Here's the question everyone in oil markets started asking after Nicolás Maduro's capture: Will Venezuelan barrels flood back into global markets and tank crude prices?
Wall Street's knee-jerk reaction was yes. Analysts rushed to frame Venezuela's potential comeback as fresh supply hitting an already saturated market. But energy strategist Jeff Krimmel, PhD, owner of Krimmel Strategy Group, isn't buying that narrative.
"I do expect U.S. export restrictions," Krimmel told MarketDash in an exclusive interview Tuesday. His point wasn't about whether Venezuelan supply would eventually increase. It was about how tightly Washington plans to control that supply for political purposes.
"Part of the motivation is to gain leverage against states that the Trump administration views as adversaries," he explained.
Think of it less as opening the oil spigot and more as installing a valve with Washington holding the handle. Krimmel expects this shift to accelerate the regionalization of global oil trade, with barrels staying within their respective hemispheres rather than flowing freely based on price signals.
Washington Takes Control of the Barrels
Late Tuesday, President Donald Trump announced that interim Venezuelan authorities had agreed to transfer between 30 million and 50 million barrels of sanctioned crude to the United States. That's not a small amount—it's a significant escalation in how directly Washington involves itself in Venezuela's oil flows.
Here's how it would work: The crude gets shipped to U.S. ports, sold at current market prices, and the proceeds placed under American oversight. Trump said the White House would control the funds to ensure they benefit "the people of Venezuela and the United States."
According to the New York Times, this initiative is unfolding alongside broader U.S. pressure on Caracas to boot out official advisers from China, Russia, Cuba, and Iran, while actively redirecting Venezuelan crude away from Beijing.
That context matters because it validates Krimmel's core argument: Venezuelan oil isn't being positioned as free-flowing supply that responds to global price signals. It's being treated as a politically managed asset, with destination, timing, and revenue oversight all shaped by U.S. policy.
Rather than flooding international markets indiscriminately, Venezuelan barrels appear set to move within clearly defined geopolitical lanes. The goal aligns with Washington's broader objective of constraining rivals' access to energy supplies and reshaping global oil trade along regional lines.
When Supply Arrives Matters as Much as How Much
Krimmel doesn't dispute that Venezuelan production will climb from here.
"Supply can only go up, given that the Venezuelan oil sector was already struggling and in perpetual decline," he said.
Where he breaks from consensus is on what that means for crude prices.
"By the time new Venezuelan production comes online, the global supply surplus will have eroded considerably, if not evaporated completely," Krimmel explained. "The world may have use for these new barrels without driving prices further down from here."
It's a timing argument, essentially. Yes, more barrels are coming. But if they arrive after the current surplus disappears, they won't necessarily pressure prices lower—they'll just fill emerging demand.
Who Actually Makes Money from Venezuela's Oil Recovery?
Krimmel sees oilfield service companies positioned to benefit earliest from any Venezuelan recovery.
"International service companies may benefit considerably, with U.S.-domiciled Baker Hughes Co. (BKR), Halliburton Co. (HAL), and Weatherford International plc (WFRD) all in the mix," he said.
That makes sense—Venezuela's oil infrastructure needs serious work after years of underinvestment and sanctions. Service companies get paid to fix things before production ramps up.
He was more cautious about U.S. producers getting involved.
"The only U.S. operators I see even hypothetically getting involved at scale would be ExxonMobil Corp. (XOM), Chevron Corp. (CVX), and ConocoPhillips (COP)," Krimmel said, adding that "there are reasons to be skeptical that any of these would overhaul their capital programs in light of the recent developments in Venezuela."
Translation: The majors might kick the tires, but don't expect them to suddenly pivot their entire investment strategies around Venezuela. The political risk remains high, and capital discipline is still the name of the game in big oil.




