Just three months ahead of presidential elections, potential investors do not believe that sale process will be concluded this year
07/14/2022
Petrobras resumed sales of three refineries in June — Foto: Divulgação Petrobras/Diego Pisante
The sales of three Petrobras refineries may not be competitive, sources say. The oil company starts receiving non-binding proposals as of this Thursday for three units: Abreu e Lima (Rnest), in Pernambuco, Presidente Getúlio Vargas (Repar), in Paraná, and Alberto Pasqualini (Refap), in Rio Grande do Sul. The move includes logistics assets integrated into these facilities.
Just three months ahead of the presidential elections, potential investors do not believe that the sale will be concluded this year. Petrobras is being advised by Citi. Sources within the oil company said the deal is unlikely to be concluded by October.
As former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva leads the polls, the concern is that the sale of assets may be interrupted if he wins the presidential race. According to Mr. Lula da Silva’s government plan, he is against the privatization of Petrobras.
Even in a scenario in which incumbent Jair Bolsonaro (Liberal Party) is reelected, potential buyers don’t feel safe either, said on condition of anonymity one businessman who is still evaluating whether to bid for one of the units. “All these moves of the president concerning the change of command at Petrobras and trying to intervene in the price policy make investors feel insecure,” he said.
According to sources, Ultra, owner of the Ipiranga gas station chain, does not intend to bid for Petrobras. The group had once advanced in the process of buying the Refap unit, in Rio Grande do Sul. However, in October last year, the two parties announced that the negotiations had fell apart. The purchase of Refap would be strategic for Ultra in the oil and gas industry. Sources say that Petrobras tried to renegotiate a higher price for the refinery, higher than the group’s previous bid.
The Cosan group, a producer of bioethanol, sugar, and energy, is still evaluating whether to make an offer. Last year, it made a bid for Repar, but it fell short of the oil company’s intentions to sell. Sovereign wealth fund Mubadala, the owner of the Mataripe unit (formerly Landulpho Alves), is not interested in making an offer for one of the units in the South region either, sources say.
The sale of the refineries is part of the agreement signed in 2019 between the oil company and the antitrust regulator CADE for the sale of eight units, so to attract other companies to the industry. The assets for sale account for about half of the state-owned company’s processing capacity.
So far, only the sale of the Bahia refinery has been concluded. Petrobras has already signed contracts for units SIX, in Paraná, and Reman, in Amazonas, but the deals have not been closed yet.
The unsuccessful sale process of Rnest was terminated in August 2021, after the interested parties gave up submitting binding proposals. As a result, Petrobras opted to include in the business plan the conclusion of the project’s second refining train, with planned investments of $1 billion. According to the company, the intention is to broaden the interest of potential buyers.
According to a specialist in the oil and gas industry, Petrobras took too long to take the sale process ahead. For him, CADE should have put more pressure. “Now it has lost the timing. The price [intervention] still weighs.”
This source understands that this sale process does not favor competition, since the refineries in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro were left out of the Petrobras divestment process. “If the idea is to foster competition, CADE should include refineries from those states. But Petrobras does not want to give up its best assets.”
In a note, Petrobras stressed its commitment to the broad transparency of its divestment projects and portfolio management and said that the subsequent stages of the project will be disclosed in due course. Cosan and Ultra declined to comment. Mubadala did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
*By Mônica Scaramuzzo, Gabriela Ruddy — São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro
Source: Valor International