Oil prices spiked early on Wednesday morning in Asia as President Trump announced a “total and complete blockade of all sanctioned oil tankers going into, and out of, Venezuela.”
At the time of writing, West Texas Intermediate crude futures had climbed 1.25% on the news to trade at $55.96, reflecting heightened market risk premiums amid fears that more Venezuelan supply will be taken offline.
In the same post, Trump labeled the Venezuelan government a “foreign terrorist organization”, justifying the move as part of an effort to combat illicit activities that he alleges are tied to the Maduro regime, including drug smuggling and human trafficking. He added that the “largest Armada ever assembled in the history of South America” will only get bigger until the country returns oil, land, and assets that Trump alleges belong to the U.S.
The Venezuelan government has yet to issue an official response to Trump’s latest escalation, though President Nicolás Maduro had earlier dismissed U.S. actions as attempts to colonize Venezuela’s vast oil wealth.
While the blockade targets only sanctioned vessels, part of a long-standing “shadow fleet” used to evade restrictions, it could disrupt a significant portion of Venezuela’s roughly 850,000 barrels per day in exports, primarily to China. Chevron’s licensed operations sending crude to the U.S. are expected to remain unaffected for now.
This action comes less than a week after U.S. forces seized a sanctioned oil tanker off Venezuela’s coast, part of a broader pressure campaign aimed at crippling the South American nation’s oil-dependent economy.
The oil market had been trading near multi-year lows, with prices pressured by signs of potential progress in Russia-Ukraine peace talks and weak economic data coming out of China. The broader bearish sentiment in markets has kept the upside risk to oil prices limited and, short of further action to back up Trump’s latest rhetoric, there is unlikely to be a major rally.
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