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Venezuela’s Petro: Stable Coin For Crypto-Economy Or Illegal Oil Futures?

Venezuela’s Petro: Stable Coin For Crypto-Economy Or Illegal Oil Futures? thumbnail

Starting in late 2017 Venezuela’s President Nikolas Maduro began expanding heavily into media space in an attempt to promote a new payment instrument– the government-issued cryptocurrency Petro.

On Feb. 20 the pre-sale of Petro was launched and has already raised $735 mln, according to Maduro’s Twitter. Total amount of PTR issued for sale is 100 mln and is worth $6 bln. The pre-sale will end on March 19.

The following questions are raised by this controversial project: what is Petro in an economic context and what would be its possible real use in the global economy? Is it a cryptocurrency, a stable coin, oil futures, new government debt instrument or something else? What is its possible economic impact? Which legal issues could follow?

image courtesy of CoinTelegraph

Having carefully studied the Petro white paper and other data available, we present below the results of the analysis.

Venezuela now

According to Maduro, Petro being backed by the Venezuelan crude oil is one of the best ways to use new technologies to restore the financial condition of Venezuela. For many years, the country has been suffering from hyperinflation by thousands of percent per year, while US sanctions cut off Venezuela from international capital markets.

A huge deficit of US dollar monetary supply has led to the absence of basic goods and a tenfold price discrepancy between official and black market currency exchanges for the Venezuelan bolivar and US dollar. That said, this financial catastrophe coincides with Venezuela’s status as possessing the largest volume of readily retrievable proved oil reserves as assessed by OPEC, being well ahead of well-known oil producers such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and others.

But it seems even more alarming news are boiling up. The US administration was urged to impose a full embargo on Venezuelan oil in the near future. According to export statistics, US is the main market for Venezuelan oil and a primary source of ‘hard currency’- US dollars. The excluding of the market from the oil export structure could lead to an even more dramatic economic situation in the country.

The idea of issuing cryptocurrency by the government has been suggested before (Japan, UAE, Russia, and some others), but has so far fallen short of authorization by top officials and practical implementation.

Petro has received official recognition from the Venezuelan government. President Maduro has signed a white paper clearly specifying the conditions and dates of the tokensale. Its activity is aimed at both internal and external markets and carried out at ALBA (Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America) and OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) levels as well.

El Petro white paper

The original white paper, published on the official website of Venezuela’s government describes the process of issuing Petro. The initial disbursement will be made on the Ethereum platform as a standard ERC20 token. It also states that the Petro price will be correlated with one barrel of Venezuelan crude oil.

The Real Coas Of Petro

The basic items of Petro are mentioned in the white paper as follows: (all the information in this table is the white paper summary and the details are stated as they are in the original document):


Petro: general information

Petro is not solely a token equal to the raw oil barrel price. They are looking at more broad functioning:

  • A transitory asset for exchange to goods and services, and also fiat money
  • A digital platform for emittance and trade of stable crypto assets backed up by raw minerals
  • A store of savings and an investment tool

Unfortunately, the Whitepaper is drafted in common language without any detail on an assumed technological base to launch a full-stack digital platform. Plans to develop such a platform are also absent.


Petro: initial emission and distribution information

100 mln coins will be emitted at launch. Their initial distribution is planned as follows:

  • 38.4% presale
  • 44% public sale
  • 17.6% will be stored in possession of Venezuela’s Superintendence of Cryptocurrencies and Related Activities (SUPCACVEN)

El Petro’s minimum unit is called the ‘mene’ and equals 10-8 Petro. ‘The total emission of El Petro is to be carried out at the initial coin offering,’ further down in the document we find that ‘an additional emission can be made as per the result of El Petro holders vote: 1 coin equals one vote.’


Petro: economic use cases

The project’s architecture is aimed at El Petro’s maximum involvement into settlements between economic agents. The main use cases are as follows:

  • As means of payment for Venezuelan oil via direct exchange of cryptocurrency to real oil dispatch
  • As a legal means of payment on the territory of Venezuela, which allows for tax payments, exactions, duties and official acceptance as the settlement by individuals and businesses. To intensify the use there is a special discount index (Dv)**:

Acceptance price of petro = PriceOil/Bolivar*(1-Dv)

**Dv will be at least 10%

Apparently, this means that paying taxes and any other settlements with state bodies would be at least 10 percent cheaper in El Petro at the current exchange rate than in traditional currency (i.e. in Bolivars).

