Chevron shipments keep Venezuelan crude arriving, despite sanctions and bluster.
US and Venezuela posture at sea, tankers still sail.
Future depends on licenses, insurance, and any misstep at sea.
Venezuelan militia on parade, by Cancillería del Ecuador, Creative Commons.
Venezuelan crude is still reaching US ports despite sanctions and a US
naval buildup. The oil flows today. Tomorrow is a question mark.
Oil Moves While Rhetoric Spikes
Everyone is pretending it isn’t happening, but oil is still moving from
Venezuela to the United States in the middle of a diplomatic knife fight.
Business Today flagged the issue, citing
energy analyst Anas Alhajji: “Today, we have tankers arriving from
Venezuela delivering oil to the United States despite the sanctions.” The point
was delivered with a side of realpolitik. The trade is happening. The rules are
a moving target.
The Chevron Carve-Out in Action
What keeps the flow alive is not magic. It is licensing. In July, the
US Treasury reportedly issued
a restricted license to Chevron that allowed operations and exports from
Venezuela to resume after a pause. Two Chevron-chartered tankers, Mediterranean
Voyager and Canopus Voyager, loaded Boscan and Hamaca crudes and reached US
waters. That
is not rumor. It is shipping threaded through a sanctions maze that
Washington built, then partially unlocked for one company.
US warships are closing in on Venezuela
"One of the reasons we have...given licenses to Chevron and a number of service companies...is to make it easier in the recovery of oil production..after the regime is replaced.”
Alhajji did not hold back on the optics. He pointed out that tankers are
arriving from Venezuela while Washington publicly punishes some buyers and
quietly creates exceptions, even as Europe
keeps importing Russian gas and LNG. He also noted, “The US still imports
uranium from Russia. No one is saying anything about it.” You do not have to
agree with the framing to recognize the punchline. Energy policy often reads
like a choose-your-own-principles adventure.
Caracas to the Pentagon: Not Today
Nicolás Maduro, President of Venezuela, by Palácio do Planalto, Creative Commons.
Across the water, the mood is not calm. Al Jazeera quotes President
Nicolás Maduro telling troops, “There’s
no way they can enter Venezuela,” while vowing the country is ready to
defend its sovereignty as US warships arrive to run an anti-cartel operation in
the Southern Caribbean. Maduro’s line was not subtle, and it was not meant to
be. It was domestic theatre and strategic messaging in the same breath.
An Armada, an Echo
Seven US warships and a nuclear-powered fast attack submarine are in or
heading to the region. More than 4,500 US service members are aboard, including
about 2,200 Marines. Those are not rhetorical devices. They are hulls, engines,
and payrolls. Caracas has answered with its own show of force, sending warships
and drones to patrol the coast and urging militia recruitment. None of that
turns valves, but all of it raises the risk that politics, not geology, decides
where barrels go next.
"Venezuela🇻🇪....we would have taken it over. We would have gotten all that oil."
Maduro’s government has also deployed 15,000 troops to the border with
Colombia to confront drug-trafficking groups. You can read that as
law-and-order theater or border security. Either way, it adds to the sense of a
tightening perimeter around an oil trade that is simultaneously open and
precarious.
Today’s Barrels, Tomorrow’s Question Mark
Put the pieces together. On the one hand, the market has a functioning
channel. Chevron’s shipments show that sanctioned energy can still thread the
needle if the paperwork aligns. On the other hand, the military temperature is
rising, and leaders are getting a little hot under the collar. Oil companies do
not like uncertainty. Traders like it even less. One policy memo in Washington
or one incident at sea could flip the script from carve-outs to clampdown in a
day. That is the part nobody can model.
What to Watch Next
Watch the license terms. If the restricted license that enabled
Chevron’s movements is narrowed, the flow tightens. If it is extended, barrels
keep crossing the Gulf. Watch the choreography at sea. More ships, closer
passes, or a hot mic could spook insurers and charterers faster than any press
conference. And listen for fewer speeches and more customs stamps. In this
story, the most honest sentences are on bills of lading.
For more stories from the edges of business and finance, visit our Trending pages.
