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Business

Spain’s Repsol accepts $5bn payoff from Argentina

Published: 27 Feb 2014 - 12:17 am | Last Updated: 27 Jan 2022 - 03:06 am

 

MADRID: Spanish oil giant Repsol said it had agreed to accept $5bn in compensation from Argentina for the country’s seizure of its subsidiary YPF.
The deal seeks to repair the financial hit taken by Repsol when Argentina’s President Cristina Kirchner ordered the nationalisation of Repsol’s 51 percent stake in YPF in April 2012.
“The agreement reached between the Republic of Argentina and Repsol recognises the company’s right to receive $5bn as compensation for the expropriation of 51 percent of the shares of YPF,” Repsol said in a statement.
The amount is to be paid in Argentine government bonds. The agreement has yet to be approved by Repsol shareholders and the Argentine parliament.
The deal “stipulates guarantees for effective payment as well as the termination of all judicial and arbitration proceedings and the reciprocal waiver of future claims”, the statement added.
The expropriation soured relations between Argentina and Spain and sparked international outrage including from Spain’s European Union partners.
Kirchner blamed it on Repsol’s failure to make agreed investments in the firm. Spain saw it as a blow to its strategic interests.
The nationalisation of its subsidiary in Argentina hit Repsol’s profits hard in 2013, it said in a separate statement announcing its annual results. Its net profits fell by 90 percent in 2013 to ¤195m, it said. 
At “constant cost of supply”, a measure which Repsol says makes its results comparable to those of US oil companies, it recorded net profits of ¤1.8bn, down by 6.7 percent from the previous year. AFP