In the future, the use of Petro is planned to be expanded into other payment markets promoting its use in the world as a stable currency backed up by a real resource.


Petro: legal aspects

As the document states, Petro will fully comply with Venezuela’s legislation. However, the opposition in the National Assembly publicly claimed that issuing Petro was illegal. Some operations with Petro, such as initial sales, subsequent exchange to oil and other assets at ‘authorized exchange sites’ will be carried out in strict compliance with KYC/AML, yet the standards for these are not stated in the document.


Overall the document goes well beyond the scope in which Petro was covered by the media in late December and early January. Earlier it was considered to be simply a cryptocurrency backed up by oil. However, over the course of deeper investigation into the white paper, one could see that it also announces future creation of a platform for e-commodities (digital representation of goods/raw materials), greatly expanding the concept.

At the same time, some parts of the Whitepaper lack fine details, and some statements are not backed by any sufficient explanation. Some items feature information that could seem contradictory. A more thorough white paper with extra technical details would probably spark much more interest and trust in global crypto community.

Economic aspects

Petro could be described as ‘a legal payment instrument’ or ‘a legal tender’ applicable by the government. The concept raises the question of determining the use of a single currency as a legal payment instrument for goods and services to businesses, individuals and the government. This leads to several basic assumptions:

  • Any individual or business must accept this medium of settlement as payment in a private or public transaction
  • All taxes, levies, duties and excise duties as well as other payments to state bodies can be made solely in this currency (currencies)

In the case of Petro, the government, businesses, and individuals can (but are not obliged) to accept it as the currency for all the payments and levies. Despite the fact that the whitepaper declares the maximum intensification of Petro use – up to the discount index, which actually makes it more beneficial for use on the market compared to the Bolivar – we still cannot confirm that Petro fully corresponds to the concept of a legal means of payment. It is a payment instrument that has the attributes of a legal means of payment but is not necessarily such.

In reality, the value of emitted currency is to be ‘secured’ by the liability of Venezuelan government on providing the goods, i.e. the oil, and by its acceptance as the payment to state bodies. In theory, Petro looks more like the currency of the gold-standard period that is technically implemented by virtue of Blockchain technology.

Petro concept

The concept of Petro seems to be both simple and complicated. Up until now, there has been no precedent of issuing cryptocurrencies with such broad functionality to the mass market by the government. Petro is the ‘intersection’ of several familiar concepts from the world of conventional finance.

In Venezuela, Petro stands close to the concept of a legal settlement medium, and in global trade, it is basically a conditionally-stable crypto asset (oil also has specific volatility) that is in fact an oil future without a specific delivery date. Petro could also be assessed as an instrument for tax and levies payment with discounts in a concrete jurisdiction (in the ICO world: a token discount on the unique goods or service of the project). From the investors perspective, at the time of running the crowd sale, the purchase of future oil delivery (the futures) is made with the nominal discount.

New monetary aggregate

That being said, Petro can be conventionally viewed as a new monetary aggregate in the structure of Venezuelan monetary mass. Unlike the Bolivar, it is expected to be easily converted into the US dollar as well as other currencies, which will help Venezuela in export trade.

Therefore, it all comes down to ‘a special monetary aggregate for international payments’. Since it is planned to issue 100 mln coins with each coin equal to one oil barrel (~$60), its total capitalization will amount to $6 bln.

This cost will be actually created during the initial offering with the Venezuelan government receiving several billion of real US dollars from investors. Taking into account the correlation with the oil price and based on the price range starting from 2008 ($30-$150 BBL), we could claim that this monetary aggregate will amount to somewhere between $3 bln and $15 bln. The white paper doesn’t have any grounding on why this specific amount of coins is issued. However, this amount should probably be calculated according to the country’s demand in US dollars and foreign trade transactions.

Payment in Petro

From now on by order of Nicolás Maduro the oil state corporation PDVSA is obliged to carry out transactions in Petro. Moreover, all public and private services like hotels or services of the Venezuelan consulates can now legally accept Petro as means of payment. At the same time, the circulation of digital currency has not even started yet, but Maduro is already preparing a full-fledged legislative and actual infrastructure for future acceptance of Petro.

