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Yukos files for bankruptcy in US
MOSCOW - In an eleventh-hour move, the Yukos oil company has filed for bankruptcy in a United States Court and is demanding the cancellation of an auction of its main production unit slated for Sunday. While the filing is a dramatic challenge to the Russian government to enter arbitration proceedings, analysts doubt the appeal will stay what is being called a Kremlin-sponsored carve-up of the nation's largest oil producer. Yukos filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 in Houston on Tuesday, the company said. Yukos said the impending auction of Yuganskneftegaz, its main production subsidiary, "will cause the company to suffer immediate and irreparable harm." Yukos maintains that the auction is illegal. "Yukos is asking the court for a temporary restraining order halting the planned Sunday auction of Yuganskneftegaz by Russian authorities," the company said in a statement posted on its Web site. The court has scheduled a hearing on Wednesday. CEO Steven Theede called the move "the only resort" left for Yukos, which the Russian government has targeted in a relentless legal campaign that has sent the company's value plunging. The campaign against Yukos and its owners, including former CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky, has been seen as a Kremlin-inspired effort to punish Khodorkovsky's perceived political ambitions, including his funding of opposition parties. President Vladimir Putin has cast the case as part of official crackdown on shady bookkeeping and corruption. Khodorkovsky, who has been in jail for 14 months, is being tried on charges including fraud and tax evasion. Tax authorities say Yukos owes them $27.8 billion. Core subsidiary Yuganskneftegaz is scheduled for auction to cover a part of the bill and observers suggest the tax claims have been engineered to transfer the unit, which produces some 60 percent of Yukos' oil, to a Kremlin-connected company ¡ª most likely state gas giant Gazprom. Yuganskneftegaz's proposed starting price of $8.6 billion is lower than even the most conservative valuation commissioned from a Western investment bank. "The management of Yukos has worked tirelessly and in good faith over the past year to establish a dialogue with the Russian authorities in an attempt to work out a compromise that would have prevented today's reorganization filing," Theede was quoted as saying. "We have submitted more than 70 settlement offers and publicly stated that reorganization was a distinct possibility if a reasonable resolution was not reached. It is regrettable that we did not receive one substantive response." Mikhail Berger, a prominent Russian economic analyst, told Ekho Moskvy radio that the bankruptcy filing did not come as a surprise, since the state's scheduling of the Yuganskneftegaz auction one day before Yukos' shareholders' meeting ¡ª when the company could have decided to apply for bankruptcy protection in Russia ¡ª left Yukos with no other way out. "They appealed to an American and not a Russian court because that would be useless ... nothing that could help Yukos could be ruled by a Russian court," Berger said.
"U.S. bankruptcy law has worldwide jurisdiction over property of the debtor and the company is seeking a judiciary that will protect the value of all shareholders' investment in Yukos," the company said. In its filing, Yukos said that as of Oct. 31, its total assets equaled approximately $12.276 billion and its total debts were about $30.79 billion, including "alleged taxes owed to the Russian government." It said it had from 200 to 999 creditors. On Monday, Yukos threatened legal action against bidders for Yuganskneftegaz in a full-page advertisement in the Financial Times newspaper. Yukos shares were down more than 7 percent at 75 cents Wednesday on Moscow's RTS change. Before Khodorkovsky's arrest, they were valued at $16 apiece. |
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