Thursday, February 9th, 2012
Today's weather     
Orlen seeks advice on refinery

23rd August 2010
Bookmark and Share

The oil giant has also incurred the competition watchdog's ire

Orlen is considering selling its MaÏeikiai refinery
Courtesy of Orlen

State-controlled refiner Orlen has officially acknowledged that it might sell its loss-making Orlen Lietuva refinery in MaÏeikiai, Lithuania. It has hired Japanese investment bank Nomura to advise it on how to proceed.

“One scenario sees a total or partial sale of the refinery,” Sławomir Jędrzejczyk, Orlen’s deputy president, told daily Puls Biznesu. “The decision will be made in the fourth quarter.”

Nomura has been chosen to research all possible scenarios concerning the future of the refinery, before presenting them in the fourth quarter. The bank will look into offers from potential investors, see what packages interest them and what they are willing to offer.

“The task of the advisor will be the verification of possible realizations of different scenarios – from upholding the present ownership situation and continued building up of the Lithuanian company’s worth, to scenarios of partial or total sale of the shares,” Orlen said in a press statement.

Recent media reports have suggested the refinery could be sold to a Russian concern, a scenario that has worried the Lithuanian government.

Speculation has been building for months that Orlen would eventually tire of the unwillingness of Lithuanian authorities to help it improve operating conditions, and will as a result offload the refinery.

According to daily Dziennik Gazeta Prawna, Orlen has invested a total of $3.7 billion in the refinery since 2006. Its value is presently assessed at $1.6 billion, but Orlen has not been able to make it profitable.

On its home market, meanwhile, Orlen has been slapped with a zł.52.7 million fine for “breaking anti-monopoly law.” In essence the firm was accused of price-fixing by dictating what some of its franchisees could charge for fuel.

Orlen and the other firms named in UOKiK’s ruling will be able to appeal the fine.


From Warsaw Business Journal


Advertisement
Corporate Finance/M&A Corner
Financial literacy
BY Les Nemethy
Just think: If more people were financially literate, there might never have been a mortgage crisis in the US, or a Swiss ... READ MORE
Corporate Finance/M&A Corner
Yields on European government bonds
BY Les Nemethy
The chart below represents one of the most important charts for European financial markets in 2011, perhaps even for global ... READ MORE
Our partners