Thursday, 31 October 2024
Home Topics Business ConocoPhillips seeks to keep priority as creditor in Citgo auction
BusinessNewsOil

ConocoPhillips seeks to keep priority as creditor in Citgo auction

28
FILE PHOTO: A sign of Citgo Petroleum is seen at its headquarters in Houston, Texas, U.S., January 11, 2024. REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo
A sign of Citgo Petroleum is seen at its headquarters in Houston, Texas, U.S., January 11, 2024. — REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo

HOUSTON — ConocoPhillips has filed a court motion to preserve the U.S. oil producer’s almost top priority among Citgo Petroleum creditors to cash proceeds from an auction of shares in the parent of the Venezuela-owned company.

Citgo is the only asset of PDV Holding, which a U.S. district court in Delaware has found to be liable for Venezuela’s foreign debts.

Conoco’s filing in the court follows lawsuits in Texas and New York by holders of Venezuelan bonds and notes trying to jump the line of creditors. Eighteen creditors aim to recover as much as $21.3 billion from the auction set to pay for expropriations and debt defaults by Venezuela.

The auction is expected to be completed in coming months.

“This action seeks to obtain writs of attachment against the shares of Citgo Holding in favor of every additional judgment creditor in the order of priority previously established by the court,” Conoco said in its motion filed this week.

A spokesperson for Conoco declined to comment.

Citgo in 2019 severed ties with its ultimate parent, Caracas-based state company PDVSA, but they have U.S. subsidiaries, including Citgo Holding and PDV Holding.

A conditional bid of up to $7.3 billion selected by a court officer last month would only cover a small fraction of the claims if approved by the judge.

Conoco has three separate arbitration claims approved by Delaware to be compensated from the auction’s proceeds. One of the claims, for $1.33 billion, is third in the priority order.

Conoco has in recent months also moved to seize payments to Venezuela from an offshore natural gas project being developed by PDVSA, Shell and the National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago.

Conoco was recently granted a license from the U.S. Treasury Department to seek the payments, Bloomberg reported earlier this month. Conoco and the Treasury Department have not confirmed the authorization.

“The risk that the … defendants might attempt to obtain writs of attachment against the Citgo Holding shares on the basis of an alter ego theory is real,” Conoco added in its motion.

“These parties have commenced actions seeking to establish that PDV Holding is the alter ego of PDVSA or the Republic in an effort to defeat this court’s (property distribution).”

(Reporting by Marianna Parraga; Editing by Richard Chang)

Related Articles

Azerbaijan's capital Baku is preparing to host the United Nations COP29 climate conference (AFP)
ClimateEnvironmentPoliticsUnited Nations

UN rapporteur urges climate activist’s release ahead of COP29

The UN rapporteur called on Azerbaijan to release activist Anar Mammadli, detained...

FILE PHOTO: Coterra Energy's logo is pictured on a smartphone in this illustration taken, December 4, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
BusinessNatural GasOil

Coterra Energy posts lower quarterly profit

U.S. oil and gas producer Coterra Energy posted a 22 per cent...

FILE PHOTO: Wind turbines spin near Palm Springs, California, U.S., March 10, 2021.  REUTERS/Mike Blake
AnalysisBusinessElectionsElectricityOffshore WindOpinionPoliticsRegulations

US offshore wind execs fret privately over possible Trump election win

Offshore wind industry braces for impact as election uncertainty looms, eyeing potential...

Login into your Account

Please login to like, dislike or bookmark this article.