Venezuela chaos could lead to billions in investment opportunities, one consultant says

Venezuela chaos could lead to billions in investment opportunities, one consultant says


The future of Venezuela remains unclear after the U.S. launched a ground attack and ousted President Nicolas Maduro over the weekend. But amid the uncertainty, some investors see the potential for lucrative, long-term opportunities in the South American nation that has long been closed to much international business.

At least Charles Myers, chairman of the consulting firm Signum Global Advisors, thinks so.

“This is a major infrastructure play, I think it could be as big as $500 billion over the next 10 years,” Myers said on Monday on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street.” 

“I think people are being far too pessimistic. This is a massive opportunity across multiple sectors,” said Myers, who is organizing a trip to Venezuela with “investors, multinationals, and asset managers” that is set for March.

He did not name the others who would accompany him on the trip, which he said is being organized independent of the State Department and the U.S. government.

Others view the situation as more fraught.

Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, were captured and brought to the U.S. on Jan. 3. President Donald Trump said in the aftermath that the U.S. would run Venezuela and in an interview with The Atlantic threatened that Acting President Delcy Rodriguez would “pay a very big price, probably bigger than Maduro,” if she opposed his administration’s actions.

Rodriguez at first pushed back on Trump’s comments but more recently has signaled an openness to work with the U.S.

Until more details emerge on the state of Venezuela post-Maduro, some still see the country as closed for business.

“When you think about the regulations that were in place, the investing environment, nothing’s changed – not yet anyway.” said Robert Koenigsberger, managing partner and chief investment officer of Gramercy Funds Management.

“An investor can’t simply just fly to Caracas – if the airport were opened —  and just start knocking on doors and meeting people, and say, ‘hey,'” he said. “Venezuela is littered with sanctioned individuals.”

Myers noted that foreign investment will largely be contingent on security guarantees, though he said the U.S. military presence off the coast of Venezuela is reassuring. And he acknowledged that sanctions are a limiting factor, though he said he would not be surprised to see some of those lifted in the coming months.

A further opening up of the country — like Venezuela’s return to the debt capital markets and the reactivation of the Caracas Stock Exchange — could spur even greater investment down the line, he said.

“This is not a short term investor trip. It’s a chance to get in and really kick the tires,” Myers said.

Still, in the immediate aftermath of Maduro’s overthrow, oil and gas companies appeared poised to benefit, though major players like Chevron, Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips have largely been silent as their shares rise.

Chevron shares jumped 5% as the only U.S. company operating in the country currently was seen by some investors as an eventual big winner if the country’s oil infrastructure is rebuilt. The move made Chevron the biggest gainer in the Dow Jones Industrial average on Monday.

Venezuela has the largest proven oil reserves in the world, but most U.S. oil majors have been shut out of the country since former President Hugo Chavez seized U.S. assets in 2007.

President Donald Trump, in a press conference on Saturday called for U.S. major oil companies to invest billions of dollars in the country to rebuild their infrastructure. 

But the opportunities in Venezuela extend well beyond oil and gas, Myers said, and those planning to accompany him come from the construction, autos, defense and chemicals mining sectors as well.

“And then on the asset management side, it’s hedge funds and some long-only investors and possibly sovereign wealth funds,” Myers said. 

Myers has led similar trips in recent years to war-torn countries in the midst of political upheaval. In October 2025, he took 27 clients to Damascus, Syria after Trump lifted sanctions on the country, which had been embroiled in civil war for more than a decade. And earlier in 2025, Myers led a trip to Ukraine that included TCW Funds, Lazard and Siemens, Bloomberg reported. 

“People are trying to compare Venezuela to Iraq,” Myers said. “The more relevant analogy we think is actually either Eastern Germany in the 90s, or Hungary/Poland, as those economies transitioned from being communist to capitalist.”

CNBC’s Spencer Kimball contributed reporting to this report.



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