Citgo Auction Heats Up: US Court Considers Bids

Thursday, Aug 21, 2025 10:57 am ET2min read

The article discusses the auction for Venezuela's state-owned refiner, Citgo, which is currently being considered by a US court. Bids for the refinery are heating up, with ConocoPhillips emerging as a major contender. The refinery is valued at around $1.5 billion and has attracted interest from various international companies.

The auction for Citgo Petroleum Corp, the parent company of Venezuela's state-owned refiner Citgo, has seen a surge in bids, with international companies vying for control. The auction, overseen by a Delaware court officer, aims to repay 15 creditors for debt defaults and expropriations by Venezuela and state oil company PDVSA [1]. The refinery is valued at around $1.5 billion and has attracted significant interest from various international companies.

Elliott Investment Management's affiliate, Amber Energy, has increased its bid for Citgo Petroleum's parent company, PDV Holding, to a total value of $8.82 billion [2]. This bid comes amid a complex auction process that has seen various bidders, including Gold Reserve, Amber Energy, and Vitol, vying for Citgo's parent since the previous year [2].

The auction process has been contentious, with various bidders submitting unsolicited offers. In January, the auction was relaunched after a year-long bidding process ended in shambles amid arguments over Citgo's worth and parallel legal cases [2]. The court had last month recommended a $7.4 billion bid by a group led by miner Gold Reserve (GRZ.V) [2], but this bid was recently surpassed by a higher offer from a subsidiary of commodities house Vitol, which submitted a bid of $8.45 billion [2].

Amber Energy's increased offer includes a provision to pay holders of a defaulted Venezuelan bond, according to a letter filed on Tuesday by one of the creditors in the auction, Red Tree Investments [2]. The court is scheduled to hold a hearing next week to make a decision on the winner [2].

The legal uncertainty is compounded by Venezuela's opposition, which has labeled the auction an “illegitimate robbery,” while U.S. regulators must approve the final bid through OFAC and CFIUS [2]. A delay in regulatory clearance could further strain Gold Reserve's liquidity, particularly if the company must hold its $1.3 billion in debt while awaiting a decision [2].

The auction's volatility and procedural delays have introduced uncertainty into the Delaware court-supervised sale, potentially upending Gold Reserve's standing and reshaping the race for control of Citgo [2]. The court-appointed Special Master in charge of the U.S. auction of PDV Holding requested that the final sale hearing be delayed to give more time to evaluate all qualifying offers before a winner is selected [2].

Gold Reserve's bid, initially recommended by Special Master Robert Pincus, has been under siege since the emergence of two unsolicited offers: Amber Energy's $8.82 billion proposal and Vitol's $8.45 billion all-cash bid [3]. Gold Reserve faces a precarious position, with its bid structured as a 44% equity stake in Dalinar Energy, backed by a $1.3 billion debt-laden balance sheet [3]. The company's ability to raise a topping bid—should the court demand it—remains uncertain, which could push its debt-to-EBITDA ratio beyond 3.0x, triggering covenant violations and liquidity crises [3].

The CITGO auction underscores the importance of liquidity, legal agility, and creditor alignment in high-stakes asset acquisitions. For investors, the auction presents a high-risk, high-reward scenario. Gold Reserve's shares are volatile, with a 15% monthly swing in 2025, reflecting market uncertainty. A successful bid could yield a 300% return on equity, but the risk of a 50% drawdown is real [3].

The Delaware court is expected to confirm the Gold Reserve Group's bid or recommend a rival offer as the winner by the end of this month [1]. The auction's outcome will have significant implications for Citgo's future and the broader geopolitical landscape in Venezuela.

References:
[1] Reuters. "Elliott affiliate raises bid for Citgo parent company to $8.82 billion." Reuters, August 13, 2025. [https://www.reuters.com/legal/legalindustry/elliott-affiliate-raises-bid-citgo-parent-competition-heats-up-2025-08-13/](https://www.reuters.com/legal/legalindustry/elliott-affiliate-raises-bid-citgo-parent-competition-heats-up-2025-08-13/)
[2] Oilprice.com. "Citgo swings to $100M profit as bidding war intensifies for parent company." Oilprice.com, July 02, 2025. [https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Citgo-Swings-to-100M-Profit-as-Bidding-War-Intensifies-for-Parent-Company.html](https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Citgo-Swings-to-100M-Profit-as-Bidding-War-Intensifies-for-Parent-Company.html)
[3] AInvest. "Gold Reserve Citgo auction: strategic implications, court-ordered delays, emerging bids." AInvest, August 25, 2025. [https://www.ainvest.com/news/gold-reserve-citgo-auction-strategic-implications-court-ordered-delays-emerging-bids-2508/](https://www.ainvest.com/news/gold-reserve-citgo-auction-strategic-implications-court-ordered-delays-emerging-bids-2508/)

Citgo Auction Heats Up: US Court Considers Bids

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