Opposition asks Trump to shield Citgo: Update

  • Market: Crude oil, Oil products
  • 31/07/19

Venezuela's shadow government is appealing to the White House to issue an executive order aimed at protecting US refiner Citgo from falling into the hands of a leading creditor.

The petition is a last-ditch effort by the putative interim government of Juan Guaido to keep defunct Canadian mining company Crystallex, owned by US hedge fund Tenor Capital Management, from acting on a 29 July US appeals court decision. That ruling ratified the plaintiff's argument that Citgo is an alter ego of the Venezuelan government, opening the door for an auction to fully satisfy its $1.4bn claim.

"Citgo is not lost," said Alejandro Grisanti, a member of the Guaido-appointed "ad hoc" administrative board in exile of Venezuela's national oil company PdV, the parent firm of Citgo. "Monday's announcement is a clear setback, but there are still many legal, political and licensing, etc. resources that can be applied."

"An executive order from President Trump has been requested to protect the country's assets on American soil. ‘For now' this has not been granted because it is understood that the sanctions protect the Venezuelan assets", he said.

The exception are PdV 2020 bondholders who already have a US government license, he said.

In a lengthy statement this afternoon the Guaido-led government said it is pursuing legal appeals, while asserting that Crystallex cannot immediately take action on the US court ruling because the assets are protected by US sanctions.

The outlook for overturning the ruling or taking it to the Supreme Court looks dim. "There is no chance in the world the case will be taken up in court again," a financial sector executive who has followed the case closely told Argus. "The opposition's arguments were bad and they have no Plan B."

There was no immediate US government comment on the possibility of issuing an executive order. A senior US administration official told Argus that the White House would rather stay out of the fray, but it still needs time to decide.

"As with the Chevron decision, there are sharp differences of opinion between those who want to focus on regime change versus those who are concerned with the economic interests of US corporations," the official said.

Citgo is a major corporation and the US arguably does have interests in preserving it, the official said, adding that among the time-buying options is for Citgo to file for bankruptcy.

According to a November 2018 academic paper issued by Lee Buchheit and Mitu Gulati referencing the Iraqi debt crisis and parallels with Venezuela, "the Executive Branch of the U.S. Government has the legal power to facilitate a foreign sovereign debt restructuring in cases where an orderly resolution of the sovereign's debt difficulties is in the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States."

Buchheit was named as the opposition's debt adviser in May 2019.

Crystallex is among a handful of companies that won international arbitration cases stemming from Venezuelan government asset seizures, but have not been able to fully collect the designated compensation from Caracas. Around $800mn is left to pay on the Crystallex claim after Venezuela made partial payments amounting to around $400mn.

In Caracas this afternoon, powerful vice president Delcy Rodriguez described the Guaido-led group as a "an organized crime operation to steal Venezuela's resources," and singled out high-level exiles including former planning minister, Harvard professor and Guaido-appointed representative to the Inter-American Bank Ricardo Hausmann, as well as opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez and Guaido's US envoy in Washington Carlos Vecchio. She charged the US government of facilitating "a great material and procedural fraud" that seeks to "illegitimately gain possession of Citgo."

A lucrative target

Citgo, the fifth-largest US refiner with 750,000 b/d of capacity, is Venezuela's most valuable overseas asset and a legacy of the Opec country's 1980s overseas drive to ensure commercial outlets for its heavy oil. The company has been the target of Venezuela's myriad creditors for years.

The government of President Nicolas Maduro, whom the US and some 50 other western countries no longer recognize as head of state, regularly tapped Citgo for dividends. In 2016, PdV issued a bond swap secured by 50.1pc of the shares in Citgo's Delaware-based parent company. The holders of the resulting PdV 2020 bonds are lobbying to stop Crystallex from auctioning Citgo and to keep the refiner in Venezuelan state hands in anticipation of a comprehensive debt restructuring involving all creditors.

The other 49.9pc of Citgo's shares are collateral on oil-backed credit issued to Venezuela by Russia's state-controlled Rosneft.

Venezuela's exiled technocrats maneuvered in US courts and the Washington Beltway to retain Citgo since shortly after Guaido declared his interim presidency in January. In mid-February, Guaido named "ad hoc" administrative boards to PdV and its US subsidiaries to protect the asset. The move was overshadowed a week later by a botched US-backed aid campaign and a stillborn 30 April military uprising in support of Guaido.

