Thursday, April 26, 2012

Reuters: Mergers News: UPDATE 3-Argentine Senate, house committee back YPF takeover

Reuters: Mergers News
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UPDATE 3-Argentine Senate, house committee back YPF takeover
Apr 27th 2012, 01:38

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Thu Apr 26, 2012 9:38pm EDT

  * Polls show most Argentines favor the expropriation      * Spain, in reprisal, halts imports of Argentine biodiesel      * Attention turns to how much compensation Argentina will  pay          By Hugh Bronstein         BUENOS AIRES, April 26 (Reuters) - Argentina stepped toward  nationalizing its biggest oil company on Thursday when the  government's expropriation bill sailed through the Senate and  then a lower house committee, setting the stage for final  legislative approval next week.       The rapid-fire votes by the full Senate and a joint  committee of the Chamber of Deputies underscored broad domestic  support for a proposal that has infuriated foreign investors.         The expropriation of YPF from majority holder  Repsol has widened the breach between Argentina and  trade partners critical of President Cristina Fernandez's  nationalist policies, including import controls that have hurt  confidence in Latin America's No. 3 economy.          But that has not hurt her popularity at home. Having won a  landslide re-election in October, the 59-year-old leader  unveiled plans last week to seize a 51 percent stake in YPF.          The Senate voted 63-3 to approve the measure early on  Thursday. Lower house member and Fernandez ally Agustin Rossi  predicted the bill will get "the same level of support" when the  257-member Chamber of Deputies is expected to give final  legislative approval to the YPF takeover late next week.              Once the bill passes, making the takeover permanent,   a ttention will turn to the compensation Argentina will pay  Spain's Repsol for its stake. Officials have already said it  will be far lower than the $9.3 billion the company has sought.       The government justifies the expropriation by saying YPF   was under-investing and under-producing in Argentina, a charge  that Repsol dismisses.        Madrid has vowed to halt multimillion-dollar imports of  biodiesel from Argentina in retaliation, while ratings agencies  Moody's and S&P said the YPF seizure could heighten Argentina's  economic isolation at a time of slowing growth.                 Argentina's trade surplus, a pillar of Fernandez's economic  policy, shrank last year as fuel imports more than doubled -  sending the issue of flagging oil and natural gas production to  the top of the president's list of priorities.                        Buenos Aires says it needs to control YPF in order to  guarantee enough domestic oil and gas output to keep the economy  expanding in the face of slower demand from key trade partner  Brazil and fallout from Europe's debt crisis.         State news agency Telam said on Thursday that, since being  shifted to preliminary government control last week, YPF has  increased gas production by almost 5 percent and oil production  by 0.7 percent per day.       Most Argentines support the move to re-nationalize YPF,  privatized in the 1990s after 70 years under full state control.  Many blame the privatizations and free-market reforms of that  decade for provoking Argentina's 2001/02 financial meltdown.                    NOT A "CAPRICIOUS, RANDOM DECISION"       Argentina has yet to return to global credit markets a  decade after its crippling 2001/02 sovereign debt default - the  biggest in history.           With memories of this debacle still fresh, many voters have  hailed Fernandez's calls for "energy sovereignty."            A survey published last weekend by polling company  Poliarquia showed 62 percent of respondents agreed with the  expropriation, with 23 percent against it.            "The government's bill doesn't reflect a capricious or  random decision," ruling party Senator Marcelo Fuentes said.  "It's a logical result stemming from the need to reverse  free-market thinking in energy policy."       The president pledged during her 2011 re-election campaign  to deepen the government model pioneered by her late husband and  predecessor as president, Nestor Kirchner.            A fiery public speaker sometimes compared to Argentina's  famous first lady Evita Peron, Fernandez has worn only black  since Kirchner's sudden death in 2010 and she has dedicated  YPF's takeover to his memory.         In a speech on Tuesday, Fernandez acknowledged she was  nervous when she announced the YPF takeover plan: "They weren't  nerves caused by doubts or insecurities. On the contrary; I'm  absolutely certain that this is the only way."        "What upset me was that he (Kirchner) couldn't be here to  see such a historic moment."  
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