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Stability under the oil shock triggered by the U.S. invasion of Venezuela

Economy, Energy, Market News
TSX:SU
09 January 2026 16:09 (EST)

(Stock image generated with AI.)

The global energy world is locked onto one storyline: the U.S. capture of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and Washington’s plan to “run” the oil‑rich nation. The move has rattled markets, raised geopolitical tensions, and set off a wave of questions about what Venezuela’s future means for the oil industry. But as investors scan the landscape for clarity, one Canadian giant stands out for its resilience and long‑term appeal: Suncor Energy (TSX/NYSE:SU).

Venezuela’s real position in the oil market

Despite hosting the world’s largest proven oil reserves — an estimated 303 billion barrels — Venezuela has not been a major producer for years. Decades of mismanagement, sanctions, and collapsing infrastructure pushed output to just over 1.1 million barrels per day (bpd) in November 2025, with exports around 950,000 bpd.

Following the U.S. military operation and blockade, Venezuelan exports fell to about 500,000 bpd — cutting production capacity in half.
This puts Venezuela far below the world’s top exporters and well outside the global top 10 in daily production.

By contrast:

So why the global panic? Because reserves matter — and Venezuela’s massive reserves signal long‑term strategic implications, even if the country is not a major producer today.

Suncor Energy: Canada’s standout producer

In the Canadian energy sector, Suncor Energy — the Calgary‑based oil sands giant — is leading the pack. The company is deeply embedded in Canada’s oil sands, operating mines, upgraders, refineries, and the Petro‑Canada retail network.

It also stands to benefit from new export opportunities through the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, which multiple Canadian producers intend to use to reach Asian markets and reduce reliance on U.S. refineries.

Why the Venezuela situation matters for Suncor investors

Short‑term pressure

Immediately following the U.S. operation, Canadian energy stocks dipped:

This market reaction reflects investor concern that a U.S.-backed revival of Venezuelan oil could:

Long‑term reality: Venezuela will take years to rebuild

Analysts at Entellus emphasize that Venezuela’s oil infrastructure is severely degraded, and even under U.S. control it will take years — possibly a decade — to restore meaningful production capacity. Existing facilities require massive investment, modern technology, and political stability that simply don’t exist right now.

This significantly softens the long‑term threat to Suncor.

Suncor Energy stock (TSX:SU) from October 2025 to January 2026.

How Suncor has weathered the turmoil

Despite short‑term volatility, Suncor has shown remarkable resilience:

Suncor’s strong operational performance and cost discipline have strengthened its balance sheet and improved margins, putting it in a far more stable position than it was several years ago.

Why does the U.S. care so much about Venezuela?

If Venezuela is so small a producer today, why is the U.S. so aggressively intervening?

Because reserves = long‑term power.

With 303 billion barrels, Venezuela controls nearly 18 per cent of the world’s known reserves, more than Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Canada.

Bringing those reserves under a U.S.-friendly regime carries immense long‑term strategic value:

For Canada and its producers — especially those like Suncor that rely on heavy crude margins — the long‑run implications are real, even if they are years from materializing.

Suncor remains one of the strongest long‑term oil investments in North America

Suncor faces legitimate competitive risks if Venezuelan oil production recovers under U.S. control — but that recovery is a long way off. In the meantime:

For investors seeking stability amid global uncertainty, Suncor remains one of the most attractive long‑term plays in the oil sector, backed by scale, integration, infrastructure, and improving performance — even as the world watches Venezuela’s volatile transformation.

Suncor is a Canadian integrated energy company, including oil sands development, production and upgrading; offshore oil and gas; petroleum refining in Canada and the U.S.; and the Petro-Canada retail and wholesale distribution networks.

Suncor Energy stock (TSX:SU) closed Friday trading 2.55 per cent higher at C$64.95 and has risen nearly 15 per cent since this time last year.

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