Consortia target Citgo's Texas refinery as auction deadline looms
Citgo Petroleum's smallest and least profitable oil refinery has been thrust into the spotlight as a potential breakout candidate ahead of next week's court auction to pay over $20 B in Venezuela-related claims.
Energy producers, refiners, investment funds and bankers increasingly have shown interest in the Venezuelan-owned company's Corpus Christ, Texas, complex during a marketing process organized by a U.S. court in Delaware.
Tuesday is the deadline for bids in the second and final round, the final step in a years-long process organized to pay creditors for past expropriations and debt defaults in Venezuela, which is expected to result in a change of the ownership of the seventh-largest U.S. refiner.
"At least a couple of consortia have shown interest in submitting bids with the only goal of keeping Corpus Christi," one of the sources said. "It's a major asset as seen by bidders."
Activist investor Elliott Investment Management has been weighing a bid, and investors represented by Centerview Partners have sought to lure ConocoPhillips COP.N, the largest creditor in the court-ordered auction, to join its effort, Reuters reported in April.
Located at the largest U.S. oil and fuel export hub, Citgo's 167,000-bpd Corpus Christi refinery has emerged as a prized asset, the people said. Its proximity to U.S. shale fields and pipelines, and the 890-acre (360-hectare) site's storage facilities and seven docks have made it a standout among bidders.
Citgo's refineries in Louisiana, Illinois and Texas can jointly process 807,000 bpd of oil. In the last two years, the circuit has generated $4.8 B in combined net earnings. In 2019, Citgo severed ties with its ultimate parent, Caracas-headquartered state oil firm PDVSA, and since has operated under a U.S. license protecting it from creditors. Venezuelan opposition envoys are pressing the U.S. government to pause the auction until a presidential election in July.
In both bidding rounds, U.S. Judge Leonard Stark has restricted offers to all shares in Citgo's parent PDV Holding. That means that if a winner in the auction is interested only in a portion of the business, it must acquire all assets and later hive off unwanted properties.
Houston-based Citgo, which in recent months opened a data room to provide information to potential bidders, did not respond to a request for comment.
Located on the Gulf Coast, Corpus Christi has emerged as the largest U.S. crude export hub with 2.2 MMbpd moving in the first quarter this year. It is also key for moving fuels, which rose to some 932,000 bpd last year, data from the Port of Corpus Christi showed.
Citgo's Corpus Christi refinery, which predominantly runs heavy crudes, is divided into east and west plants, linked by pipelines. The east plant is intertwined with the east plant of Flint Hills Resources' 343,000-bpd Corpus Christi refinery.
Koch Industries-owned Flint Hills is believed to have considered a bid or joining a consortium. The addition of Citgo's crude distillation unit could lead to a Koch facility with capacity of 510,000 bpd and make it the seventh-largest U.S. refinery.
Koch is one of the creditors pursuing Citgo parent's shares through the Delaware case. The bidding process allows it to use its $456.5 MM claim against Venezuela as a credit bid in the auction.
Citgo's other refineries are in Lemont, Illinois, which is typically the second-most profitable plant due to its access to lower-cost Canadian crudes, and Lake Charles, Louisiana, the largest and most profitable of the three.
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