Venezuela creditors are holding a rare meeting in Davos to discuss potential opportunities in the oil sector amid increasing optimism for investment in the country as the US floats easing some sanctions.
London-based brokerage IlliquidX Ltd and Canaima Capital Management, a fund focused on distressed debt, are hosting the meeting with more than two dozen creditors in Davos on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum to explain the implications of a potential opening in Venezuela’s oil sector.

“It’s the first time a discussion like this is happening in Davos,” said Celestino Amore, CEO IlliquidX and co-founder of Canaima. “Investors want to know about eventual opportunities in the Venezuelan oil and gas sectors if sanctions are removed and what would be the impact on creditors.”
Speakers at the event include former Shell Plc executive Jeroen Van Der Veer, Venezuelan Oil Chamber President Reinaldo Quintero, sovereign debt restructuring expert Rodrigo Olivares-Caminal, Keith Mines, who handled Venezuelan affairs at the US State Department, economist and Council of Foreign Relations fellow Francisco Rodriguez, and director of consulting firm Araya Energy Group Juan Carlos Andrade.
Venezuela remains deeply sanctioned and any restructuring of its more than $60 billion of defaulted debt is still nowhere in sight. But the global energy crisis caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has opened a discussion on how Venezuela could help address oil supply disruptions.
The US is currently planning sanctions relief targeting restrictions on oil companies working in Venezuela.
Defaulted state-oil company bonds rose as investors priced in optimism over those potential changes. PDVSA notes maturing in 2024 jumped as much as 18 percent to around 7 cents on the dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The market continues to be cautious, however, and the prices remain below levels seen in March following a visit by US officials to Caracas. Some bonds pared gains, with the 2024s falling to around 5 cents. US investors remained barred from buying the securities.
The US tightened oil sanctions against Venezuela in early 2019 amid a collapse of the oil industry. With the help of allies such as Iran, PDVSA increased and stabilized production in recent months at around 700,000-800,000 barrels per day from 374,000 a year before. But the current output is still below the country’s high point of more than 3 million barrels a day.
The US has conditioned any form of sanctions relief on the resumption of political negotiations between the government of Nicolas Maduro and the opposition, halted since last year.
Easing restrictions for American oil firm Chevron’s operations in Venezuela is one of the strategies in place to encourage the Maduro delegation to go back to talks.
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