Quick Take
  • Venezuela’s long-rumored Bitcoin hoard has come into sharp focus following the January 2026 US-led operation that captured President Nicolás Maduro.
  • With an alleged BTC stockpile above 600,000 Bitcoin tokens, Venezuela may easily rival institutional giants like BlackRock and MicroStrategy.
  • The revelation could fundamentally alter supply dynamics and market sentiment for Bitcoin in 2026.
  • Between 2018 and 2020, Venezuela reportedly exported tens of tons of gold from the Orinoco Mining Arc.

What Happened

The capture of Maduro introduces further uncertainty. A transitional government, influenced by US interests, could:

Market Context

Venezuela’s long-rumored Bitcoin hoard has come into sharp focus following the January 2026 US-led operation that captured President Nicolás Maduro.

With an alleged BTC stockpile above 600,000 Bitcoin tokens, Venezuela may easily rival institutional giants like BlackRock and MicroStrategy. The revelation could fundamentally alter supply dynamics and market sentiment for Bitcoin in 2026.

Between 2018 and 2020, Venezuela reportedly exported tens of tons of gold from the Orinoco Mining Arc. Reportedly, it converted around $2 billion of gold proceeds into Bitcoin at an average price of $5,000 per BTC.

The scale of Venezuela’s alleged reserve dwarfs previous government liquidations. In 2024, the German state of Saxony sold 50,000 BTC (approximately $3 billion at the time), triggering a 15–20% market correction.

By contrast, Venezuela’s 600,000 BTC, if seized or frozen, could trigger unprecedented supply shocks, reducing available liquidity and supporting higher prices.

Why Venezuela’s Bitcoin Hoard Matters for Global Markets

Why It Matters

Intelligence reports indicate the country may have amassed a “shadow reserve” of 600,000–660,000 BTC, valued at between $60 billion and $67 billion, making it one of the largest holders of Bitcoin globally.

Following the collapse of the state-backed Petro crypto, the Maduro regime increasingly required PDVSA, the state oil company, to settle crude oil exports in USDT from 2023 to 2025. These stablecoins were subsequently “washed” into Bitcoin to mitigate the risk of account freezes and reduce exposure to the US dollar.

The US now faces critical decisions regarding the reserve. Sources suggest three primary scenarios:

The assets could be frozen in litigation

They could be added to a US Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, or

Liquidated through auctions (less likely).

Details

How does the arrest of President Maduro affect Bitcoin?

According to sources cited by Whale Hunting, the accumulation began in 2018 through a combination of gold swaps, oil settlements in Tether (USDT), and domestic mining seizures.

This tranche alone, now valued at roughly $36 billion, laid the foundation of the country’s clandestine crypto reserve.

Additional holdings stemmed from domestic mining seizures, bringing the total Bitcoin accumulation to an estimated 600,000+ coins, roughly 3% of the circulating supply.

Analysts believe that freezing the assets or incorporating them into a strategic reserve is the most probable option.

Such a move would potentially lock up supply for 5–10 years and create a bullish narrative for Bitcoin, as well as for institutional holders like MicroStrategy ($MSTR).

Venezuela’s Bitcoin hoard also highlights the country’s remarkable grassroots crypto adoption. Hyperinflation, US sanctions, and a collapsing bolívar have driven widespread use of Bitcoin and stablecoins.

By late 2025, up to 10% of grocery payments and nearly 40% of peer-to-peer transactions were conducted in crypto. Meanwhile, remittances via stablecoins accounted for nearly 10% of inflows. Venezuela ranked approximately 17th globally in crypto adoption per Chainalysis. In Latin America,

Relax mining restrictions,

Encourage pro-crypto policy, and

Prioritize the recovery of the alleged BTC holdings.