Colombia’s Monómeros Wins Approval to Reorganise Over COP860 Billion in Debt
Colombia
Key Facts
—Regulatory green light. Colombia’s Superintendencia de Sociedades approved a court-supervised reorganisation covering COP860.6 billion (US$222 million) in liabilities.
—Debt reduction. Total liabilities fell 14.8 percent from roughly COP1.1 trillion, driven by lower obligations to related-party companies.
—Strategic asset. The Barranquilla-based firm supplies over 80 percent of Colombia’s fertiliser inputs, making it vital for food production and prices.
—Sanctions overlay. The company is owned by Venezuela’s state petrochemical firm Pequiven, and any ownership transfer requires US Treasury approval.
—Sale negotiations. Bogotá and Caracas are finalising a state-to-state purchase agreement, with a confidentiality pact already signed.
Colombia’s corporate regulator has approved a Monómeros debt reorganisation covering COP860.6 billion (US$222 million), a decisive step that keeps the country’s dominant fertiliser supplier operational while Bogotá and Caracas negotiate a politically sensitive ownership transfer under Washington’s sanctions watch.
What the reorganisation approval actually means
Colombia’s Superintendencia de Sociedades confirmed that Monómeros Colombo Venezolanos S.A. has reduced its total liabilities by 14.8 percent, from roughly COP1.1 trillion to approximately COP860.6 billion. The regulator stated the company is no longer technically insolvent and is meeting its financial obligations, though it remains under close supervision while the formal agreement with creditors is finalised.
A senior SuperSociedades official estimated that roughly three months remained in the reorganisation stage, with a final agreement expected around June, provided negotiations over more than COP100 billion in outstanding obligations can be wrapped up. The process operates under Colombia’s Law 1116 of 2006, which prioritises preserving viable enterprises over liquidating them.
The Bogotá Superior Tribunal had already upheld the regulator’s authority in March 2025, rejecting a constitutional challenge filed by Monómeros to halt the reorganisation. That ruling confirmed SuperSociedades’ power to intervene when a company ceases payments, reinforcing legal predictability for creditors and investors navigating Colombian corporate distress.
How a fertiliser giant became a regulatory ward
Monómeros is headquartered in Barranquilla and controlled by Pequiven, a subsidiary of Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA. It supplies more than 80 percent of the fertilisers and agrochemical inputs used in Colombia, making it systemically important for the country’s agricultural sector and food prices.
The company’s troubles escalated in September 2021, when SuperSociedades first assumed control citing a critical financial situation and risk of insolvency. By that point Monómeros already owed suppliers more than US$30 million, and former board chair Carmen Elisa Hernández told Reuters that Nicolás Maduro’s push to reassert control had unsettled key suppliers who stopped providing inputs on favourable credit terms.
Losses deepened through 2022, reaching more than COP83.2 billion by September of that year. The regulator intervened again in November 2024 amid renewed solvency fears, and by March 2025 Monómeros was formally admitted into reorganisation under Law 1116 after courts confirmed it had ceased payments and needed structured rescue to avoid bankruptcy.
The sanctions puzzle that shapes every decision
Monómeros’ finances are inseparable from US sanctions on Venezuela. In 2019, the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control granted the company a special licence allowing unrestricted financial operations with Colombian and international banks, plus access to 120-day commercial financing for raw material purchases.
That OFAC licence expired in 2025, temporarily raising costs and triggering demands for immediate payment from some counterparties. Despite the squeeze, SuperSociedades noted the company still managed to cut its total liabilities to COP860.6 billion during that period, a sign of underlying operational resilience.
The sanctions regime now effectively sits at the negotiating table. Maduro confirmed in July 2025 that his government is finalising a sale of Monómeros to Colombia, and Bloomberg reported that any transaction requires US Treasury approval because the firm remains under sanctions.
Colombian state oil firm Ecopetrol has separately faced OFAC restrictions preventing it from purchasing Monómeros, even as it wrestles with COP1.7 trillion in disputed diesel-import taxes.
