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Venezuela's defaulted government bonds soar after US capture Maduro

Venezuela's defaulted government bonds surged Monday after the surprise capture of President Nicolas Maduro by?U.S. Capture of President Nicolas Maduro.

Maduro was detained and removed to the U.S. after a military "raid" in Caracas on Saturday. This has fueled expectations that this will be one of largest and most complex sovereign debt restructurings ever.

Analysts predict that the bond prices issued by Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), the state oil company of Venezuela, will rise up to 8 cents per dollar or 20% in early European trading.

JPMorgan analysts wrote in a client note that Venezuela and PDVSA bonds had roughly doubled their price over the course of 2025. However, they still expect a strong rebound -- up to 10 points -- when Monday's trading session begins.

Venezuela's sovereign debts, which defaulted in 2017, had the best performance in the world in 2018. Their price nearly doubled as U.S. president Donald Trump increased military pressure against Maduro.

Data from Tradeweb showed that Monday's move pushed Venezuela's bond 2031 to almost 40 cents per dollar. Most of the other bonds in the country were up between 35 and 38 cents, and PDVSA's debt was over 6 cents more at almost 30 cents.

Venezuela's government and state oil company PDVSA have defaulted on bonds that had a face-value of $60 billion. Analysts estimate that the total external debt, which includes other PDVSA obligations as well as bilateral loans, arbitration awards and other PDVSA obligations is between $150 billion and $170 billion depending on how interest accrued and court judgements are counted. Reporting by Marc Jones, Karin Strohecker and Alison Williams.

(source: Reuters)