Home » Crypto Market Steady as U.S. Captures Venezuelan President Maduro

Crypto Market Steady as U.S. Captures Venezuelan President Maduro

by Terron Gold
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The crypto market opened North American sessions today in a cautious holding pattern as traders digested breaking geopolitical news: the United States says it has captured Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro in a large-scale military operation. While prices have not broken sharply in either direction yet, the backdrop has shifted from routine macro noise to full geopolitical risk, the kind that historically wakes crypto markets fast.
 
According to U.S. President Donald Trump, U.S. forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro during a large-scale military operation. The announcement follows weeks of rising pressure, including reported strikes, oil seizures, and a major U.S. troop buildup in the Caribbean. Venezuela’s government has allegedly denied the claim, declared a state of emergency, and accused Washington of military aggression after explosions were reported in Caracas and other regions. Trump is expected to outline the next steps in a public briefing.
 
As of the latest snapshot, Bitcoin hovered near $89,976, up about 0.6% over 24 hours. Ethereum traded around $3,102, posting a stronger 1.6% daily gain, while XRP jumped above $2.00, rising more than 5.5% on the day. Stablecoin USDT remained flat, as expected, while broader crypto benchmarks showed modest gains across the board.
 
On the surface, the market looks calm. Underneath, positioning is tightening. Thin early-January liquidity, combined with an unexpected geopolitical shock, has put traders on edge. The CRYPTOCAP index shows that total market volume climbed sharply overnight. It sat near $138 billion until about 7 PM on January 2, surged to $217 billion after 8 PM, and has since eased slightly, holding around $200 billion as activity remains elevated, according to TradingView data.
 
Market participants are now waiting to see whether this story fades into diplomatic noise or escalates into sanctions, oil disruptions, or regional instability that forces risk repricing. Venezuela has long sat at the intersection of geopolitics, energy, and crypto. Under Maduro, the country became a case study in how sanctioned regimes lean on digital assets to bypass financial isolation.
 
Blockchain analysts have previously traced tens of millions of dollars in stablecoin flows linked to Venezuelan state entities, and U.S. officials have accused the regime of using crypto rails to skirt oil and gold sanctions. That history matters now. If Washington follows the capture with tighter enforcement, asset seizures, or broader sanctions targeting energy and financial channels, crypto could once again become both a pressure valve and a flashpoint, especially in stablecoins, offshore liquidity, and emerging-market flows.
 
So far, crypto is doing what it often does best in the first hours of a shock: wait. Bitcoin holding near $90,000 suggests no immediate flight to or from risk. Ethereum’s steadiness points to ongoing confidence in real network use and scaling. XRP’s jump looks more like a liquidity-driven pop than a reaction to Venezuela or broader macro news. But traders aren’t relaxed. Support and resistance levels are being watched closely, and derivatives desks are already pricing in wider ranges for the sessions ahead.
 
Geopolitical events don’t move crypto instantly; they reprice expectations. If the Venezuela situation stabilizes, today’s moves may fade into background volatility. If it escalates, crypto could quickly shift from drifting sideways to repricing risk, sanctions exposure, and capital flows in real time. For now, prices are holding, but attention across the market is fully switched on.

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