M. Juan Szabo [1] y Luis A. Pacheco [2]
Published Originally in Spanish in LA GRAN ALDEA
In a week of mixed signals, the oil market remained volatile, though within a narrow range close to $105/BBL — relatively low given the supply crisis. Investors continue to weigh the inflationary impact of the conflict on demand, as well as the risk that tensions will persist and oil and natural gas shortages will worsen. A sharper-than-expected drawdown in U.S. inventories barely triggered a brief price rebound.
Among the factors at play during the week:
• Reports of progress in negotiations with Iran, including announcements of talks with Oman to establish a “fair” toll system for transit through the Strait of Hormuz, were interpreted as a possible signal that the blockade might ease.
• A deteriorating global macroeconomic environment, with Europe posting its worst figures since 2023, China cutting crude imports, and the International Energy Agency (IEA) warning that the market could enter a “red zone” between July and August.
• Contingency measures adopted by several countries — including China, Japan, and the U.S. — through strategic reserves and fuel conservation programs have reduced demand by nearly 2 million barrels per day (2 MMbpd).
• An increase in U.S. oil exports and early indications of efforts to ramp up domestic production.
Against this backdrop, OPEC has announced production increases that are more symbolic than effective and that, for now, do not substantially alter the market’s perception of scarcity and fragility.
On the geopolitical front, the Trump-Xi summit’s main takeaway was the possibility of an understanding to entrench a bipolar framework, with both powers consolidating their influence in their respective spheres and dissipating the clouds generated by the trade war. Where the Middle East falls in this arrangement remains to be seen. In this context, Trump’s statements on Taiwan point in that direction and could broaden the U.S.’s room for maneuver in scenarios such as those involving Venezuela and Cuba.
Geopolitical Fundamentals
The Iran–U.S. conflict, which was originally aimed at neutralizing Tehran’s threat to regional stability, has evolved into a stranglehold on oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies to the rest of the world. It is estimated that, to date, roughly 1 billion barrels of oil and approximately 800 trillion cubic feet of natural gas have been withdrawn from the global market.
In response to this supply deficit — and beyond alternative pipeline routes in the region — several countries have reinforced contingency measures:
• Release of strategic reserves.
• Increased exports, as in the case of the U.S.
• Reducing dependence on Middle Eastern crude, as China and Japan are attempting to do.
• Fuel conservation measures, primarily in Asia and Europe, have become a reality.
• High energy prices have also reduced demand, despite its typical inelasticity.
• U.S. operators appear to have decided to increase production and to pressure Venezuela to accelerate its sluggish opening to private capital.
All of these responses are warranted, as experience and even futures market behavior suggest that even a rapid resolution of the blockade would not fully unwind the consequences of the prolonged disruption until well into 2027.
Although President Trump suspended further strikes against Iran to create space for diplomacy, the absence of concrete agreements on Iranian uranium enrichment and the proposed Strait tolls continue to fuel caution and anxiety in global markets. Over the weekend, the U.S. president signaled that his negotiators should proceed carefully and not rush to a deal, dampening rumors that an agreement was imminent. In any case, the oil market opened sharply lower on Monday, May 25.
The truth is that the original objective of the strikes on Iran — preventing Tehran’s regime from developing a nuclear weapon — has had an unintended consequence: Iran now understands that strategic control over the region’s energy supply may be an even more powerful weapon. This has reshuffled the balance of forces in unpredictable ways, upending the geopolitical chessboard.
Russia–Ukraine Conflict: Attacks on Energy Infrastructure
Global supply has also been affected by the ongoing Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian refineries, terminals, and storage facilities. The week witnessed one of the largest and most devastating long-range strike campaigns to date, bringing oil refining in central Russia to a near-complete halt and triggering severe fires at key export nodes. The affected facilities included:
• Ryazan Refinery.
• Kstovo Refinery (Lukoil).
• Nizhegorodnefteorgsintez plant, in the Nizhny Novgorod region.
• Syzran Refinery (Rosneft), in the Samara region.
• Novorossiysk marine terminal.
On the final day of the week, Ukraine successfully struck the port of Novorossiysk and the Sheskharis terminal, Russia’s fifth-largest oil export hub. The success of these strikes is reshaping the relative assessment of the war.
For its part, on May 24, 2026, Russia launched a large-scale missile and drone attack on Kyiv, causing significant casualties and destruction. The assault is among the largest attacks on the city since the start of the full-scale war.
