Today: 9 April 2026
Venezuela oil deal puts Chevron, Valero and PBF in focus before the U.S. open
7 January 2026
2 mins read

Venezuela oil deal puts Chevron, Valero and PBF in focus before the U.S. open

New York, January 7, 2026, 05:50 EST — Premarket

  • Chevron slid in premarket trade after Trump said the U.S. struck a deal to bring Venezuelan crude to U.S. ports.
  • Gulf Coast refiners and Canadian heavy-oil producers also moved as traders weighed shifting crude flows.
  • Investors are watching Thursday’s White House talks with oil executives for clues on licenses and timing.

Chevron fell 4.4% in premarket trading after President Donald Trump said the United States had reached a deal to import up to $2 billion of Venezuelan crude — roughly 30 million to 50 million barrels — to be sold at market prices. Valero, Marathon Petroleum, Phillips 66 and PBF Energy were down between 1.2% and 7.7%, while Canadian Natural Resources and Cenovus slipped about 2% and Baker Hughes rose 0.6%. Chevron controls Venezuelan oil flows to the United States under a U.S. authorization and has been exporting 100,000 to 150,000 barrels per day (bpd), while traders said the prospect of added supply pushed some U.S. Gulf heavy-crude differentials — the price gap to benchmark grades — about 50 cents lower on Tuesday. Reuters

Why it matters now: Venezuelan crude is heavy and “sour” (high-sulfur), a grade that suits complex U.S. Gulf Coast plants and can lower fuel production costs if sanctions ease. “The Gulf Coast can absorb a substantial portion of that 1 million bpd,” said Rommel Oates, founder of refining software firm Refinery Calculator. Barclays analyst Theresa Chen said Valero could process an extra 300,000 to 400,000 bpd, and oil executives are expected at the White House on Thursday to discuss Venezuela, sources said. Reuters

Supply is still gated by enforcement on the water. Shipping data and PDVSA documents showed crude deliveries to Asia have stalled, leaving tanks close to full and forcing PDVSA to deepen production cuts, while Chevron-chartered vessels were among the few loading for export. At least a dozen sanctioned vessels that loaded in December sailed in early January with transponders switched off — a practice traders call “dark mode” — and U.S. authorities have not said whether those departures were authorized. Reuters

The moves come after a sharp rally earlier in the week on hopes that U.S.-Venezuela policy shifts could eventually expand access beyond the narrow channels now allowed. Chevron ended 5% higher on Monday and refiners rose between 3% and 9%, while Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips added more than 2% and oilfield services firms Baker Hughes, Halliburton and SLB gained 4% to 9%. “This type of crude aligns well with the configuration of U.S. Gulf Coast refineries,” said Pepperstone strategist Ahmad Assiri. Reuters

Oil prices extended declines on Wednesday, adding pressure to the producer side of the trade. Brent fell 0.6% to $60.35 a barrel and U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude dropped 0.9% to $56.61 in early European trading. UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said the Venezuela headline weighed early, though traders later questioned how big the incremental volumes would be, while Morgan Stanley estimated the market could run a surplus of as much as 3 million bpd in the first half of 2026. Reuters

But the stock trade hinges on politics as much as barrels. A shift in sanctions terms or tougher enforcement could strand cargoes again and keep Venezuelan production constrained, while a faster-than-expected flow of discounted heavy crude would squeeze producers’ pricing power and shift refining margins.

Investors will watch for signs on U.S. licensing decisions and any changes in how quickly Venezuelan cargoes can move from storage to U.S. buyers. The next catalyst is Thursday’s White House meeting with oil executives, where traders expect the first concrete read on timelines and scope for Chevron and Gulf Coast refiners.

