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On June 24, Venezuela was struck by two powerful earthquakes just 39 seconds apart, measuring 7.2 and 7.5 in magnitude. The quakes caused widespread damage, with reports of collapsed buildings, damaged transportation infrastructure, power outages and hundreds of casualties as search-and-rescue operations continue. It will take time to fully assess the human and economic toll, but the disaster also raises immediate questions about what it could mean for Venezuela’s economic recovery.

The timing matters because attention had only recently shifted toward reports that the interim government was preparing to move ahead with a debt restructuring after years of default and political uncertainty. Following Nicolás Maduro’s removal earlier this year, investors had become more optimistic that Venezuela might finally begin rebuilding the economy, attracting foreign investment and restoring oil production. The earthquakes don’t change those longer-term objectives, but we believe they add a fresh layer of uncertainty at a delicate moment.

Any restructuring now has to account for a more complicated backdrop. Resources that might have gone toward economic stabilization or investment in the energy sector may instead need to be redirected to emergency relief and reconstruction. At the same time, creditors, advisers and policymakers will need a clearer picture of the damage before assessing the country’s growth outlook, fiscal position and debt repayment capacity. Even if restructuring talks continue, the assumptions underlying any agreement are likely to become more challenging.

The broader regional context matters too. As we discussed in our recent note on Latin American elections, political change across the region has been reshaping investor views on reform, governance and economic policy. Venezuela had started to re-enter that conversation following its political transition, but the earthquakes are a reminder that political change alone doesn’t erase the structural problems left by years of underinvestment, deteriorating infrastructure and weak institutions.

From an energy market perspective, the implications extend beyond Venezuela itself. The country holds the world’s largest proven oil reserves and has long been viewed as a potential source of future production growth if investment returns and infrastructure can be restored. There have been no confirmed reports of major damage to key oil facilities, but any disruption to production, transportation or investment plans would be closely watched by energy markets. The earthquakes don’t change Venezuela’s long-term potential as an energy producer, but we believe they introduce another variable into an already-uncertain outlook for one of the world’s most significant untapped energy producers.



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