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Citgo Parent Auction nears Final Stages as Sale Hearing Kicks Off

  • Delaware judge to select final winner after four-day hearing
  • Hearing could extend to October if more evidence is needed
  • 15 creditors seek up to $19 billion from auction proceeds
  • Amber's bid includes $2.1 billion cash for PDVSA bondholders
  • Gold Reserve and others prefer waiting for New York case resolution

HOUSTON, Sept 15 (Reuters) - A long-awaited sale hearing expected to complete a U.S. court-organized auction of shares in the parent of Venezuela-owned U.S. refiner Citgo Petroleum is set to begin on Monday, with bidders and creditors locked in a bitter dispute over who should win.

The Delaware court will hear testimony from the involved parties, witnesses and experts in the four-day showdown before Judge Leonard Stark selects a final winner. Another set of arguments could be presented in October if the court decides more time and evidence are needed.

At stake is the future of the seventh largest U.S. refiner, whose parent PDV Holding was found liable for the South American nation's debt, opening the door for a total of 15 expropriated companies and defaulted bondholders to pursue its assets.

In July, a court officer overseeing the process selected a subsidiary of Toronto-listed miner Gold Reserve as the auction's frontrunner.

But following a last-minute bidding war, officer Robert Pincus last month switched his recommendation to a $5.9 billion bid from Amber Energy, an affiliate of hedge fund Elliott Investment Management.

The decision has unleashed objections and a motion to disqualify Amber's bid amid a battle between companies seeking compensation for assets that were expropriated in Venezuela and holders of the nation's defaulted bonds.

"The September 15 auction hearing will serve as the first stress test of whether the Amber bid can survive the full gauntlet of procedural, legal, and geopolitical risks," said lawyer Jose Ignacio Hernandez from consultancy Aurora Macro Strategies in a report last week.

By including a $2.1 billion cash payment to holders of PDVSA's 2020 bonds, Amber's bid creates an opportunity to resolve a long-pending claim that is being heard in a separate New York court.

However, Gold Reserve, lawyers representing Venezuela and a handful of creditors prefer to wait for the resolution of the New York case, where the validity of the bonds is in dispute, before anything is paid to the holders.

A court decision about that is crucial to determine how many of the 15 creditors lining up since 2017 in Delaware, who want to collectively cash up to $19 billion from auction proceeds, will end up getting compensation.

Reporting by Marianna Parraga; Editing by Nathan Crooks and Marguerita Choy

Source: Reuters


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