Carlyle hires Goldman Sachs for Lukoil asset bid

LONDON, ⁠Dec 17 (Reuters) – U.S. private equity giant Carlyle ⁠has hired Goldman Sachs to work on its bid for Lukoil assets, ⁠two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday, as the ​race for the sanctioned Russian oil firm’s overseas portfolio ‍heats up.

At least a dozen potential suitors have expressed interest in buying Lukoil assets, including Carlyle, U.S. oil majors Exxon Mobil and Chevron, Abu Dhabi ​conglomerate IHC, and Saudi Arabia’s Midad Energy, sources have said.

Both Carlyle and Goldman Sachs declined to comment.

Lukoil is looking to sell its foreign assets after ​the United States crippled its operations with new sanctions in ⁠October aimed at pressuring Russia to end its war in ‌Ukraine.

The U.S. Treasury has said any buyer would need its clearance for the ⁠purchase and has given Lukoil ​until January 17 to conclude talks.

The assets are valued at ‌about $22 billion, spanning oilfields, refineries and thousands of fuel stations worldwide.

Carlyle – one of the world’s ‍biggest private equity, alternative asset management and financial services firms – has $474 billion of assets under management, including $20 billion across oil, gas, power, renewables and infrastructure.

The U.S. Treasury has already blocked two bidders – Gunvor and U.S. bank Xtellus Partners – from buying Lukoil assets, highlighting the geopolitical hurdles involved in a potential acquisition.

(Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov; ⁠Additional reporting by Anousha Sakoui; ‌Editing by Joe ⁠Bavier)