The Caracas General index is up 260 % since mid-December, but the only tradeable exposure for Americans is Chevron—already producing 20 % of Venezuela’s oil and cleared to ramp another 50 % within 24 months.
What actually sparked the 260 % move?
After the U.S.-backed removal of Nicolás Maduro on 20 December, traders priced in a three-fold catalyst: sanctions relief, dollarisation of the economy, and a crude-production rebound toward the 3 million bpd level last seen in 2008. With daily volume in Caracas still under $5 million, a handful of local pension funds rotating back into equities was enough to deliver the parabolic rally.
Why the Caracas exchange is still untouchable
- No ADRs or dual listings exist; U.S. sanctions block Cede & Co. custody.
- Hyperinflation accounting makes EPS meaningless—companies restate earnings in petros, bolívars, and parallel dollars simultaneously.
- Settlement risk: the local clearing house, CEVAL, still operates on a T+3 physical certificate model.
Chevron: the only sanctioned-proof proxy
Chevron is the only super-major that never left. Its joint ventures with PDVSA already lift 800 k–1 million bpd, roughly one-fifth of national output. Vice-chair Mark Nelson told analysts the company can add 50 % more barrels “within our disciplined capex framework” once Washington raises the current 200 k bpd cap. The incremental flow would add an estimated $1.2 billion of annual free cash flow at $70 Brent, equal to a 7 % boost to enterprise value—before any dividend uplift.
Bond workaround: 43 ¢ on the dollar
Venezuela’s defaulted 2034 sovereigns trade around 43 ¢, double the August quote, pricing in a 55 % recovery under a hypothetical oil-revenue restructuring. Holders are betting output climbs toward 2 million bpd and GDP doubles to $120 billion within five years, freeing up $8 billion of annual coupon service. Even a 30 % recovery implies a 14 % internal rate of return—attractive if you can stomach hold-out litigation risk.
Key risk matrix
- Policy whiplash: A 2026 Congress flip or 2028 White House change could re-impose full sanctions overnight.
- Security premium: ELN guerrillas still control 20 % of eastern pipeline routes.
- Currency regime: Dollarisation talk is just that—Caracas still prints bolívars to pay salaries.
Bottom line for portfolios
Unless you have a Cayman vehicle and a tolerance for custody chaos, the only liquid Venezuela exposure today is Chevron—already cash-flowing the upside and yielding 4.3 % while you wait. Treat the 260 % Caracas fireworks as a sentiment gauge, not an allocation target.
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