Who else were market winners from the arrest of Venezuela’s president?
The dramatic capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro by the US hasn’t just dominated geopolitical headlines since the weekend, it has also created distinct winners in financial markets.
Those investors willing to bet on rapid change and capitalise on geopolitical risk have emerged as among the biggest beneficiaries of the action ordered by President Trump, with some staggering gains seen from speculative trades on prediction markets.
On Polymarket, a handful of anonymous accounts took concentrated positions on Maduro’s removal and saw those positions pay off spectacularly, with some traders reporting profits in the hundreds of thousands of dollars when the event occurred.
However, with one trader reportedly generating more than $400,000 from a relatively modest initial stake and a small cluster of newly created wallets capturing even larger combined gains, the timing and focus of those trades have drawn scrutiny in Washington, where lawmakers are examining whether prediction markets pose new risks for insider-style trading around sensitive geopolitical events, Reuters reported.
Beyond niche platforms, distressed-debt investors were rewarded as Venezuelan sovereign and PDVSA bonds jumped sharply while stock markets showed pockets of strength, especially among energy and defense sectors.
CNBC reported that the White House has engaged with executive leadership from several US oil producers about potential rebuilding efforts for Venezuela’s dilapidated energy infrastructure, even as those companies publicly say they have not had direct discussions with Washington. This signals investor interest in what could be a multi-billion-dollar opportunity, albeit one that is fraught with political and logistical hurdles.
Speaking on the channel’s Squawk Box, Charles Myers, chairman of Signum Global Advisors, said the size of the opportunity for investing in Venezuela’s infrastructure could run to $500 billion over the next decade.
Among the potential upsides, are a substantial restructuring of Venezuela’s sovereign debt, which was highlighted in an outlook from Allianz Global Advisors last month.
“The country’s sovereign bonds have been in default since 2017 but have surged in price over 2025 on expectations that pressure from the Trump administration may lead to Caracas eventually regaining access to international bond markets,” the firm said, noting the importance of when oil markets return and the extent of US support for the country’s economy and currency, alongside a potential IMF program.
Venezuela’s investment outlook is still constrained by a complex web of sanctions and legal risks. Years of US restrictions on state energy operations and the legacy of asset seizures have created structural barriers that cannot be quickly dismantled. Even if political conditions evolve, investors face lingering questions around enforcement, property rights and outstanding claims that complicate large-scale deployment of capital.