As the US prepares to roll back sanctions and market Venezuelan oil, the scramble for financial infrastructure is beginning.
JPMorgan Chase is emerging as the frontrunner to lead the country’s financial re-entry, leveraging a dormant Caracas office and deep historical ties.
🗝️ THE JPM ADVANTAGE:
- Legacy Footprint: Unlike peers who exited completely (Citi sold in 2021; Scotiabank in 2014), JPMorgan maintained a dormant presence.
- The “Iraq Playbook”: Sources suggest JPM could replicate its 2003 strategy in Iraq, where it led the consortium that established the Trade Bank of Iraq. A similar “Trade Bank of Venezuela” could be created to finance oil exports securely.
- Capital Deployment: Potential to utilize its $1.5 Trillion “Security and Resiliency” initiative to finance critical minerals and energy infrastructure.
⚔️ THE COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE:
- Citigroup: The “dark horse” given its extensive history in LatAm, though it sold its local unit in 2021.
- BBVA: The only major foreign bank with significant active operations on the ground, positioning it well for retail/commercial flow.
- ConocoPhillips CEO Ryan Lance: Explicitly stated that US entities like the Export-Import Bank will need to be involved to de-risk investments.
🚧 THE REALITY CHECK: This is not an overnight opportunity.
- Sanctions: US institutions are still prohibited from providing new money to PDVSA until specific sanctions are lifted.
- Compliance Risk: As seen with Iran in 2016, even after sanctions lift, global banks often hesitate due to fear of “snap-back” penalties and AML concerns.
- Revenue Share: Currently, LatAm accounts for just ~2.2% of JPM’s global revenue, meaning this is a strategic long-term play rather than an immediate P&L driver.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: If Venezuelan oil is to flow to US markets, it requires a US-controlled financial pipe. JPMorgan appears to be the “State Department’s Banker” of choice for this transition. Expect the initial opportunities to be strictly ring-fenced trade finance (letters of credit for oil cargoes) rather than broad commercial lending.
👇 Bankers & Traders: Will compliance departments actually greenlight Venezuelan deals in 2026, or is the regulatory risk still toxic?
