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Elliott defends Citgo offer in the face of lenders' objections

Hedge fund Elliott Investment Management on Monday pressed a court not to hold up its bid for Citgo Petroleum, saying the Venezuelaowned oil refiner's assets are weakening in worth and creditors will not get a better deal from others.

The remarks came in a court filing after creditors last week explained an approximately $7.3 billion conditional bid put before the court by Elliott's wholly-owned Amber Energy as insufficient and most likely to be turned down.

Elliott's wholly-owned Amber Energy repeated its risk to leave if the court does not attend to threshold issues, referring to its desire to hold back more than $2 billion of its deal as a set-aside were Venezuela bondholders to prevail in a. separate lawsuit. And it wants the court to bar other claims. from looking for control over the very same possessions.

Citgo operates three U.S. refineries, 38. terminals, six pipelines and materials fuel to 4,200 independent. sellers. The Houston-based oil refiner is the centerpiece in a. U.S. District Court in Delaware's auction seeking to satisfy $21. billion in claims versus Venezuela for defaults and. expropriations.

In addition to Eliott's backing, Amber composed it has actually obtained. a debt commitment letter from Barclays and Citigroup. 's Citibank demonstrating its capability to finance the. purchase. It likewise has retained a 8 individual refining. management group prepared to take control of Citgo operations.

The court filing did not deal with other problems raised by. financial institutions, consisting of an undisclosed separation cost need to the deal. not conclude, and opposition to other bidders accessing Citgo. financial data up until after the court selects its breakup charge.

A spokesperson declined to respond to those issues.

Amber wrote its proposition is the best and just reasonable. pathway for the biggest number of lenders to get payment. despite lenders calling its terms as unlikely to provide them. with auction proceeds for years - if ever.

(source: Reuters)