In May, the US-backed opposition took a gamble by paying $72mn in interest on the PdV 2020 bond, arguing that the Maduro government would have defaulted because of US sanctions. Up to that point, the PdV 2020s stood out as the only Venezuelan bond that was still current. The funds for the opposition payment came from PdV's frozen US accounts released by the US Treasury.

Guaido's advisers are seeking US Treasury sanctions clearance to negotiate a delay in paying $842mn in principal on the PdV 2020 bonds due in October. By then, Crystallex could move to auction Citgo, unless the US government steps in to temporarily halt the sale. In the same month of October, the White House will decide whether Chevron gets another extension on its waiver to operate in Venezuela.

In a sidebar to the crisis, the opposition statement asserted that Jose Ignacio Hernandez, Guaido's ad hoc attorney general, had recused himself from the Crystallex case as he had testified on behalf of the company before he joined the exile administration.

Maduro's attorney general Tarek William Saab said this afternoon that he opened a criminal investigation into Hernandez because of his legal role in supporting Crystallex.

The Citgo case is unfolding just as US election season gets into full swing, but for now the Venezuelan cause has fallen into the margins of US politics. An opposition-led campaign for protected status for Venezuelan migrants passed the US House of Representatives this month but was not taken up by the Senate before its recess period.


Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
03/05/24

Chevron’s oily DJ basin buy boosts gas output

Chevron’s oily DJ basin buy boosts gas output

New York, 3 May (Argus) — Chevron's US natural gas production has surged in recent quarters due to its crude-focused acquisition of Denver-based PDC Energy last August, increasing the oil major's exposure to the US gas market months after that market entered an extended price slump. Chevron's US gas production in the first quarter was 2.7 Bcf/d (76mn m3/d), up by 53pc from the year-earlier quarter and the highest since at least 2021, according to company production data. Chevron's total US output rose by 35pc year-over-year to 1.57 b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d), while US crude output increased by 21pc to 779,000 b/d. The acreage Chevron picked up last year in the DJ basin of northeast Colorado and southeast Wyoming has higher gas-oil ratios than the rest of its US portfolio. Chevron mostly focuses US production in the crude-rich Permian basin of west Texas and southeast New Mexico. Since Chevron closed its acquisition of PDC on 7 August, US gas prices have mostly languished in loss-making territory. Prompt-month Nymex gas settlements at the US benchmark Henry Hub from 7 August 2023 to 2 May 2024 averaged $2.46/mmBtu, down from an average of $4.999/mmBtu in the year-earlier period. In a May 2023 conference call over Chevron's acquisition of PDC, chief executive Mike Wirth expressed optimism for the long-run outlook for natural gas, despite the more immediately dim outlook. "There's going to be stronger global demand for gas growth than there will be for oil over the next decade and beyond as the world looks to decarbonize," Wirth said. Despite lower US gas prices, Chevron has captured $600mn in cost savings from the PDC acquisition between capital and operational expenditures, the company told Argus . Crude prices have also been more resilient. Chevron's profit in the first quarter was $5.5bn, down from $6.6bn in the year-earlier quarter, partly due to lower gas prices. US gas prices have been lower this year as unseasonably warm winter weather and resilient production have created an oversupplied US gas market. A government report Thursday showed US gas inventories up by 35pc from the five-year average. By Julian Hast Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Dutch FincoEnergies supplies B100 biodiesel to HAL


03/05/24
News
03/05/24

Dutch FincoEnergies supplies B100 biodiesel to HAL

London, 3 May (Argus) — Dutch supplier FincoEnergies has supplied shipowner Holland America Line (HAL)with B100 marine biodiesel at the port of Rotterdam for a pilot test. This follows a collaboration between HAL, FincoEnergies' subsidiary GoodFuels, and engine manufacturer Wartsila to trial blends of B30 and B100 marine biodiesel . HAL's vessel the Rotterdam bunkered with B100 on 27 April before embarking on a journey through the Norwegian heritage fjords to test the use of the biofuel. The vessel will utilise one of its four engines to combust B100, which will reportedly cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 86pc on a well-to-wake basis compared with conventional fossil fuel marine gasoil (MGO), according to GoodFuels. There is no engine or fuel structure modification required for the combustion of B100, confirmed HAL. The B100 marine biodiesel blend comprised of sustainable feedstock such as waste fats and oils. The firms did not disclose how much B100 was supplied, or whether this is the beginning of a longer-term supply agreement. Argus assessed the price of B100 advanced fatty acid methyl ester (Fame) 0°C cold filter plugging point dob ARA — a calculated price which includes a deduction of the value of Dutch HBE-G renewable fuel tickets — at an average of $1,177.32/t in April. This is a premium of $410.20/t to MGO dob ARA prices for the same month, which narrows to $321.68/t with the inclusion of EU emissions trading system (ETS) costs for the same time period. By Hussein Al-Khalisy Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

