Marketdash

Venezuela's Oil Comeback Could Shake Energy Markets — ETFs Split on What It Means

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 days ago
Oil prices and oil stocks moved in opposite directions Monday as investors wrestled with what a Venezuelan oil recovery could mean for supply and U.S. energy companies.

The oil market served up a puzzle on Monday. Crude-linked ETFs slipped lower while energy equity ETFs rallied hard, a split that perfectly captures the tension between what Venezuela means for oil prices versus what it means for oil companies.

Funds tracking crude itself, like the United States Oil Fund (USO) and the United States Brent Oil Fund (BNO), edged down as futures dipped, with Brent hovering around $61 per barrel.

Meanwhile, energy equity ETFs told a completely different story. The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE), SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production ETF (XOP), and Vanguard Energy ETF (VDE) all jumped more than 2%. Investors were betting less on immediate supply risks and more on what U.S. energy companies stand to gain from rebuilding Venezuela's battered oil infrastructure.

Two Ways to Read the Venezuela Story

The U.S. seizure of power from Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro is undeniably a big geopolitical moment. But what does it actually mean for oil?

Goldman Sachs, according to Bloomberg, warned that any meaningful recovery in Venezuelan oil output will be slow and incomplete. The country's infrastructure is degraded, and getting production back online requires massive upstream investment. The bank kept its 2026 oil price forecasts steady at $56 per barrel for Brent and $52 for West Texas Intermediate.

But here's the catch: Goldman also flagged that potential increases in Venezuelan production beyond 2027 add downside risk to long-term oil prices, especially when you factor in recent production gains from the U.S. and Russia.

For energy equity ETFs, the immediate reaction is all about capital spending and reconstruction. President Donald Trump has floated the idea that U.S. companies could pour billions into restoring Venezuela's oil sector. That's good news for the large American energy firms that dominate sector funds like XLE and VDE.

Crude ETFs, on the other hand, are more attuned to supply expectations and futures pricing. Even the distant possibility of additional barrels down the road can ripple through the forward curve, which directly impacts funds like USO and BNO that roll futures contracts month to month.

The Long Game

Venezuela sits on the world's largest proven oil reserves. At its peak, the country pumped roughly 3 million barrels per day. Today, output has collapsed to under 1 million barrels daily, and any recovery would take years, not months.

Still, the situation raises a broader question for oil markets: What happens when politically sidelined producers start coming back online just as global supply is already expanding?

For now, energy equity ETFs are celebrating the potential upside for U.S. companies. Crude ETFs, meanwhile, are quietly calculating what those extra barrels could mean for prices. Same event, two very different stories.

Venezuela's Oil Comeback Could Shake Energy Markets — ETFs Split on What It Means

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 days ago
Oil prices and oil stocks moved in opposite directions Monday as investors wrestled with what a Venezuelan oil recovery could mean for supply and U.S. energy companies.

The oil market served up a puzzle on Monday. Crude-linked ETFs slipped lower while energy equity ETFs rallied hard, a split that perfectly captures the tension between what Venezuela means for oil prices versus what it means for oil companies.

Funds tracking crude itself, like the United States Oil Fund (USO) and the United States Brent Oil Fund (BNO), edged down as futures dipped, with Brent hovering around $61 per barrel.

Meanwhile, energy equity ETFs told a completely different story. The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE), SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production ETF (XOP), and Vanguard Energy ETF (VDE) all jumped more than 2%. Investors were betting less on immediate supply risks and more on what U.S. energy companies stand to gain from rebuilding Venezuela's battered oil infrastructure.

Two Ways to Read the Venezuela Story

The U.S. seizure of power from Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro is undeniably a big geopolitical moment. But what does it actually mean for oil?

Goldman Sachs, according to Bloomberg, warned that any meaningful recovery in Venezuelan oil output will be slow and incomplete. The country's infrastructure is degraded, and getting production back online requires massive upstream investment. The bank kept its 2026 oil price forecasts steady at $56 per barrel for Brent and $52 for West Texas Intermediate.

But here's the catch: Goldman also flagged that potential increases in Venezuelan production beyond 2027 add downside risk to long-term oil prices, especially when you factor in recent production gains from the U.S. and Russia.

For energy equity ETFs, the immediate reaction is all about capital spending and reconstruction. President Donald Trump has floated the idea that U.S. companies could pour billions into restoring Venezuela's oil sector. That's good news for the large American energy firms that dominate sector funds like XLE and VDE.

Crude ETFs, on the other hand, are more attuned to supply expectations and futures pricing. Even the distant possibility of additional barrels down the road can ripple through the forward curve, which directly impacts funds like USO and BNO that roll futures contracts month to month.

The Long Game

Venezuela sits on the world's largest proven oil reserves. At its peak, the country pumped roughly 3 million barrels per day. Today, output has collapsed to under 1 million barrels daily, and any recovery would take years, not months.

Still, the situation raises a broader question for oil markets: What happens when politically sidelined producers start coming back online just as global supply is already expanding?

For now, energy equity ETFs are celebrating the potential upside for U.S. companies. Crude ETFs, meanwhile, are quietly calculating what those extra barrels could mean for prices. Same event, two very different stories.