Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business...

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April 2 Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003

Transcript of Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business...

Page 1: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

April 2

Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in

Romania’s Oil Industry

Eric Kish VP Business Development,Mergers and Acquisitions

November 18, 2003

Page 2: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

Largest private company in Romania (2002 revenues in excess of $1 billion), representing roughly 2.4% of GDP

Domiciled in the Netherlands with operations worldwide and assets mostly in Romania

Owned 75% by management and 25% by OMV

Financed principally by international banks; audited to IAS standards

Active in upstream, refining, marketing and services

One of the country’s largest exporters and taxpayers

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The Rompetrol Group – an overview

Page 3: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

Principal challenges to private oil business in Romania

• De facto price controls on domestic motor fuels prices by Government of Romania

• Low domestic motor fuels prices are subsidized by domestic oil production (e.g., 100% of population subsidizes 15% of population who drives)

• Tax system which promotes tax evasion and fraud, leading to high percentage of counterfeit products

• No real regulation of trading companies• Need to attract fresh investment to

modernize/upgrade production to EU standards inhibited by non-productive “historic debts”

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Page 4: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

Principal challenges to publicly owned companies in Romania

• Large labor forces compared to global competitors• Insulation from market forces promotes uncompetitive

behavior• “Self-sufficiency” idea in crude oil results in losses from

using over-quality crude vs. import prices• Need to attract additional investments to meet EU

standards ($800 million needed by 2005)• Risk of self-insuring assets• Small capacities compared to global competitors (e.g., esp. in petrochemicals)

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Page 5: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

Suggestions from the private

sector

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Page 6: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

Liberalize pricing

• Tax rates are as high as W Europe, but retailing margins are only 40-60% of West Europe and CEE countries

• Domestic prices need to be linked to international price of crude

• Consistent with World

Bank/IMF recommendations

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Page 7: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

Move quickly to EU product quality

standards

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Page 8: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

Regulate the unorganized trading sector to

reduce: • Tax evasion• Counterfeit or mis-branded products• Environmental degradation• Theft

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Page 9: Prerequisites to attract investment and financing in Romania’s Oil Industry Eric Kish VP Business Development, Mergers and Acquisitions November 18, 2003.

Privatize Petrom

in a way that: • Is 100% transparent• Invites proposals from all quarters but very

quickly narrows the list in order to meet end 2003 deadline

• Maximizes payments to the State and the value of the privatized entity

• Leaves the buyer with management flexibility to perform needed restructuring consistent with social protection norms

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