The Big Picture: Venezuela Changes Everything
Markets got a geopolitical jolt this morning as President Trump forcibly extracted Venezuelan President Maduro, who's now facing a court in New York. Trump announced the U.S. will run Venezuela and invest billions in its oil sector. And this isn't just another Latin American adventure. We're talking about the world's largest oil reserves: roughly 303 billion barrels of crude sitting underground.
The momentum crowd is going wild, sending energy stocks soaring in premarket trading. But before you FOMO into these names, let's talk about what's actually happening here versus what the hype machine wants you to believe.
The Clear Winners: Energy Service Companies and Producers
Let's start with Halliburton Co (HAL), which gapped up sharply in early trading. As a major oil service company, Halliburton stands to capture significant business as Venezuela attempts to rebuild its shattered oil infrastructure. The chart shows HAL is now overbought, making it vulnerable to pullbacks. But the thesis remains solid for patient investors.
Chevron Corp (CVX) is perhaps the most obvious beneficiary. They're the only major U.S. oil company currently operating in Venezuela, controlling roughly 25% of the country's oil production. They've maintained presence through the darkest years, and now that positioning looks prescient.
ConocoPhillips (COP) has an interesting angle. They're holding about $10 billion in claims against Venezuela for past expropriations. With interest and fees, those claims could be worth closer to $20 billion. Suddenly, what looked like dead money on the balance sheet might become very real cash.
Other service companies jumping include SLB NV (SLB), another major oil service provider that should see increased activity.
On the refining side, Valero Energy Corp (VLO) and PBF Energy Inc (PBF) stand to benefit from increased availability of Venezuelan heavy crude oil, which their refineries are configured to process.
For investors seeking higher risk and reward, two microcaps are worth noting. Rusoro Mining Ltd (RMLFF) owns gold mining properties in Venezuela, including 95% of the Choco 10 mine and 50% of the Isidora mine. Gold Reserve Ltd (GDRZF), a Bermuda company, has been involved in gold and copper mining in Venezuela and holds expropriation claims. They currently have no active mining operations there, but that could change quickly.
ETF investors might consider VanEck Oil Services ETF (OIH), which provides broad exposure to the oil services sector.
All these stocks and the ETF are gapping up aggressively in premarket trading. The momo crowd is buying with both hands. But here's where prudent investors need to pump the brakes.
Why the Hype Is Getting Ahead of Reality
Let's inject some cold water into the euphoria. Years of leftist rule have left Venezuela's oil infrastructure in complete shambles. The country is producing significantly less oil now than it was a decade ago. Bringing production back online will require tens of billions of dollars and a very long timeline. Anyone buying today expecting a quick production surge is going to be disappointed.
There hasn't been significant resistance in Venezuela so far, but that doesn't mean it won't emerge. The U.S. has given presidential powers to Venezuelan Vice President Rodríguez, who has spent her entire life as an anti-U.S. crusader. That's an interesting choice, to put it mildly.
Now, about that flawed math you're seeing everywhere. Momo gurus are multiplying 303 billion barrels by $57 per barrel to get $17.3 trillion, then claiming the U.S. just acquired $8.7 trillion if it captures 50%. This is financial fantasy.
Venezuelan oil is highly viscous heavy crude with high sulfur content. It's expensive to extract. The actual margin for oil companies might only be $5 to $7 per barrel. And those 300 billion barrels aren't sitting in a warehouse waiting to be shipped. They're deep underground, some in formations that will be extremely challenging to access. The difference between oil in the ground and oil in tankers is measured in decades and dollars.
The Losers: Canadian Producers Take a Hit
For every winner, there's a loser. Canadian oil companies Suncor Energy Inc (SU) and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd (CNQ) are notable casualties. More Venezuelan supply means more competition for their heavy crude. The short side might actually be easier money here than chasing the crowded long trades.
The Real Strategic Victory: Dollar Dominance
Here's what actually matters beyond the stock moves. Venezuela will no longer be selling oil to China in yuans. For the dollar to maintain its reserve currency status, oil needs to keep trading in dollars. China has been working hard to topple dollar hegemony, and they'd made significant progress by persuading Venezuela to sell oil in yuans. That's now over.
