S., or even in the event there is a positive political change in
Caracas," the investor said.
Under the plan, no new debt would be issued. The investors would repay
the outstanding loan balance and require that Rosneft terminate its lien
and assign the loan to the new investors.
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A Citgo refinery is seen in Romeoville, near Chicago, Illinois,
U.S., March 3, 2005. REUTERS/John Gress/File Photo
"This is a private sector solution to a public policy problem," the
investor added.
In response to a query from Reuters, a Treasury spokesman said
"Treasury does not discuss OFAC licensing requests, including to
confirm whether or not one has been received, and does not comment
on national security reviews."
POTENTIAL PROFITS
The U.S. investors see Citgo as an attractive asset that could
easily become highly profitable. Trying to seize Citgo is "certainly
not the plan," the investor stressed.
It is unclear whether Rosneft, whose powerful boss Igor Sechin is a
close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, would be open to
such an offer. The company declined to comment.
Caracas-based PDVSA did not respond to a request for comment.
The Citgo deal has particularly worried Washington, with senators
Robert Menendez and Marco Rubio writing U.S. Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin to express their concern in September.
"Just as a matter of common sense, it would be better if those
assets were held by American investors than by Rosneft," said
Richard Morningstar, chairman of the Global Energy Center at the
Atlantic Council and a former energy official under ex-president
Barack Obama.
Despite long delays in Venezuela's debt payments, the holders of the
bonds - some of the world's highest yielding debt - have been
reluctant to press their claims in court, wary of a prolonged and
messy litigation. That could yet change, sparking a potential
stampede to seize assets.
Foreign companies seeking compensation for nationalizations under
Venezuela's late leader Hugo Chavez have also objected to PDVSA
using Citgo as collateral, alleging that Venezuela was seeking to
reduce its exposure to assets in the United States, where they could
potentially be seized.
(Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer; Additional reporting by Vladimir
Soldatkin in Moscow; Editing by Daniel Flynn and David Gregorio)
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