Thank you for registering!
Pemex Settles Differences with Repsol
Pemex has agreed to work with the management of Spain’s Repsol and to keep its ownership stake in the company. The more cooperative stance marks major turnaround for the Mexican state-owned oil company, which up until now had sought to build alliances with other shareholders to revamp management at the Spanish firm. The companies are putting together a 10-year cooperation agreement that will involve working jointly in business opportunities that arise in the upstream, downstream and LNG sectors in the Americas, as well as the downstream business in Spain and Portugal, Pemex says. In Mexico, executives from both companies will evaluate and promote joint business opportunities as well. In turn, the Mexican state oil company has agreed to maintain a stake in Repsol of anywhere between 5% and 10%, and to “support the strategic plan and structure of the current Repsol management,” Pemex notes in a statement. It currently holds a 9.5% stake in Repsol. Pemex increased its stake to 9.5% last year and struck a failed agreement with Spanish builder Sacyr-Vallehermoso, another Repsol shareholder, to force a change in Repsol’s top brass. Pemex even considered spending an additional EUR854.3m to up its Repsol stake to 12.5%, and gain a greater say in the company. The deal fell apart, however, when the cash-strapped Sacyr was forced to sell half of its 20% stake back to Repsol in late 2011. “For the moment Pemex is not considering reducing its Repsol stake. We’ve put a 5% floor as a way to give us some room to maneuver but nothing more,” a spokeswoman says. Although the Mexican oil company enjoys generous after tax cash flows, the Mexican government’s tax take is considerable and the company struggles with lower oil reserve replacement and higher leverage than its international competitors.
