Formally known as Petroleos Mexicanos, the firm holds roughly
$106 billion in financial debt, the highest of any national oil
company in Latin America.
Pemex will receive $1.8 billion in pension liability
monetization as part of the new fiscal assistance plan for
company, officials said, but the Mexican government will not
take on new debt for Pemex.
Mexico's finance minister Carlos Urzua said if Pemex requires
more capital injection, the government will provide it. The
capital injection will allow debt refinancing over the course of
this year, he said.
Rating agency Fitch downgraded debt issued by Pemex by two steps
last month, leaving it just barely within its investment grade
category.
The move weakened Mexico's peso currency and stoked fears that
further downgrades by Fitch or other credit ratings agencies
could significantly raise the oil company's financing costs and
result in dire fiscal consequences for the government.
Mexico's peso currency was down 0.5 percent against the U.S.
dollar on Friday.
(Reporting by Ana Isabel Martinez, Writing by Daina Beth
Solomon; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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