The Monómeros debt reorganisation and what it signals for investors
For outside investors assessing Colombian corporate risk, the Monómeros case demonstrates that regulators will use intervention and reorganisation powers aggressively when systemic supply chains are at stake, even for foreign state-owned firms. Courts have confirmed that SuperSociedades can push companies into reorganisation upon cessation of payments, reinforcing the regime’s authority.
The combination of emergency tools from Decree 560 of 2020 and formal Law 1116 procedures signals a policy bias toward restructuring rather than liquidation. That can be positive for bondholders and suppliers when the underlying business is strategic and cash-generative, as Monómeros clearly is.
The creditor structure adds another layer of complexity. Pequiven is Monómeros’ largest creditor, meaning Venezuela’s government sits on both sides of the restructuring table with significant leverage over the outcome. Colombia holds regulatory leverage through SuperSociedades, and Washington holds a third lever through OFAC, making this a three-way negotiation with local creditors and farmers as collateral stakeholders.
Food security meets geopolitics in Barranquilla
President Gustavo Petro’s government has explicitly linked Monómeros to food sovereignty, removing its representatives from the company’s board in late 2024 to signal opposition to any sale that might jeopardise domestic control over fertiliser supply. The regulator’s decision to place the firm under maximum supervision and then into reorganisation is framed as protecting Colombia’s agricultural supply chain, not just creditor interests.
The ownership saga mirrors the political thaw between Bogotá and Caracas. Under Colombia’s previous administration, Monómeros was controlled by the Venezuelan opposition aligned with Juan Guaidó, whose appointees faced accusations of mismanagement.
With diplomatic ties restored under Petro, Pequiven reasserted control, and the company has become a platform for state-to-state cooperation in fertilisers.
Maduro’s confirmation that Venezuela is selling Monómeros to Colombia positions the restructuring as a precursor to a bilateral strategic acquisition rather than a prelude to liquidation. Both governments signed a confidentiality agreement in July 2025 to advance the sale process, but the transaction remains contingent on navigating OFAC requirements and finalising the creditor agreement.
What to watch in the coming months
The immediate milestone is the final creditor agreement, expected around mid-2026, which must lock in new payment schedules and the 14.8 percent debt reduction already documented. Successful completion would allow Monómeros to exit the highest level of regulatory surveillance and normalise commercial relations with suppliers who had curtailed credit lines during the uncertainty.
The parallel sale negotiation between Bogotá and Caracas will be the larger story for markets. Any transfer of ownership requires structuring that satisfies OFAC, and the incoming administration of President-elect Abelardo De La Espriella, who has already dispatched his finance minister-designate to Washington for debt refinancing talks, will inherit this delicate triangular negotiation.
For global investors, Monómeros is a micro case with a macro message: Colombia’s approach to corporate distress increasingly weighs food security and supply-chain continuity alongside traditional creditor rights, and the state is willing to deploy its full regulatory toolkit to keep strategic assets operational.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is Monómeros so important to Colombia’s economy?
Monómeros supplies more than 80 percent of the fertilisers and agrochemical inputs used in Colombia. A collapse would directly affect food production and push up costs for the agricultural sector and basic staples, making the company systemically important for both food security and consumer prices.
How do US sanctions affect the Monómeros reorganisation?
Monómeros is owned by Venezuela’s state petrochemical firm Pequiven, placing it under US sanctions on PDVSA. An OFAC licence that previously allowed unrestricted financial operations expired in 2025, and any transfer of ownership now requires US Treasury approval, effectively giving Washington a seat at the negotiating table alongside Bogotá and Caracas.
What happens next with the Monómeros debt reorganisation?
A final creditor agreement is expected around mid-2026, covering more than COP100 billion in outstanding obligations. Once implemented, Monómeros can exit the highest level of regulatory surveillance, while parallel state-to-state sale negotiations between Colombia and Venezuela continue under OFAC’s oversight.
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