PDVSA Seeks to Buy Time for Oil Rally With $7 Billion Debt Swap
Venezuela’s state-owned oil company has been on default watch for two years. Now it hopes it can buy itself, and the country, more time with a $7 billion debt swap.
Petroleos de Venezuela SA wants investors holding unsecured bonds due this year and next to exchange them for notes with payments staggered over the next four years that are backed by shares of the company’s U.S. unit. The government already owns a portion of the notes, but how much is not public. For the deal to have a meaningful impact, PDVSA would need at least half the remaining bondholders to agree to the swap, according to Nomura Holdings Inc.
Specific terms of the offer haven’t been announced, so it’s difficult to gauge what the reception will be. If PDVSA can pull the deal off, Venezuela may be able to avoid default for another 12 months, according to Edward Glossop, an economist at Capital Economics in London. The company’s total debt will increase and future recovery values in the event the company stops making payments will fall, but none of that will matter if oil prices recover back to levels that allow it to make payments comfortably.
“It’s a play on whether the oil price recovers enough for them to pay it,” said Phillip Blackwood, a managing partner at EM Quest Ltd., which advises Denmark’s Sydbank A/S on emerging-market debt. “If they pull it off, it’s definitely positive right now.”
Excluding its U.S. subsidiary Citgo Petroleum Corp., the state-owned producer already has $2.7 billion of bond payments to make in 2019 and another $4.5 billion in 2020.
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