# [WARNING] Venezuela Sanctions Loosened for Quake Aid, Oil Flows in Focus

*Friday, June 26, 2026 at 1:21 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-26T01:21:26.719Z (3h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, ENERGY, sanctions, Venezuela, oil, geopolitics, riskPremium
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/11993.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: U.S. Treasury issued General License 60, temporarily suspending Venezuela sanctions restrictions for transactions linked to earthquake relief through October 23, 2026, alongside a visible U.S. military deployment to support operations. While framed as humanitarian, the license materially eases constraints on payments, logistics and third‑party dealings with Venezuelan entities, potentially enabling incremental oil and product exports and altering near‑term supply expectations. Markets will reprice Venezuelan barrels’ accessibility and the evolving geopolitical risk premium around U.S.–Venezuela engagement.

## Detail

1) What happened
Multiple reports indicate the U.S. Treasury has issued General License 60, suspending until 23 October 2026 the application of U.S. sanctions restrictions to all transactions related to earthquake aid and relief in Venezuela. In parallel, the U.S. is deploying warships, military aircraft and a senior commander to support relief operations. OFAC communications stress that the core sanctions architecture remains in place, but humanitarian-related transactions, logistics, and financing are now broadly authorized.

2) Supply/demand impact
Although the license is formally humanitarian, in practice such broad relief tends to loosen operational bottlenecks: banks, insurers, shipping firms and service providers gain legal cover to transact with Venezuelan counterparties tied to relief, infrastructure repair, fuel supply and import/export logistics. This can indirectly support higher oil production and exports by:
- Easing access to spare parts, services and fuel imports critical to upstream and refining operations.
- Enabling more flexible crude and product swaps linked to relief cargoes.
Incremental near-term supply is likely modest (hundreds of kb/d are not realistic on this time frame), but even 100–200 kb/d of additional credible export capacity compared with prior expectations is enough to move Brent and heavy crude differentials by >1% as traders mark down the tightness of heavy sour supply.

3) Affected assets and direction
- Brent, WTI: Bearish vs prior path; curve could see some softening in Q3–Q4 2026 as risked Venezuelan barrels are marked up.
- Heavy sour benchmarks (e.g., Maya, Mars, fuel oil cracks): Bearish on relative spreads as more Venezuelan heavy barrels are assumed available.
- PDVSA and Venezuelan sovereign risk: Secondary, but improved sentiment on export and cash‑flow prospects.
- Regional refined products in the Caribbean/LatAm: Slightly bearish on cracks if additional Venezuelan products or swap flows emerge.

4) Historical precedent
Similar "temporary" or "humanitarian" licenses for Iran and previous OFAC relief for Venezuela in 2023–24 led markets to quickly front‑run potential structural easing, with heavy crude spreads compressing and Brent softening by several dollars over months as exports surprised to the upside.

5) Duration of impact
Headline impact is immediate for sentiment and risk premia. Structural supply effects depend on how expansively GL60 is used and whether it becomes a bridge to broader sanctions relaxation. Baseline: modest but non‑trivial bearish pressure on crude over the next 3–6 months, with upside risk if Washington later codifies wider oil‑specific relief.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, heavy sour crude differentials (Maya, Mars), fuel oil cracks, Venezuelan sovereign bonds, PDVSA-related credits