OPEC+: Symbolic Measures and Demand Destruction
As for OPEC+ actions, which have been relegated to the background for now, a group of seven of the alliance’s leading producer countries is expected to discuss a modest output increase in July to stabilize depleted inventories — a symbolic gesture with little real impact on supply balances.
More effective than the OPEC+ announcements has been demand destruction, concentrated in cuts to air transport — eliminating unprofitable routes and flight frequencies. High jet fuel prices have squeezed low-cost carriers. Prices have also spurred greater use of coal and, to a lesser extent, renewable energy, contributing to the temporary destruction of hydrocarbon demand.
U.S.: Production, Drilling, and Inventories
In the U.S., while crude production has remained relatively stable, early signs of a supply response are emerging in a high-price environment that could prove durable. Among these signals are growing interest in federal land lease offerings in shale oil basins and, in the near term, an uptick in drilling activity. According to Baker Hughes, 10 oil drilling rigs were activated in Texas basins during the past week, while 3 gas rigs were taken out of service, resulting in a net increase of 7 units. If this becomes a trend, it could translate into an increase of approximately 300 Mbpd by the end of 2026.
U.S. commercial crude inventories fell by nearly 8 MMBBLs; however, against a global drawdown of more than 70 MMBBLs, they have lost the significance they once held before the current crisis.
Cuba: An Emerging Geopolitical Factor
A geopolitical development that appears to foreshadow possible military or political action is the situation in Cuba, where the current conditions of economic quarantine and naval siege imposed by the U.S. have backed the island’s government into a corner. It should be noted, however, that Cuba’s political situation — after more than 60 years of dictatorship — differs markedly from Venezuela’s, which led to the arrest of Maduro and his wife.
Price Dynamics
Crude oil prices fell this week after Washington and Tehran signaled progress in their dialogue. Additionally, Iran’s overtures to Oman to implement a toll system in the Strait of Hormuz — which Iranian officials described as fair and justified by the guidance and protection services both countries provide — were interpreted as an olive branch and prevented prices from escalating in line with global inventory levels. Most maritime experts consider such an arrangement contrary to international law.
At the close of the week:
Crude | Price (USD/BBL) |
Brent | $103,54 |
WTI | $96,60 |
A decline of more than 5% compared to the previous week’s close.
Venezuela
Plenty of Currency and Activity, but the Population Feels None of It
The Paradoxical Metamorphosis of the Regime
The metamorphosis of the Chavista regime from “revolutionary” government to an instrument of Washington’s decisions is a paradox that only the distance of history can explain. The current policy and economic framework of Venezuela’s interim government is marked by intensified U.S. guardianship and oversight.
Following the news is sufficient to find evidence of this 21st-century form of vassalage: the comments by Energy Secretary Chris Wright about the absence of a functioning banking system that must be resolved to achieve recovery; the direct involvement in managing the opening of the oil sector to private capital through the tool of licenses and pressure on potential investors; and the unusual military drill around the U.S. Embassy in Caracas, which included overflights by American military aircraft — all of which illustrate the erosion of the much-vaunted sovereignty of recent years.
This set of events generated a range of commentary, most notably the topic most discussed in financial circles: the possibility of dollarization as a solution to the “absence of a functional banking system.” There were also predictions that the U.S. military drill could foreshadow another extraction operation, similar to the one on January 3.
ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, and the Oil Sector Opening
The announcement that ExxonMobil is reportedly close to confirming its participation in at least six oil fields in Venezuela — four months after dismissing the country as an unattractive investment destination — tends to support the theory that the Trump administration is mounting pressure on the oil sector. Meanwhile, ConocoPhillips has stated that much still needs to change before Venezuela becomes an attractive place to invest.
Release of Political Prisoners
After Trump announced that all political prisoners would be released, Jorge Rodríguez communicated the release of 300 of them. Although only about forty of this large number have been independently verified, the step is significant: among those freed were metropolitan police officers, emblematic prisoners of the revolution, and part of the false Chavista narrative about responsibility for the violent events of the historic April 11, 2002 coup. These officers had been imprisoned for more than 20 years.
The Alex Saab Case
In a deeply Orwellian move, former minister Alex Saab was deported to the U.S. because he was a Colombian citizen with legal troubles. This claim contradicts the entire narrative of recent years, according to which Saab was not only Venezuelan but also a diplomatic representative of Nicolás Maduro. This is yet further evidence that Delcy Rodríguez’s political position now aligns with Washington’s wishes to the point of rewriting her own history.
