Valero Energy stock forecast: VLO in focus after U.S. strikes Venezuela, oil shock looms for Monday
3 January 2026
2 mins read

Valero Energy stock forecast: VLO in focus after U.S. strikes Venezuela, oil shock looms for Monday

NEW YORK, Jan 3, 2026, 06:55 ET — Market closed

  • Trump said U.S. forces captured Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro after overnight strikes, putting oil back in the geopolitical spotlight.  Reuters
  • Valero shares last closed up 1.55% on Friday, ahead of the weekend news, and remain about 11% below their 52-week high.  MarketWatch
  • Analysts’ average target price near $189 implies low-double-digit upside, with Valero’s Jan. 29 earnings the next key company catalyst.  MarketWatch

Valero Energy Corp shares were headed for a volatile reopening after U.S. President Donald Trump said U.S. forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in overnight strikes and promised details at an 11 a.m. press conference at Mar-a-Lago in Florida. MST Marquee analyst Saul Kavonic said oil prices were “likely to jump on the near-term risk to supply.”  Reuters

Valero (VLO) ended Friday up 1.55% at $165.31, leaving investors without an immediate read-through on how the Venezuela headlines will hit refiners until U.S. markets reopen on Monday. The stock is about 11% below its 52-week high of $185.62.  MarketWatch

Why it matters now is oil’s role as both a macro driver and a direct input cost. Venezuela is a key crude producer, and any disruption — or a rapid shift in U.S. policy toward Venezuelan exports — can swing oil prices and the cost of feedstock for refiners.

Early signs pointed to limited immediate operational damage. Two sources familiar with Venezuela’s state-run PDVSA said its oil production and refining were normal and major facilities had suffered no damage, though the port of La Guaira near Caracas was heavily damaged and is not used for oil operations.  Reuters

For Valero, higher crude prices are not automatically bullish. The refiner’s earnings tend to track refining margins — often discussed through “crack spreads,” the gap between wholesale gasoline and diesel prices and the cost of crude oil. If crude rises faster than products, margins can tighten; if product prices rise more, margins can improve.

Refining peers moved higher in the last session before the strikes. Marathon Petroleum rose 1.6%, Phillips 66 added 1.2% and HF Sinclair gained 1.7% on Friday, while Valero traded between $162.08 and $165.65 before settling at $165.31.

On Wall Street’s longer-dated view, analysts’ average 12-month price target for Valero stood at $188.65, implying roughly 14% upside from Friday’s close, according to MarketWatch’s compilation of 23 ratings.  MarketWatch

The next known company catalyst is earnings. Valero said it will release fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results on Jan. 29 before the market opens and hold a conference call at 10 a.m. ET.  Valero Energy

Valero has highlighted its scale and mix ahead of the report, describing a footprint of 15 refineries with combined throughput capacity of about 3.2 million barrels per day, alongside renewable diesel and ethanol operations.  Valero Energy

Investors will also be listening to a management team that has just completed a finance leadership handoff. An Oct. 28 filing showed Valero appointed Homer Bhullar as chief financial officer effective Jan. 1, replacing Jason Fraser.  SEC

Oil closed lower on Friday — before the Venezuela strikes — with Brent settling at $60.75 a barrel and U.S. West Texas Intermediate at $57.32 as traders weighed oversupply concerns against geopolitical risks that included Venezuela. The same Reuters report said the Trump administration on Wednesday imposed sanctions on four companies and associated oil tankers it said were operating in Venezuela’s oil sector.  Reuters

OPEC+ policy is the other near-term swing factor for crude. Delegates told Reuters they expect the group to maintain its pause on output hikes in the first quarter at a meeting scheduled for Sunday, even as tensions between Saudi Arabia and the UAE have flared over Yemen.  Reuters

Before the next session, traders will watch oil’s first reaction when futures reopen, and whether Washington signals any changes to sanctions or enforcement that affect Venezuelan barrels. The key for Valero is the direction of crack spreads once crude and product markets digest the shock.

Before the next session, technicians will also focus on whether VLO holds above the $162 area, near Friday’s low, with the mid-$160s a first hurdle and the $170 level a psychological marker. Beyond Monday’s open, Jan. 29 guidance on refining margins and operating rates is the next major checkpoint for the stock.

CEO of TS2 Space and founder of TS2.tech. Expert in satellites, telecommunications, and emerging technologies, covering trends in space, AI, and connectivity.

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