Questions arise

Many questions arise upon scrutinizing the project, and finding answers to them might clear up the future of Petro. Here we’d like to list some major concerns:

  1. Is it a currency or an oil future? And to what extent is it legal? Taking into account Venezuela’s condition under economic sanctions, it’s highly unlikely that this monetary tool will be easily accepted by the global community. And if it is not, Petro investors and users could get into trouble with the law in jurisdictions outside Venezuela.
  2. Whats are the risks of money laundering through Petro? There’s a clear possibility that it could be purchased with the funds that were received illegally at crypto exchanges or privately, and then exchanged to oil that can be ‘laundered’ and documented to eventually be sold under above-board business practices in various jurisdictions.
  3. Taking into consideration the political and economic situation in Venezuela and the level of corruption, it’s very likely that KYC/AML could become a rather byzantine procedure. Another question is whether major crypto exchanges would agree to list a token that is contradictory in terms of legal compliance.
  4. The project is initially issued at a digital platform. However, there is zero information on the technical parameters of the future blockchain system.
  5. What is the discount index going to be like? The white paper states that ‘no less than 10 percent’ will be available. This could be a point of leverage for Petro’s popularity in the country.
  6. It should be noted that introduction of Petro could put Venezuelan national currency Bolivar into even more miserable condition.
  7. The issue of additional issuance is not fully transparent. If it is done with consideration to holders’ votes, then apparently the government will profit from accumulating >50 percent of the coins and sooner or later start disseminating whichever amounts it chooses. On the one hand, it is useful for Venezuela’s economy: it could actually put into full swing the printing of ‘hard currency,’ on the other hand, a trust issue could arise.

To be continued…

Petro has set a precedent of bringing a cryptocurrency to the market which was created by and government and secured by a physically tangible resource. This instrument features broad functionality that is close to regular money and conventional financial instruments.

However, at the moment the project raises a lot of concerning questions and provides few answers. It still looks more like a beautifully crafted concept than a real and viable financial instrument which could operate worldwide.

It should be noted that initially, the cryptocurrency world is in the state of post-industrial economy, i.e. an economy of communities which independently emit the values determining cost on their own. Therefore, any attempt to secure the cost by virtue of some kind of liabilities is pretty risky.  As history shows, the emitters of money like to renege on financial liabilities. Taken Venezuela’s negative reputation on world financial markets, one might think twice about the promise of Petro.

So the big question is still there: is Petro a stable coin for the world’s crypto economy or merely an illegally emitted oil future? It remains to be seen.

CoinTelegraph.com



8 Comments on "Venezuela’s Petro: Stable Coin For Crypto-Economy Or Illegal Oil Futures?"

  1. Outcast_Searcher on Sun, 25th Feb 2018 11:26 am 

    Just because a dictator with no credibility issues a crypto currency and wants the international community to trust it doesn’t mean it will.

    With all the fraud and scamming and hacking going on already in crypto exchanges, what could possibly go wrong here?

  2. bobinget on Sun, 25th Feb 2018 12:16 pm 

    Petros won’t help poor Venezuelans w/o means to leave the country.

    Even employed are hungry.

    https://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/i-havent-eaten-meat-in-2-months-venezuelan-oil-workers-are-collapsing-from-hunger-on-the-job_02232018

    Oil production, in spite, or BEAUSE of higher prices, continues to plumIt.

    Draw a direct line between Ecuador’s falling exports to hard currency consumers and rising oil prices.

    In a very real sense Venezuela is hedging lower production with Petro. (if next President Rex Tillerson embargoes Venezuelan crude, oil prices, Petro rise. Early Rich Foreigners take profits.

    Not Poor Venezuelans.
    A genuine people’s revolt follows.
    Petros, bonds, worthless.

  3. bobinget on Sun, 25th Feb 2018 12:31 pm 

    On Topic;

    “The Trump administration is threatening to embargo Venezuelan oil, a potentially ruinous blow to the Saudi Arabia of South America. But here in the home of the world’s largest crude reserves, Venezuela is killing its largest industry all on its own.”