Venezuelan crude is still reaching US ports despite sanctions and a US
naval buildup. The oil flows today. Tomorrow is a question mark.
Oil Moves While Rhetoric Spikes
Everyone is pretending it isn’t happening, but oil is still moving from
Venezuela to the United States in the middle of a diplomatic knife fight.
Business Today flagged the issue, citing
energy analyst Anas Alhajji: “Today, we have tankers arriving from
Venezuela delivering oil to the United States despite the sanctions.” The point
was delivered with a side of realpolitik. The trade is happening. The rules are
a moving target.
The Chevron Carve-Out in Action
What keeps the flow alive is not magic. It is licensing. In July, the
US Treasury reportedly issued
a restricted license to Chevron that allowed operations and exports from
Venezuela to resume after a pause. Two Chevron-chartered tankers, Mediterranean
Voyager and Canopus Voyager, loaded Boscan and Hamaca crudes and reached US
waters. That
is not rumor. It is shipping threaded through a sanctions maze that
Washington built, then partially unlocked for one company.
US warships are closing in on Venezuela
"One of the reasons we have...given licenses to Chevron and a number of service companies...is to make it easier in the recovery of oil production..after the regime is replaced.”
Alhajji did not hold back on the optics. He pointed out that tankers are
arriving from Venezuela while Washington publicly punishes some buyers and
quietly creates exceptions, even as Europe
keeps importing Russian gas and LNG. He also noted, “The US still imports
uranium from Russia. No one is saying anything about it.” You do not have to
agree with the framing to recognize the punchline. Energy policy often reads
like a choose-your-own-principles adventure.
Caracas to the Pentagon: Not Today
Nicolás Maduro, President of Venezuela, by Palácio do Planalto, Creative Commons.
Across the water, the mood is not calm. Al Jazeera quotes President
Nicolás Maduro telling troops, “There’s
no way they can enter Venezuela,” while vowing the country is ready to
defend its sovereignty as US warships arrive to run an anti-cartel operation in
the Southern Caribbean. Maduro’s line was not subtle, and it was not meant to
be. It was domestic theatre and strategic messaging in the same breath.
An Armada, an Echo
Seven US warships and a nuclear-powered fast attack submarine are in or
heading to the region. More than 4,500 US service members are aboard, including
about 2,200 Marines. Those are not rhetorical devices. They are hulls, engines,
and payrolls. Caracas has answered with its own show of force, sending warships
and drones to patrol the coast and urging militia recruitment. None of that
turns valves, but all of it raises the risk that politics, not geology, decides
where barrels go next.
"Venezuela🇻🇪....we would have taken it over. We would have gotten all that oil."
Maduro’s government has also deployed 15,000 troops to the border with
Colombia to confront drug-trafficking groups. You can read that as
law-and-order theater or border security. Either way, it adds to the sense of a
tightening perimeter around an oil trade that is simultaneously open and
precarious.
Today’s Barrels, Tomorrow’s Question Mark
Put the pieces together. On the one hand, the market has a functioning
channel. Chevron’s shipments show that sanctioned energy can still thread the
needle if the paperwork aligns. On the other hand, the military temperature is
rising, and leaders are getting a little hot under the collar. Oil companies do
not like uncertainty. Traders like it even less. One policy memo in Washington
or one incident at sea could flip the script from carve-outs to clampdown in a
day. That is the part nobody can model.
What to Watch Next
Watch the license terms. If the restricted license that enabled
Chevron’s movements is narrowed, the flow tightens. If it is extended, barrels
keep crossing the Gulf. Watch the choreography at sea. More ships, closer
passes, or a hot mic could spook insurers and charterers faster than any press
conference. And listen for fewer speeches and more customs stamps. In this
story, the most honest sentences are on bills of lading.
For more stories from the edges of business and finance, visit our Trending pages.
Louis Parks has lived and worked in and around the Middle East for much of his professional career. He writes about the meeting of the tech and finance worlds.
Bitcoin Price Stuck Below 200 EMA at $82,000 in a 2% Volatility Cage. How High Can BTC Go?
Featured Videos
FM Daily Brief - 21 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 21 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 21 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 21 May 2026
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.