Bitcoin’s price could be hit by Venezuela’s 3% BTC reserve: Here’s how
Venezuela is sitting on as many as 600,000 Bitcoin [BTC]. With the capture of President Nicolas Maduro, if the U.S. seizes the coins, they would likely be frozen in legal battles for years.
Roughly 3% of Bitcoin’s total supply could be effectively taken out of circulation without a single trade taking place.
For an asset with limited supply, this is critical.
One of crypto’s largest reserves
The markets are fixated on Venezuela’s vast oil wealth, but here’s a look between the lines. The regime was building a Bitcoin “shadow reserve.”
Beginning in 2018 with sanctions, Venezuela allegedly used gold swaps, forced oil-for-USDT settlements, and seized mining operations to accumulate crypto.
Gold from the Orinoco Mining Arc was liquidated, and, by some estimates, nearly $2 billion was converted into Bitcoin at prices near $5,000 (around 400,000 BTC.)
As the state-backed “Petro” failed, USDT became a workaround for oil sales before being quietly washed into Bitcoin to avoid Tether’s freeze risk.
Add later inflows, and estimates now place Venezuela’s holdings at 600,000-660,000 BTC, worth over $60 billion.
Why this changes the BTC market
To understand the impact, compare this to Germany’s 2024 sale of roughly 50,000 BTC. That liquidation caused a 15-20% correction and weeks of bearishness.
Venezuela’s stash is 12 times larger.
At this scale, it rivals MicroStrategy [MSTR] and sits just below BlackRock’s IBIT ETF. It’s also nearly double the U.S. government’s known Bitcoin holdings.
If the U.S. locks up those coins, roughly 3% of Bitcoin’s circulating supply could disappear from the market without being sold.
Why a fire sale is unlikely
The most likely outcome is a freeze. Legal battles, forfeiture claims, and creditor disputes could lock these coins in escrow for years.
A strategic reserve is also plausible, especially given President Donald Trump’s public openness to holding confiscated Bitcoin as a long-term asset.
A rapid liquidation remains the least likely option. Politically and strategically, dumping such a large amount of Bitcoin would wreck stability and the broader “Bitcoin reserve” narrative.
In the short term…
Uncertainty could cause big moves, but the numbers look calm. There are no signs of a surge in panic selling, with similar patterns seen during recent geopolitical conflicts.
BTC is growing to be immune to macroeconomic events.
Longer term, a forced lock-up of 600,000 BTC is bullish. Reduced liquid supply favors large LTHs and makes a stronger case for Bitcoin’s scarcity narrative in the new year.
Final Thoughts
- A potential 600,000 BTC freeze could lock 3% of Bitcoin’s supply.
- With no panic selling visible, the market appears to view this shock as bullish.




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