China is the big loser in the short term. Expect U.S.-China tensions to ratchet higher. That creates some interesting derivative plays. Intel Corp (INTC) benefits from its U.S.-based foundries as reshoring accelerates. Rare earth miners like MP Materials Corp (MP), USA Rare Earth Inc (USAR), and Critical Metals Corp (CRML) also benefit from reduced Chinese leverage.
Markets are full of crosscurrents. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSM) would normally be down on Venezuela news given rising U.S.-China tensions, but it's actually up because a major Wall Street bank raised its price target by 35%. That's the market for you.
Meanwhile, there's jubilation in Chinese media, with many claiming the U.S. just handed China a blueprint to capture Taiwan. The momo crowd is completely oblivious to this angle.
Precious Metals: Short-Term Winners, Long-Term Question Mark
Gold and silver are rallying on the Venezuela situation as safe-haven demand kicks in. But prudent investors should know that Venezuela's central bank holds 161 tonnes of gold. Another 31 tonnes of Venezuelan gold sits in Bank of England vaults, tied up in litigation. If some of this gold gets sold to fund reconstruction or settle claims, it could trigger a major dip in precious metals markets.
Tech Sideshow: Nvidia and AMD at CES
In other news, both NVIDIA Corp (NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices Inc (AMD) CEOs are giving keynote speeches at CES. Historically, these speeches have propelled not just NVDA and AMD but all AI stocks higher. Wall Street is front-running, buying AI stocks hoping to sell them to retail investors at elevated prices. It's a familiar game.
Jobs Report Friday
Friday brings the first jobs report not impacted by the government shutdown. That will be worth watching for clean economic data.
Magnificent Seven Money Flows
Most portfolios are now heavily concentrated in Mag 7 stocks, so early money flows matter. In early trading, money flows are positive in Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), Alphabet Inc Class C (GOOG), NVIDIA Corp (NVDA), and Tesla Inc (TSLA).
Money flows are neutral in Microsoft Corp (MSFT) and Meta Platforms Inc (META).
Money flows are negative in Apple Inc (AAPL).
In early trading, money flows are positive in SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 (QQQ).
Following Smart Money Versus Momo Crowd
Investors can gain an edge by knowing money flows in SPY and QQQ. An even bigger edge comes from tracking when smart money is buying stocks, gold, and oil. The most popular ETF for gold is SPDR Gold Trust (GLD). The most popular ETF for silver is iShares Silver Trust (SLV). The most popular ETF for oil is United States Oil ETF (USO).
Oil Market Note
OPEC+ decided to leave production unchanged, adding another data point for oil market bulls to digest.
Bitcoin Sees Buying
Bitcoin (BTC) is seeing buying pressure as investors seek alternatives amid geopolitical uncertainty.
What Investors Should Do Now
This Venezuela situation is a major development. Take time to fully grasp its implications in both the short and long term. The media is flooding with highly flawed analysis driven by agendas that aren't aligned with your investment success.
Consider continuing to hold quality long-term positions. Based on your individual risk tolerance, maintain a protection band consisting of cash, Treasury bills, or short-term tactical trades, along with short to medium-term hedges. This lets you protect capital while still participating in upside.
You can determine your protection bands by adding cash to hedges. The high band of protection is appropriate for older or conservative investors. The low band suits younger or aggressive investors. If you don't hedge, your total cash level should be higher than stated above but significantly less than cash plus hedges combined.
A protection band of 0% would be very bullish, indicating full investment with no cash. A protection band of 100% would be very bearish, suggesting aggressive protection with cash and hedges or aggressive short selling.
Remember: you cannot take advantage of new opportunities if you're not holding enough cash. When adjusting hedge levels, consider using partial stop quantities for individual stock positions and allowing wider stops on remaining quantities, especially for high beta stocks that move more than the market.
Traditional 60/40 Portfolio Considerations
Probability-based risk reward adjusted for inflation doesn't favor long duration strategic bond allocation right now.
Those sticking to the traditional 60% stocks and 40% bonds allocation should focus on high-quality bonds with five-year duration or less. Investors willing to add sophistication might consider using bond ETFs as tactical positions rather than strategic positions at this time.