Saab arrived in Miami under federal custody to face criminal charges, while the Venezuelan parliament simultaneously asserted that the businessman had maintained secret ties with U.S. intelligence agencies since 2019. It was also reported that the dismissed attorney general, Tarek William Saab, is being held at Fort Tiuna.
María Corina Machado and the Democratic Transition
Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado (MCM) led a large-scale gathering with the Venezuelan diaspora in Panama City on Saturday, May 23, 2026. During the event, Machado reaffirmed her commitment to democratic restoration and officially announced her candidacy for president in the upcoming free elections outlined in the transition roadmap.
Perhaps the most significant aspect of her visit to Panama was the meeting with the Unitary Platform (PUD), represented in person by political leaders freed from persecution, such as Biagio Pilieri and Delsa Solórzano, and the participation via videoconference of President-elect Edmundo González Urrutia.
MCM and her new alliances will need to define how they respond to the redesign now underway in Venezuela’s economy and politics — a landscape that bears little resemblance to the situation in 2023–2024. Oil is perhaps the sector undergoing the most significant changes.
Meanwhile, in Caracas, various student groups, professional associations, and labor unions have called for protests demanding a clear presidential electoral timetable, changes to the economic conditions eroding the wages of public employees and workers in general, and improvements to public services.
Economic Situation
The economic situation continues to be marked by uncoordinated measures to manage the sharp growth in public spending, interventions in the foreign exchange market, liquidity restrictions, and the arbitrary setting of the official exchange rate, which is increasingly diverging from the intervention rate. The result has been a renewed widening of the gap between the official and parallel exchange rates, along with intensifying inflationary pressures.
Houston Forum and Oil Sector Opening
On the oil side, May’s foreign currency revenues are shaping up to be similar to April's. Meanwhile, promotional activities for the new oil sector opening are intensifying. Oil Minister Paula Henao and PDVSA Vice President Jovanny Martínez attended a technical event in Houston on investment opportunities in Venezuela — the first time in many years that “red” PDVSA personnel shared the same venue with “blue” PDVSA technicians without the former vetoing the latter.
In addition to a variety of technical presentations at this important forum, representatives of the interim government met with numerous groups interested in participating in the reactivation of Venezuela’s hydrocarbon sector. Investors were briefed on the procedures required to take part in the process. Representatives of the Department of Energy accompanied the proceedings.
Our analysis concludes that, to be effective, this process must fulfill several steps that are not yet fully defined. For example, the review and modification of the LOH Regulations, followed by complex negotiations over the model contracts currently circulating. Another element that has slowed the process is the lack of data — or the difficulty in locating it — which impedes the due diligence that every investor must conduct.
Based on these factors — not to mention the need to resolve the LOH challenge pending before the Supreme Court (TSJ) — we estimate that production growth over the coming years will be slower than projected by both the interim government and U.S. sources. Our updated forecast is shown in the attached charts, covering both total production and incremental activity.
Oil Operations
During the week, operations — including Chevron’s production in the Orinoco Oil Belt — were affected by recurring power outages and by an accident at the Lamargas plant in western Venezuela the previous Friday. It was also confirmed that China Concord Resources Corp., which had signed one of the first CPP agreements for that block, was not operating in the area, and that the Lago V block remained under PDVSA control.
Weekly Production
This week’s production stood at 906 Mbpd:
Region | Production (Mbpd) |
West | 249 |
East | 110 |
Orinoco Belt | 547 |
TOTAL | 906 |
Companies under OFAC Licenses and New Contracts (LOH)
Company | Production (Mbpd) |
Chevron | 249 |
Repsol | 50 |
M & P | 32 |
Refineries and Petrochemicals
National refineries processed 248 Mbpd of crude and intermediate products, yielding 75 Mbpd of gasoline and 77 Mbpd of diesel.
The Petrochemical Complex at José is operating normally, though with limited natural gas availability. Daily production stands at 5,900 metric tons (mt) of methanol, 2,600 mt of ammonia, and 3,500 mt of urea. The Morón Complex remains shut down, awaiting gas. The El Tablazo Complex is completely idle, as the only plant operating — the Chloro-Soda facility — is currently undergoing maintenance.
Exports and Basket Price
Crude oil dispatches in the first half of May are consistent with exports of 750 Mbpd.
The Venezuelan crude basket averaged $87.2 per BBL.
[1]: International Analyst
[2]: Nonresident Fellow, Baker Institute