    “During his trip to Latin America this month, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson suggested that the “nuclear option” could be imminent — in other words, restrictions on U.S. imports of Venezuelan oil, as well as exports of diluents this nation needs to make its sludgy, super-heavy crude more salable.”

    “A senior U.S. official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, given the diplomatic sensitivities, said in an interview that a study is underway by various U.S. departments — including State, Energy and Treasury — to assess the impact of such oil restrictions. If Maduro does not change course on the April vote, or pledge himself to a transparent election with foreign monitors, an embargo of some kind is highly likely, the official suggested.”

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/the-venezuelan-oil-industry-is-on-a-cliffs-edge-trump-could-tip-it-over/2018/02/24/1c8d6350-0b62-11e8-998c-96deb18cca19_story.html?utm_term=.670ce4d40be5

  4. bobinget on Sun, 25th Feb 2018 12:42 pm 

    (the Sec of State is third in line for Presidency)
    As Trump says “A lot of people don’t know that”.

    My advice, make sure your kids, grand children, learn Chinese and Russian.

  5. Davy on Sun, 25th Feb 2018 12:53 pm 

    “My advice, make sure your kids, grand children, learn Chinese and Russian.”

    I wish you would move over there, bob. That is where you belong.

  6. bobinget on Sun, 25th Feb 2018 1:13 pm 

    What ‘other boards’ are saying;

    “The Venezuelan oil industry is on a cliff’s edge. Trump could tip it over”.

    Its workers are starving and passing out at their posts. No companies will do business with them without cash PRIOR to delivery. They owe Russia and China 60 billion dollars, while they are currently in default on their international bonds and are likely to have their overseas assets seized. (Russia already owns most CITGO, bi)

    Yes, I’d say they passed the edge like two years ago.

    Trump if anything, just kicking the corpse.

    https://www.investorvillage.com/groups.asp?mb=19168&mn=133993&pt=msg&mid=18036879

    bobinget commets;
    Saudi Arabia could help Venezuela is a hot second
    except for the fact KSA NEEDS Brent $80 and is
    TRYING to put oil markets in deficit. Removing a million B’s p/d helps that cause enormously.

    Normally WTI should be ADDING to our stockpile
    during crummy driving weather. Instead, deficits.
    IMO: markets are already in deficit.

    Stay tuned on Wednesday, rat cheer 10:30 AM Eastern for confirmation of a draw.

    Watch for higher WTI open Monday. ($64.50 ?)

  7. rockman on Sun, 25th Feb 2018 2:06 pm 

    “…US is the main market for Venezuelan oil and a primary source of ‘hard currency’- US dollars.” Depending on which numbers one choses to believe (Vz govt stats have been suspect for years) 75% to 80% of Venezuelan oil exports go to countries other then the US. The US may be the SINGLE largest Vz oil importer but collectively the vast majority of the oil is bought by refineries in other countries.

    Losing US buyers would certainly hurt Vz to some degree. But given the continuous decline in its production it may not be long before Vz is unable to supply US refineries. As far as the US govt refusing to export diluents Vz began importing some from North Africa more then a year ago. The primary reason such imports have been problematic for Vz is the inability to pay for them. Or at least cover them with Letters of Credit. With LOC’s they could acquire the diluents and pay for them from the subsequent oil sales. But so what if the US doesn’t want to issue those LOC’s: the world is full of potential creditors. Let Vz go cut deals with them…if they can get them to take the risk.

    The world is full of oil importer. More then about 90 mm bbls/day. Vz oil exports about 2% of the total global consumption. Vz doesn’t need the US to imports any of its oil: lots of other potential buyers out there. China cut a deal for Vz oil and built tankers specifically designed to haul its Orinoco crap. Let China buy the oil exports that have been going to the US.

    The world also has many money lenders besides the US so Vz doesn’t need a US credit source. China loans out many $billions every year. So why point any fingers at the US for any of Venezuela’s problems? We have no more obligation to help it then we do N. Korea. South America is full of Venezuelan cousins that are free to lend it all the help it needs. Vz is free to tell the US to go f*ck itself anytime it chooses to. LOL

  8. Norman Pagett on Mon, 26th Feb 2018 9:42 am 

    crypto currency is explained very clearly:

    https://extranewsfeed.com/bitcoin-24b3efd58ec

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