US appeals court sides with Argentina
16/8/2025 6:30
A U.S. appeals court on
Friday granted Argentina's request to put on temporary hold a
judge's order that it turn over its 51% stake in oil and gas
company YPF to partially satisfy a $16.1 billion
judgment won by two investors.
In a brief order, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in
Manhattan stayed U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska's June 30
turnover order while Argentina appeals.
Friday's order provides a reprieve for Argentine President
Javier Milei's government, which warned of irreparable harm and
economic instability if it gave up its stake in YPF, the
country's largest energy company.
Argentina is separately appealing the $16.1 billion
judgment, which Preska awarded in September 2023 to Petersen
Energia Inversora and Eton Park Capital Management.
The investors are represented by litigation funder
Burford Capital, which would share in their damages.
Lawyers for Petersen and Eton Park did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
Friday's order did not provide reasons for the stay,
which should last at least a few months. Argentina's next legal
filing related to YPF is due on September 25, court records
show.
The dispute stemmed from Argentina's 2012 decision to
seize the YPF stake from Spain's Repsol without making
a tender offer to minority shareholders.
Argentina had argued that the YPF shares were immune
from turnover under the federal Foreign Sovereign Immunities
Act.
The U.S. government sided with Argentina, saying a
resolution of the dispute should not be rushed and potentially
interfere with relations between the countries.
Lawyers for the investors countered that a commercial
activity exception to immunity, together with Argentina's "many
years" of evasion, justified a turnover.
In her June 30 order, Preska said Argentina's control
over the YPF shares triggered the exception, and the country
could not simply invoke its own laws to prevent a turnover.
A spokesperson for the Argentine government said the
country welcomed Friday's order, and confident the $16.1 billion
damages award would also be overturned.
|