US job growth nearly halved in April: Update


03/05/24
News
03/05/24

US job growth nearly halved in April: Update

Adds services PMI in first, fifth paragraphs, factory PMI reference in sixth paragraph. Houston, 3 May (Argus) — The US added fewer jobs in April as the unemployment rate ticked up and average earnings growth slowed, signs of gradually weakening labor market conditions. A separate survey showed the services sector contracted last month. The US added 175,000 jobs in April, the Labor Department reported today, fewer than the 238,000 analysts anticipated. That compared with an upwardly revised 315,000 jobs in March and a downwardly revised 236,000 jobs in February. The unemployment rate ticked up to 3.9pc from 3.8pc. The unemployment rate has ranged from 3.7-3.9pc since August 2023, near the five-decade low of 3.4pc. The latest employment report comes after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday held its target lending rate unchanged for a sixth time and signaled it would be slower in cutting rates from two-decade highs as the labor market has remained "strong" and inflation, even while easing, is "still too high". US stocks opened more than 1pc higher today after the jobs report and the yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 4.47pc. Futures markets showed odds of a September rate cut rose by about 10 percentage points to about 70pc after the report. Services weakness Another report today showed the biggest segment of the economy contracted last month. The Institute for Supply Management's (ISM) services purchasing managers index (PMI) fell to 49.4 in April from 51.4 in March, ending 15 months of expansion. The services PMI employment index fell to 45.9, the fourth contraction in five months, in today's report. Readings below 50 signal contraction. On 1 May, ISM reported that the manufacturing PMI fell to 49.2 in April, after one month of growth following 16 months of contraction. In today's employment report from the Labor Department, average hourly earnings grew by 3.9pc over the 12 month period, down from 4.1pc in the period ended in March. Job gains in the 12 months through March averaged 242,000. Gains, including revisions, averaged 276,000 in the prior three-month period. Job gains occurred in health care, social services and transportation and warehousing. Health care added 56,000 jobs, in line with the gains over the prior 12 months. Transportation and warehousing added 22,000, also near the 12-month average. Retail trade added 20,000. Construction added 9,000 following 40,000 in March. Government added 8,000, slowing from an average of 55,000 in the prior 12 months. Manufacturing added 9,000 jobs after posting 4,000 jobs the prior month. Mining and logging lost 3,000 jobs. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Kazakhstan outlines Opec+ compensation plan


03/05/24
News
03/05/24

Kazakhstan outlines Opec+ compensation plan

London, 3 May (Argus) — Opec+ member Kazakhstan has submitted a plan to Opec detailing how it intends to compensate for producing above its crude production target in the first four months of the year. Kazakhstan and Iraq — which has also submitted a compensation plan — are the Opec+ alliance's largest overproducers and a key reason why the group exceeded its overall production in the first three months of the year . Kazakhstan's energy ministry said it produced above its target by 129,000 b/d in January, 128,000 b/d in February, and 131,000 b/d in March, according to secondary source estimates. Opec secondary sources, of which Argus is one, have yet to formally submit their production estimates for April, but Kazakhstan said it is factoring preliminarily overproduction of 100,000 b/d for April. The ministry said it kept oil production high because of high winter demand for natural gas — much of its gas production is associated and is produced alongside its oil. Kazakhstan said it would start its compensation plan in May with an initial cut of 18,000 b/d below its official target of 1.468mn b/d. It would then stick to its target in June and July before implementing a cut of 131,000 b/d in August, none in September, 299,000 b/d in October, 40,000 b/d in November and zero in December. The cuts have been designed to coincide with scheduled maintenance at the country's key oil fields of Kashagan and Tengiz, the ministry said. Kazakhstan would have to reduce its output by 149,000 b/d in May compared with its March production of 1.599mn b/d to meet its pledge, according to Argus calculations. The compensation plan is set to be adjusted once a final figure for April is available. The plan would be further adjusted to accommodate any change in the Opec+ alliance's output policy — for which a meeting is scheduled to take place on 1 June in Vienna. Opec has been increasing pressure on members exceeding their targets. It called last month on countries that have overproduced to submit detailed compensation plans by the end of April. The Opec+ alliance has implemented a series of cuts — voluntary or collective — worth a combined 5.4mn b/d since October 2022 in a self-described bid to "support the stability and balance of the oil market". The latest round of "voluntary" output reductions by several members came into force in January and is due to run until the end of June. By Aydin Calik and Nader Itayim Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Iraq sets plan to compensate for excess Opec oil output