Stock Market Today

  • Stocks Slip as US-Iran Ceasefire Optimism Wanes; Oil Prices Surge
    April 9, 2026, 12:18 PM EDT. Stocks dipped as S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq 100 indexes retreated following fading optimism over a US-Iran ceasefire. June E-mini futures reflected this softening trend. Crude oil jumped over 5%, driven by the Strait of Hormuz blockade and escalating tensions from Israeli-Lebanon clashes, threatening the fragile truce. Both the US and Iran accused each other of ceasefire breaches, complicating Saturday's talks. U.S. economic data disappointed, with rising unemployment claims, weaker personal income and spending, and downwardly revised Q4 GDP growth adding pressure. Oil tanker restrictions amplified shipping delays, with over 1,000 vessels waiting near the strait, historically a key global energy transit route. Markets price in only a 2% chance of a Federal Reserve rate hike in late April, while overseas shares also fell, weighing on sentiment.

Latest article

Palantir Stock Drops as Michael Burry Says Anthropic Is ‘Eating Its Lunch’

Palantir Stock Drops as Michael Burry Says Anthropic Is ‘Eating Its Lunch’

9 April 2026
Palantir Technologies dropped about 7% Thursday after Michael Burry said Anthropic was overtaking it in enterprise AI, putting Palantir on track to lose $34 billion in market value. Anthropic reported its annualized revenue run rate had surged past $30 billion and launched new AI tools for businesses. Nearly one in four businesses on Ramp now pays for Anthropic, according to Ramp data. Palantir’s stock still trades at 395 times earnings.
Salesforce Stock Hits Fresh 52-Week Low Despite AI Growth and $50 Billion Buyback

Salesforce Stock Hits Fresh 52-Week Low Despite AI Growth and $50 Billion Buyback

9 April 2026
Salesforce shares hit a new 52-week low Thursday, dropping 3.7% to $169.76 despite reporting 12% revenue growth and strong demand for its AI products. The broader software sector continued to slide, with the S&P 500 software and services index down about $1 trillion since January. Salesforce raised its buyback authorization to $50 billion and increased its dividend to 44 cents a share.
ServiceNow Stock Hits Fresh 52-Week Low as Analysts Cut Targets Ahead of Earnings

ServiceNow Stock Hits Fresh 52-Week Low as Analysts Cut Targets Ahead of Earnings

9 April 2026
ServiceNow shares dropped 5.1% to $92.45 by 10:20 a.m. EDT Thursday, hitting a new 52-week low after analysts at Stifel, BTIG, and Goldman Sachs cut price targets citing weak federal spending and limited 2026 growth. The company announced it will integrate AI, data, security, and governance into all products ahead of first-quarter results due April 22.
SoFi Technologies Stock Slips as Wall Street Cuts Targets Ahead of Q1 Earnings

SoFi Technologies Stock Slips as Wall Street Cuts Targets Ahead of Q1 Earnings

9 April 2026
SoFi Technologies shares fell 1.9% to $16.18 Thursday after KBW and Wells Fargo cut price targets ahead of first-quarter results due April 29. The moves follow Muddy Waters’ short position and claims of accounting issues, which SoFi denies. Affirm and LendingClub also traded lower. Barclays and other banks have trimmed targets as concerns mount over credit quality and sector valuations.
Tesla revives cheaper EV bet with compact SUV plan in China after sales strain

Tesla revives cheaper EV bet with compact SUV plan in China after sales strain

9 April 2026
Tesla is developing a smaller, cheaper electric SUV to be built first in Shanghai, sources said. The new model would cost less than the Model 3 and be smaller than the Model Y. Tesla produced 408,386 vehicles but delivered only 358,023 in Q1, as U.S. demand weakened and competition increased. Shares fell 0.8% Thursday.
Zealand Pharma stock sinks 6% in Copenhagen — what investors watch before JPM Healthcare
Previous Story

Zealand Pharma stock sinks 6% in Copenhagen — what investors watch before JPM Healthcare

Lloyds share price dips below 100p as Barclays backs the stock ahead of January results
Next Story

Lloyds share price dips below 100p as Barclays backs the stock ahead of January results

Go toTop