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US Court of appeal delays the sale of Argentina's 51% YPF share

A U.S. Judge on Monday temporarily halted the enforcement of an order requiring Argentina's 51% stake in oil company YPF as partial satisfaction of a $16.1 Billion court judgment.

The U.S. District Court Judge Loretta Preska's decision in Manhattan provides temporary relief for the cash-strapped South American nation, which warned that its economy would be unstable if it was forced to give up YPF's stake.

Preska had originally scheduled a turnover for Monday but extended the deadline until July 17 in order to give time to appeal.

Argentine president Javier Milei is trying to boost foreign currency reserves, rein in inflation and deal with a heavy debt burden.

The dispute arose after Argentina decided in 2012 to take the YPF stake away from Spain's Repsol, without making a bid to minority shareholders Petersen Energia Inversora or Eton Park Capital Management.

Burford Capital is representing these shareholders. Burford Capital has stated that it expects to receive between 35% and 73% respectively of Petersen and Eton Park’s damages.

Preska has ordered Argentina to pay $1.71 billion and $14.39 billion in September 2023 to Petersen.

Argentina is appealing the judgement. Preska, on June 30, ordered that the government turn over its YPF stake in 14 days.

Burford said Argentina's years of evasion and a commercial exception justified a turn-over.

Argentina said in a filing to the court on Thursday that "the stakes couldn't be higher."

It warned that forcing a turn-around would irreparably damage its sovereignty, interfere in foreign relations, violate the international law, and expand wrongly the power of U.S. Courts.

The Argentina compared a turn-over to a foreign judge ordering the U.S. Government to ship gold stored at Fort Knox out of the country, because this court misinterpreted U.S. laws.

It also claimed that it would be unfair for the country to relinquish its control of the largest energy company in the country, even if it won the case. Reporting by Jonathan Stempel, New York; Editing by William Mallard

(source: Reuters)