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Citgo parent shares sold at auction in the US to a bidder competing with its own

In a court filing, an officer in charge of the auction process for shares in Citgo Petroleum's parent company in the United States (owned by Venezuela) has revealed that a bidder had submitted a rival offer. The court was holding the auction to pay creditors who were owed money due from expropriations or defaults.

Last month, a $7.4 billion offer by a group headed by a subsidiary owned by Canadian miner Gold Reserve, was recommended as the winner of the bidding process. However, the judge still has to decide whether or not to accept it after some creditors and competitors objected.

According to a late Thursday filing, Officer Robert Pincus informed the court of the "unsolicited offer." He did not reveal the date or name of the bidder.

Gold Reserve announced in a Friday release that the court had allowed Pincus, a bidder identified as "Bidder B," to communicate with it and to reactivate its access to the data room with Citgo's key information.

Gold Reserve said that since the unsolicited offer was received, Pincus has "consistently engaged with Bidder B about its progress towards the proposed transaction" and the bidder now is in active discussions, Gold Reserve stated, with parties who consent or agree to the proposed deal.

The miner stated that Pincus had not yet deemed this new offer superior to Gold Reserve's recommendation. Marianna Pararagaa is reporting.

(source: Reuters)