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Venezuela oil giant tries end run

PDVSA deposits funds beyond reach of asset freeze. Some speculate about a cash crunch.

February 12, 2008|Chris Kraul, Times Staff Writer

CARACAS, VENEZUELA — Venezuela's state oil company reportedly moved to protect its assets from Exxon Mobil Corp.'s legal reach Monday as experts speculated that the South American energy giant may be suffering a severe cash shortage.

Petroleos de Venezuela, or PDVSA, instructed its traders to deposit oil receipts with UBS bank in Switzerland, the Reuters news agency reported Monday. The move follows Exxon Mobil's victory last week persuading U.S., British and Dutch courts to freeze PDVSA bank accounts and other assets worth $12 billion. Efforts by The Times to reach PDVSA executives for comment Monday were unsuccessful.


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Exxon Mobil sought the asset freeze as part of its effort to recover the value of its investment in the Cerro Negro heavy oil project in eastern Venezuela, which the government of President Hugo Chavez nationalized in June.

Irving, Texas-based Exxon Mobil is seeking restitution for the project before a World Bank tribunal, a process that could take years. Because the $12 billion in frozen PDVSA assets far exceeds the $2 billion to $4 billion that analysts estimate Exxon Mobil's investment was worth, analysts said the American oil company was employing tough tactics designed to make Chavez agree to its terms.

The Standard & Poor's debt rating agency said Monday that the asset freeze would have no immediate effect on its ratings of billions of dollars in PDVSA debt, although it warned the action may cause lenders to tighten credit terms, increasing PDVSA's cost of doing business.

Economist Jose Guerra, a former director of Venezuela's central bank, said Monday in Caracas that PDVSA was in the midst of "a profound crisis" and is "mortgaging" its oil reserves because of a cash crunch. As evidence, he cited a $4-billion loan he said PDVSA was negotiating with the Chinese government, to be paid back in oil.

Ex-PDVSA executive Ramon Espinasa, now an economist with the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington, said cash problems may have prompted PDVSA's recent moves to sell future oil production to two Japanese banks and renegotiate some loans packaged by BNP Paribas of France.

On Sunday, Chavez threatened to retaliate for Exxon Mobil's legal maneuver by cutting off all oil shipments to the United States, a threat he has made repeatedly in the past. Few in the industry take him seriously because the United States buys half of Venezuela's oil output and the Citgo network of U.S. refineries that PDVSA owns are best suited to refine his crude.

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