Geopolitical flare-up unlikely to disrupt global supply significantly, but risk of regional escalation looms over crude outlook.
Energy analysts project that this weekend’s dramatic U.S. military action in Venezuela will have only a limited effect on global oil prices, pointing to the country’s already sanctions-hit output and a well-supplied market as key stabilizing factors.
Venezuela holds the world’s largest proven crude reserves, but years of stringent international restrictions have drastically reduced its exports, leaving its current market influence muted.
“Venezuela ranks only in the low twenties globally as an oil exporter due to sanctions,” noted Samer Hasn, senior market analyst at xs.com. “A U.S. attack is unlikely to trigger a material supply crisis, especially while the oil market remains deeply oversupplied.”
The International Energy Agency forecasts a supply surplus of 3.85 million barrels per day by 2026, further cushioning potential disruption from Caracas.
Short-term volatility expected
Still, markets may see a volatile opening when trading resumes.
Vijay Valecha, chief investment officer at Century Financial, highlighted that oil prices historically gap higher during geopolitical flare-ups, citing a 7% jump after U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities last year.
“The worst-case disruption from Venezuela is small—between 0.7 and 1 million barrels per day,” Valecha said. “But the fear is escalation, especially given Venezuela’s alliances with Iran and Russia.”
Amena Bakr, head of Middle East Energy and OPEC+ Insights at Kpler, also cautioned that markets tend to underestimate geopolitical risk, even if the immediate price reaction remains subdued.
Wider risk landscape
Hasn warned that if the Venezuela crisis converges with ongoing Middle East tensions and disruptions from the Russia-Ukraine war, a triple-supply shock could drive prices to multi-year highs.
“Closure of the Strait of Hormuz or attacks on regional shipping routes could trigger a severe market shock,” he said, though he added that U.S. policymakers would likely act to prevent simultaneous crises that could fuel inflation.
With speculative sentiment leaning bearish amid ample inventories, analysts suggest any price spike may be short-lived unless the crisis draws in other oil-producing nations.
For oil-linked economies like the UAE—which recently lowered January 2026 fuel prices in line with global trends—the immediate price impact appears contained, but market watchers remain alert to geopolitical developments.
