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Italy's Eni Said to Weigh Sale of Mexican Oil Stake to Qatar

Eni, Qatar Are Said to Hold Talks for Deal on Giant Mexico Field

(Bloomberg) -- Eni SpA is in talks to sell a stake in its giant oil discovery in Mexico to Qatar Petroleum International, according to people with knowledge of the plans.

The Italian oil major, which currently holds 100 percent of the offshore find in Campeche Bay and expects to start production in early 2019, would sell 20 percent to 35 percent to Qatar Petroleum, the people said, asking not to be named because the negotiations aren’t public. Eni is also in talks with other potential suitors, the people said.

Eni declined to comment, and Qatar Petroleum didn’t respond to calls and emails seeking comment after business hours. Eni shares fell 0.1 percent at 11:30 a.m. in Milan, trading at 14.9 euros.

A deal would be "positive news for the company, as it reduces capital outlay ahead of first oil in 2019," said Alessandro Pozzi, an analyst at Mediobanca in London. "It’s yet more evidence that the dual exploration model stands as a key pillar of the company’s upstream strategy, which remains under-appreciated by the market."

Eni has sought to sell minority stakes in fields it operates to fund future development and support dividends, generating $9 billion in the last four years with the strategy it calls the dual exploration model. The Rome-based company, which has boasted record production and a string of discoveries including the giant Zohr gas field in Egypt, won the area in Mexico’s second-ever oil auction in 2015.

The deal would mark the first Mexico farm-out, a joint venture in which help in developing an oil area is exchanged for a stake, by companies other than Petroleos Mexicanos since the country opened its oil industry to competition in 2013, ending three-quarters of a century of state monopoly over exploration and production.

Government Change

Such agreements could become more common in Mexico. Presidential frontrunner Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has said that he will stop holding oil auctions if he wins Mexico’s July 1 election, potentially leaving farm-outs among the only options for entering Mexican waters. China’s Cnooc Ltd. has also said it will seek to farm out blocks it won in Mexico’s first deep-water oil auction in 2016.

If negotiations are successful, Qatar Petroleum would hold an interest in an area comprising the Amoca, Mizton and Tecoalli shallow-water oil fields in the southern Gulf of Mexico, which Eni estimates may hold the equivalent of 2 billion barrels of oil.

The Italian driller has picked up blocks in subsequent tenders in Mexico, including a deep-water prospect in partnership with Qatar Petroleum. For its part, Qatar Petroleum nabbed three other blocks in the same bidding round in January.

Eni is among a number of European drillers that have swarmed Mexico’s newly opened oil territory. An auction Last month saw blocks awarded to the U.K.’s BP Plc, France’s Total SA, Spain’s Repsol SA, Lukoil PJSC and DEA Deutsche Erdoel AG of Germany, among others. The next tenders, including one for onshore areas and another for shale, will be held in July and September, respectively -- prior to the end of President Enrique Pena Nieto’s term.

To contact the reporters on this story: Amy Stillman in Mexico City at astillman7@bloomberg.net, Chiara Albanese in Rome at calbanese10@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Marino at dmarino4@bloomberg.net, Jerrold Colten at jcolten@bloomberg.net, Carlos Caminada

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