Trading firm Vitol is a bidder in the auction to buy US refiner Citgo and has asked a federal court for more information about the stalking horse bidder, according to a court document.
Vitol is a "competing bidder" in the process, the company said in a 24 March filing to the US District Court for the District of Delaware.
A court-appointed official overseeing the Citgo auction picked Contrarian Capital Management's $3.7bn proposal as the stalking horse bid in the sale, setting a price floor. The official cited the likelihood of regulatory approval, the bidder's "financial wherewithal" and certainty of financing, according to court filings.
Another bidder, Gold Reserve, is protesting the choice after its own $7.08bn bid was not recommended. Gold Reserve asked the court to publicly release more information about the Contrarian Capital bid, including a "transaction support agreement" with a group of 2020 bondholders of Citgo's parent firm, Venezuelan state-owned PdV.
Vitol joined Gold Reserve's request for the information saying that it shares concerns about sealed and heavily redacted documents, according to the court filing. Vitol said that it joined the request to "ensure it receives access to the information necessary to improve its bid during the topping period".
The court received a total of four bids this month in the auction. Contrarian Capital was the second-highest bid, according to court filings.
Citgo's three refineries, as well as its lubricant plants, midstream and retail assets are being auctioned to satisfy debts owed by Venezuelan state-owned PdV.
Last year, Amber Energy was the top bidder in the auction for Citgo with a bid of $7.3bn. But the recommendation did not receive public support from the "sale process parties" or "additional judgment creditors", and the court officer pivoted to another round of bidding, according to court filings.