Here's an interesting disconnect: Betting markets think there's a coin-flip chance the U.S. launches military operations in Venezuela within the next few months. Oil markets, on the other hand, are trading like geopolitical risk in Latin America doesn't exist.
According to Polymarket, traders are pricing in a 29% chance that the U.S. begins a military engagement with Venezuela by January 15, 2026. That probability climbs to 40% by January 31, and hits 52% by March 31, 2026. In plain English, prediction markets are saying it's more likely than not that President Donald Trump orders some form of military action in Venezuela before spring.
Oil markets? They're not buying it. West Texas Intermediate crude, tracked by the United States Oil Fund (USO), is trading around $57 a barrel, down roughly 22% this year. Earlier this week, prices briefly touched $55 per barrel, the lowest level since January 2021. That's created serious headaches for U.S. shale producers and reinforced the narrative that we've got plenty of global supply chasing weakening demand.
So energy markets seem largely unconcerned about Venezuela conflict risk, even as betting markets suggest otherwise. Meanwhile, public opinion tells yet another story. Recent polling shows most voters oppose Trump's Venezuela strategy and want Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to resign.
Why Oil Isn't Pricing This In
"I do not think oil prices reflect a meaningful risk of U.S.–Venezuela armed conflict," said Jeff Krimmel, energy analyst and founder of Krimmel Strategy Group, in an exclusive interview with MarketDash on Friday.
"That's mostly because for the past several decades, the U.S. has shown very little interest in being militarily entangled in what have historically been incredibly messy South American politics."
Krimmel noted that while tensions have grabbed more headlines lately, the probability of escalation, and what it would actually mean for oil, hasn't worked its way into crude pricing yet.
If military intervention does happen, the immediate impact would likely be bullish for oil. History shows that armed conflict in oil-producing countries typically triggers price spikes. And Venezuela, despite the complete deterioration of its national oil industry under Nicolás Maduro's regime, still sits on the world's largest proven oil reserves.
The short-term logic is straightforward, according to Krimmel.
"A conflict would take oil off the market," he explained. "Reduced supply would translate to higher prices."
"This would benefit US oil producers through improved revenues and cash flows," he added.
But the medium to long-term picture gets more complicated. It all depends on the political outcome.
If conflict eventually brings meaningful political reform, you could see foreign investment return, infrastructure get rebuilt, and Venezuela reintegrate into global oil markets more fully. That scenario would eventually increase supply and put downward pressure on prices. If instead you get a shaky ceasefire with minimal reform, Krimmel said the future would probably look a lot like today: a constrained, inefficient Venezuelan oil sector that's basically irrelevant to global supply calculations.
A Blind Spot Worth Watching
With prediction markets now signaling essentially even odds of military action by early spring, investors face an uncomfortable question: Is the oil market ignoring a geopolitical risk that could materialize very quickly?
Right now, crude sits near multi-year lows, seemingly unbothered by any of this. But if the betting markets are picking up on something real, and not just generating speculative noise, this disconnect between geopolitics and oil pricing might not last much longer.
The market has been wrong before about dismissing tail risks. And Venezuela, for all its dysfunction, represents a potentially significant supply disruption if things actually escalate. Whether that 52% probability means anything, or whether it's just prediction market participants getting carried away, is the question oil traders will need to answer soon.




