The $100 billion mirage: why Venezuela’s oil won’t save the market

The $100 billion mirage: why Venezuela’s oil won’t save the market


The risk facing U.S. policy in Venezuela is no longer that pressure failed to produce change. It is that Washington and the market have misread the nature of the change it produced. President Donald Trump‘s January 3 exfiltration of Nicolás Maduro, followed by his calls for $100 billion in U.S. oil industry investment to “take back” and revive the sector, has sparked speculative optimism. 

For investors and U.S. Gulf Coast refiners, the coming disappointment will be balance-sheet driven. The current debate remains trapped in a familiar post-conflict framework that emphasizes elections and aid. What this misses is fundamental: Venezuela’s oil sector is not merely damaged; it was deliberately repurposed. Over two decades, it became the circulatory system of a criminalized, rent-extracting bureaucracy designed to reward loyalty and resist transparency.

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