# [WARNING] US Eases Venezuela Sanctions 4 Months, Potential Oil Flow Upside

*Saturday, June 27, 2026 at 7:08 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-27T07:08:37.433Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, ENERGY, OIL, SANCTIONS, LATAM
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/12147.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Washington has temporarily lifted a number of economic sanctions on Venezuela for four months to facilitate earthquake relief operations. While framed as humanitarian, the move modestly improves the near-term probability of incremental Venezuelan crude exports and may narrow heavy crude spreads if operationalized beyond purely aid-related channels.

## Detail

1) What happened:
- The U.S. government has suspended or eased a set of economic sanctions on Venezuela for a four-month window, explicitly to support relief and reconstruction efforts after two major earthquakes.
- Details of which sanctions are lifted are not fully specified in the brief, but such measures typically touch payment channels, logistics, and potentially some oil-related transactions when tied to humanitarian aims.

2) Supply/demand impact:
- Venezuela currently produces roughly 0.8–0.9 mbpd (ballpark), with exports constrained by sanctions, financing, and infrastructure.
- A strictly humanitarian carve-out might only marginally boost crude exports (tens of thousands of bpd equivalent) via in-kind crude-for-aid swaps or relaxed payment channels, but if de facto interpreted more broadly by traders and counterparties, it could enable several hundred thousand bpd of additional flows compared to the strict sanctions baseline.
- Timing: Any uplift in actual loadings would lag by weeks, given contracting, shipping, and infrastructure constraints, and quake damage itself may impair some domestic logistics.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- Brent/WTI: slight bearish bias at the margin, via expectations of incremental heavy sour barrels over a 1–3 month horizon, but impact is modest relative to global balances and overshadowed by the Iran/Hormuz risk premium in the very near term.
- Heavy crude benchmarks (e.g., Maya, Mars, fuel oil cracks): potential softening if Venezuelan grades reappear in a bit more volume.
- U.S. Gulf Coast refiners configured for heavy sour crude may benefit from improved availability and discounted Venezuelan barrels, tightening some spreads (e.g., Mars vs WTI).

4) Historical precedent:
- Past limited sanctions easings (e.g., 2023–24 licenses) led to incremental Venezuelan exports but were often partially reversed or hedged by political uncertainty.

5) Duration:
- The measure is explicitly four months and therefore temporary by design. Market impact depends on whether this is seen as a bridge to broader sanctions relief or a one-off humanitarian carve-out. Base case: modest, transient bearish influence on heavy crude markets, with upside risk to more structural easing if not re-tightened.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Maya crude, Mars crude, Fuel oil cracks, US Gulf Coast refining margins, Venezuelan sovereign and quasi-sovereign debt
