January 14, 2026

Maduro ouster sparks Venezuelan stock market boom

maduro ouster sparks venezuelan stock market boom
Photo source: France 24

Venezuela’s main stock index, the IBC, has rocketed more than 130 per cent to all-time highs since U.S. forces seized ex-president Nicolás Maduro on January 3.

The gauge surged from roughly 2,000 points year-start to near 6,000, building on 2025’s 1,644 per cent leap amid thin trading volumes.​

Traders anticipate sanctions relief unlocking oil investments via Chevron and Repsol, potentially lifting output to 1.5-2 million barrels daily within two years after years of crisis. U.S. ETF provider Teucrium filed SEC papers last Friday for a pioneering fund tracking Venezuelan-exposed firms.​

“In what is a fluid environment, we currently believe that Venezuela is more likely to experience regime continuity with behavioral realignment, rather than an outright democratic transition or system collapse,” BMI said in a note. “A pliant Venezuela would allow the U.S. to reinforce its regional hegemony, secure access to the oil sector on very favourable terms.”​

venezuela stocks
Photo source: MSN

Bonds from the government and PdVSA have rallied too, as creditors eye debt workouts for $150-170 billion in claims defaulted since 2017.​

“Investors began to price in Maduro’s removal from power as a precondition for sanctions relief and eventually a restructuring deal,” said Anthony Simond of Aberdeen.​

The market stays small and illiquid, prone to sharp swings like the 50 per cent daily post-seizure jump.​

“Because Venezuela’s markets are thinly traded, even small shifts in expectations can cause large price moves,” Alice Blue of TradingView noted. “The rally reflects hope and speculation, not confirmed outcomes.”​

“At this stage, the rally appears to be largely tactical, rather than the start of a structural re-rating,” said Jeff Grills of Aegon Asset Management.​

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