Bitcoin miners facing squeezed profit margins may eventually see relief from US involvement in Venezuela’s oil sector. Bitfinex analysts say increased Venezuelan crude production could lower global electricity prices, though the timeline spans years rather than months.
The US started seizing Venezuelan oil tankers in December. President Donald Trump is pushing major US oil companies to enter Venezuela and begin extracting from the country’s 303 billion barrels of crude oil reserves.
Chevron remains the only major US oil company currently operating in Venezuela. Trump wants other large American energy firms to join production efforts in the South American nation.
Bitcoin miners are dealing with multiple financial pressures. Bitcoin prices have dropped 25% from their all-time high. Mining difficulty has increased across the network. Electricity costs have risen.
The analysts said the intervention will have immediate spillover effects in energy markets. Second-order implications will follow for Bitcoin and the broader cryptocurrency market.
US benchmark crude oil already dropped to roughly $58 per barrel. This represents a 3% decline from December’s high of about $60. The price change offers marginal relief for Bitcoin miners whose electricity costs depend on crude oil prices.
Bitfinex analysts stressed that meaningful increases in Venezuelan output would take years. The pace depends on how the US handles Venezuela’s political transition. Lingering sanctions over the country will also affect production timelines.
Matt Mena, crypto research strategist at 21Shares, estimates the process could take a decade. Restoring Venezuela to its former production status would require over $100 billion in infrastructure investment, he said.
Venezuela’s oil production has declined dramatically over decades. The country produced around 3.5 million barrels per day in the 1970s. That figure represented roughly 7% of global crude output.
Today, Venezuelan production sits at around 1 million barrels per day. The country now accounts for only 1% of global production.
Venezuela’s economic output contracted sharply over the past decade. Hyperinflation has eroded the bolívar’s purchasing power since 2013. The country has experienced widespread political and institutional disruption.
Bitfinex analysts noted that crypto market prices will likely be driven more by shifts in macro risk appetite than energy fundamentals. Volatility and cross-asset positioning will play larger roles in determining prices.
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