Carlyle, Chevron-Quantum partnership among frontrunners for Lukoil assets
Private equity giant Carlyle, a group comprising oil major Chevron and Quantum Capital Group as well as UAE-based investor International Holding Company are competing for the global assets of Russia's Lukoil, as a U.S. deadline to sell them expires this week.
The U.S. imposed sanctions on Lukoil and its peer Rosneft in October to push the Kremlin to a peace deal with Ukraine and has given Lukoil until January 17 to sell its global portfolio, valued at $22 billion.
The assets include oil fields in many countries including Iraq, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan as well as refineries and petrol stations in Europe and the United States.
The firm's operations have been disrupted around the world due to sanctions and a lack of banking lines while Iraq has nationalized Lukoil's biggest oil field, West Qurna 2.
Lukoil has been holding talks with potential investors since November, the four industry sources said.
Carlyle declined to comment. IHC did not respond to a request for comment. Chevron and Quantum declined to comment.
Once Lukoil reaches a deal, the future buyer needs to obtain clearance from the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, according to U.S. regulations.
OFAC may extend the current general license and allow negotiations between Lukoil and buyers to continue, three of the four sources said.
Treasury did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
OFAC may opt to grant individual licenses to one or several potential buyers before the January 17 deadline, a fifth source said. Treasury has blocked two attempted deals so far, first between Lukoil and Swiss trading group Gunvor in October and a proposed share swap engineered by Xtellus Partners, the former U.S. arm of Russian bank VTB, in December.


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