Sri Lanka's CPC loses $60 mln hedging case vs Deutsche Bank
Fri Nov 2, 2012
COLOMBO Nov 2 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka's state-run oil company has lost a
$60 million hedging case against Deutsche Bank after a U.S.-based
arbitrator ruled in favour of the bank, officials said on Friday.
A source familiar with the ruling said Ceylon Petroleum Corporation
(Ceypetco) would have to pay Deutsche $60.3 million plus interest for
non-payment of dues.
"It's against us," Sri Lanka's Attorney General Palitha Fernando told
Reuters. "Now we are considering what actions to be taken to annul
this."
Oil Minister Sisil Premajayantha told Reuters he was not aware of the
ruling but would appeal if the case went against the company.
Three foreign banks, Standard Chartered, Citigroup and Deutsche, took
legal action after Ceypetco refused to make hedging payments of more
than $460 million, including to two local banks. Deutsche had asked the
Washington-based International Centre for Settlement of Investment
Disputes to arbitrate.
Ceypetco, which imported some 26 million barrels at a cost of $2 billion
in 2007, needed to hedge its purchases of crude oil and refined
products on the international market.
It was exposed to the oil rally of 2008, when oil hit a record high
above $147 a barrel in July before crashing to less than $40 a barrel in
December.
In July, Ceypetco lost an appeal against a London court ruling which
ordered it to pay nearly $162 million plus interest for non-payment of
dues to Standard Chartered Bank linked to hedging deals.
Standard Chartered argued that Ceypetco had always been aware that a
fall in oil prices would have made it liable to make payments to the
UK-based bank.