TLDR Intelligence reports suggest Venezuela secretly accumulated 600,000-660,000 Bitcoin worth $60-67 billion through gold swaps, oil sales in Tether, and miningTLDR Intelligence reports suggest Venezuela secretly accumulated 600,000-660,000 Bitcoin worth $60-67 billion through gold swaps, oil sales in Tether, and mining

Venezuela’s $60 Billion Bitcoin Reserve Surfaces After Maduro Capture

TLDR

  • Intelligence reports suggest Venezuela secretly accumulated 600,000-660,000 Bitcoin worth $60-67 billion through gold swaps, oil sales in Tether, and mining seizures starting in 2018.
  • The alleged Bitcoin hoard would make Venezuela one of the world’s largest Bitcoin holders, comparable to BlackRock and MicroStrategy holdings.
  • US authorities face three options after capturing President Maduro: freeze the assets, add them to a US Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, or liquidate through auctions.
  • Germany’s 2024 sale of 50,000 BTC caused a 15-20% market correction, making Venezuela’s 12x larger reserve a major concern for market stability.
  • If frozen or held as strategic reserve, the Bitcoin would be locked up for 5-10 years, potentially supporting higher prices through reduced supply.

Venezuela may control one of the world’s largest Bitcoin reserves. Intelligence reports indicate the country accumulated between 600,000 and 660,000 BTC over several years. The revelation came after US forces captured President Nicolás Maduro in January 2026.

The alleged stockpile is valued between $60 billion and $67 billion at current prices. This places Venezuela alongside institutional giants like BlackRock and MicroStrategy as major Bitcoin holders. The accumulation reportedly began in 2018 through multiple channels.

Venezuela converted approximately $2 billion in gold proceeds into Bitcoin between 2018 and 2020. The country sold gold from the Orinoco Mining Arc at an average Bitcoin price of $5,000 per coin. That tranche alone is now worth roughly $36 billion.

The regime also required state oil company PDVSA to accept crude oil payments in Tether from 2023 to 2025. These stablecoin payments were then converted to Bitcoin to avoid US dollar exposure and account freezes. The strategy helped Venezuela circumvent international sanctions.

Additional Bitcoin came from seized domestic mining operations. Combined sources brought the total to an estimated 600,000+ coins. This represents roughly 3% of Bitcoin’s circulating supply.

Market Impact and Supply Concerns

The size of Venezuela’s reserve raises concerns about market stability. Germany sold 50,000 BTC in 2024, triggering a 15-20% market correction. Venezuela’s alleged holdings are twelve times larger than Germany’s sale.

US authorities now must decide how to handle the assets. Three scenarios are under consideration. The Bitcoin could be frozen in litigation for years. It could be added to a US Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. Or it could be liquidated through auctions, though analysts view this as unlikely.

Freezing the assets or adding them to a strategic reserve would lock up supply for 5-10 years. This scenario could support higher Bitcoin prices by reducing available liquidity. Markets are watching closely for official confirmation and policy decisions.

Venezuela’s grassroots crypto adoption grew rapidly under economic pressure. By late 2025, up to 10% of grocery payments used cryptocurrency. Nearly 40% of peer-to-peer transactions involved crypto assets. Remittances via stablecoins represented nearly 10% of inflows. Venezuela ranked approximately 17th globally in crypto adoption according to Chainalysis data.

A transitional Venezuelan government could pursue pro-crypto policies. Changes might include relaxed mining restrictions and efforts to recover the alleged Bitcoin holdings. However, the Bitcoin remains effectively locked until private keys are surrendered or legal claims are resolved.

The capture of Maduro adds uncertainty to crypto markets. Bitcoin jumped to $93,000 following news of his arrest. Short-term volatility is expected as details emerge about the reserve’s actual size and location.

Private keys to the wallets remain a critical unknown. Without access to these keys, the Bitcoin cannot be moved or sold. This technical reality may keep the supply locked regardless of legal proceedings.

The post Venezuela’s $60 Billion Bitcoin Reserve Surfaces After Maduro Capture appeared first on CoinCentral.

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