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DDR
16th April 2012, 17:59
Argentina to expropriate Repsol oil subsidiary YPF

The Argentine government will seize a controlling interest in oil company YPF owned by Spanish firm Repsol.
President Cristina Fernandez said a bill will be presented to the Senate allowing the government to expropriate 51% of YPF shares.
The move, announced on national television, was welcomed by her cabinet and Argentine governors.
Spain and the EU have already expressed concern at such a state takeover of YPF, in which Repsol has a 57.4% stake.
Announcing the move, President Fernandez said energy was a "vital resource". Of the seized shares, the state will hold 51% and the country's oil-producing provinces will get 49%.
Shares in YPF fell some 18% on Wall Street following the announcement.
YPF has come under sustained criticism from the Argentine government, which accuses it of failing to invest enough in local oil fields.
The Argentina authorities have accused YPF of not investing enough to increase its output and so lessen the need for imports, an accusation it rejects.
The company has been stripped of a number of leases, including in some of the biggest oil fields in the country.
In recent weeks, speculation has grown that the Argentine government was planning to force through a bigger state role in the firm.
Continue reading the main story (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-17732910#story_continues_2) Analysis

Robert Plummer Business reporter, BBC News
YPF is not the first big firm to be nationalised by President Cristina Fernandez and it is unlikely to be the last.
Ms Fernandez has continued the economic nationalism of her late husband and predecessor, Nestor Kirchner, bringing such companies as the national airline under renewed state control.
Like Aerolineas Argentinas, YPF was privatised in the 1990s by former President Carlos Menem, a man who transformed the Peronist party into an engine of free-market reform.
But since Argentina's economic collapse of 2001-02, Peronism has gone back to its original corporatist vision, and many sectors of the economy that were liberalised in that era are now back in government hands.

Spain has previously warned Buenos Aires that a takeover of YPF could have consequences for Argentina's international image.
And on Monday Spain's ruling People's Party said the government would defend national interests
"The government has to decide on its response, but I don't have the slightest doubt that it will be the most appropriate response to defend national interests and Spanish interests and a sufficient and complete response to defend the interest of Spanish companies in Argentina," said the general secretary of the party, Maria Dolores Cospedal.
The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, has made it clear it backs Spain's position.
In November last year, YPF, which was privatised in 1993, announced a major find of 1bn barrels of shale oil.
Argentina has some of the world's largest reserves of shale oil and gas, hydrocarbons trapped deep underground.
It is ranked number three in the world in terms of recoverable resources, behind China and the US, according to the US Energy Information Administration. (http://205.254.135.7/countries/cab.cfm?fips=AR)

ckaihatsu
25th April 2012, 21:47
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It was Nestor Kirchner, elected president in 2003 and serving as Fernandez’s “co-president” between her election in 2007 and his death in 2010, who pushed Repsol to initiate an “argentinization” of YPF. This involved helping a wealthy close friend and supporter of the Kirchners, Enrique Eskenazi, the head of a construction firm with no experience in the oil industry, to buy a 25 percent share in the firm. He did so under extraordinarily favorable terms, putting no money down, and with Repsol agreeing to cover his payments on some $3.45 billion in debt with dividends that accounted for 90 percent of the company’s profits. Repsol removed its own director from YPF and installed Eskenazi in its Buenos Aires offices.

Thus, the payout of the bulk of YPF profits as dividends rather than their reinvestment in production was an integral part of the deal worked out by the Kirchners to benefit one of their cronies. The parasitism was driven not only by Spanish capital, but by their politically connected Argentine partners.




On Sunday, Argentine Planning Minister Julio de Vido and Vice Minister of Economy Axel Kicillof, appointed as state supervisors of YPF, announced plans to start meetings on Monday with major oil companies to solicit foreign investment. Meetings already held with French Total and Brazil’s Petrobras were to be followed in quick succession by talks with ConocoPhillips, Chevron, ExxonMobil and other companies. One of the aims of these negotiations is to secure both capital and expertise to develop a recently discovered shale field, Vaca Muerta, believed to be the world’s third largest.

This rush to obtain foreign capital points to the reality behind the “recovery of sovereignty.” In the end, it will be the Argentine working class that will pay the price for compensating Repsol, ensuring the profits of the new transnational oil giants that replace it, and subsidizing the corruption of the Peronist government. This will sooner rather than later take the form of higher fuel prices, declining living standards and accelerating inflation.




http://wsws.org/articles/2012/apr2012/arge-a24.shtml