03/05/24
News
03/05/24

Iraq sets plan to compensate for excess Opec oil output

Dubai, 3 May (Argus) — Iraq, Opec's second-largest oil producer, has submitted a plan to the Opec secretariat outlining how it will compensate for producing above quota in the first quarter of 2024. The plan indicates that Baghdad will make compensatory cuts from May through to the end of this year, although its breakdown could be tweaked if its April production is again above quota, based on average production estimates issued by the seven Opec secondary sources, including Argus . Opec+'s Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC) said in its 3 April meeting that members that have produced above their quotas so far this year would need to submit plans to compensate for the excess. Iraq and Kazakhstan, which Opec said has also submitted its own compensation plan, have produced the most excess excess volumes in the Opec+ group since the beginning of the year. The JMMC oversees compliance to the coalition's crude production cuts and studies market dynamics. Iraq produced 194,000 b/d above target in January, and overshot by 217,000 b/d and 193,000 b/d in February and March, respectively. To compensate for this, Baghdad plans to produce 50,000 b/d below its quota between May and September, 100,000 b/d below quota for October and November, and 152,000 b/d below its quota for December. Iraq has been working to a quota of 4mn b/d since the start of the year, including two rounds of voluntary cuts it made in April and November last year. Baghdad will submit its crude production figure for April later this week, it said. Any extra volumes produced will also be factored into the country's compensation plan. To meet obligations, Baghdad says it will cap its crude burn at 75,000 b/d and maintain refining intake to between 400,000 b/d and 500,000 b/d through to the end of this year, according to Iraq's Opec national representative Mohammed Adnan Ibrahim Al-Najjar. But Iraq has yet to decide whether it will extend a 3.3mn b/d cap on exports, in place since April , beyond the second half, as it will depend on "Opec+ agreements [in the June meeting] and [the needs of] Iraq's economy over the coming months," the oil ministry told Argus last week. When needs must With the summer season around the corner in the Mideast Gulf region, Iraq has pushed the majority of its compensation into the last three months of the year. Iraq in summer often experiences extreme heatwaves resulting in a major spike in electricity demand. Power shortages during the summer season have fuelled political unrest in Iraq in recent years. To strike a balance between its Opec+ commitments and avoid similar scenarios this year, Iraq says it will import higher levels of gas from neighbouring Iran, with Baghdad also beginning to benefit from electricity supply from Jordan through a newly-established power line which became operational at the beginning of April. Iran and Iraq finalised a five-year supply agreement at the end of March, which will see Tehran send "up to 50mn m³/d" of gas to Iraq, Iraq's electricity minister Ziad Ali Fadel said. But Iraq's persistent overproduction, which has drawn scrutiny within Opec+, might be difficult to address, especially as Iraq blames it on its inability to oversee production in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region in the north of the country. Most Iraqi Kurdish crude output is directed to local refineries or sold on the black market following the closure of the export pipeline that links oil fields in northern Iraq to the Turkish port of Ceyhan just over a year ago. Iraq's federal oil ministry says its Kurdish counterpart has stopped providing production data, but on 3 May said it estimates Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) crude production to be between 40,000 b/d and 50,000 b/d. Meanwhile, Iraq's oil minister Hayyan Abdulghani on 2 May announced that two joint Baghdad-Erbil committees have been formed to resolve the issue of contracts between Erbil and the international oil companies operating in the Kurdistan region. By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more