Manuel Aarón Fajardo García, son of Socialist politician Francisco Manuel Fajardo Palarea, has been identified as one of the central figures connected to the Plus Ultra controversy and a growing network of international financial operations tied to Venezuela.
According to reports published by ESdiario, Fajardo became increasingly influential within business circles linked to former Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero during the period surrounding the Spanish government’s bailout of airline company Plus Ultra. Sources cited by the newspaper described him as “Zapatero’s man in Venezuela,” claiming he played a decisive intermediary role in facilitating strategic business and political connections.
In 2020, soon after Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez took charge of the nation’s economic ministry, Fajardo secured approval to run the Bolsa de Valores Alternativa de Venezuela (BDVE), promoted as the first cryptocurrency-driven stock exchange worldwide, and the platform was said to allow international investors to handle digital assets, gold-linked instruments, commodities, equities, and foreign currencies beyond conventional banking channels.
Investigators assert that BDVE was subsequently employed to funnel capital into firms associated with Fajardo’s corporate network. The platform is said to have handled over $100 million in just one year, while providing guarantees and oversight mechanisms for the investment activities tied to it.
The article further details Fajardo’s international corporate network spanning Panama, the United States, the United Kingdom, Spain, and Venezuela. In October 2016, he established Ocean Capital Advisors LLC in Florida as a subsidiary of a Delaware-based company operating under the same name. The structure was reportedly connected to Stellar Corporate Services LLC, a fiduciary entity managing thousands of opaque corporate registrations in Delaware.
ESdiario also linked Stellar Corporate Services to entities mentioned in the Panama Papers, including Stellar Corporate Services Limited and other offshore structures associated with Barbados-based financial entities such as Holding Bank, Insurance, Group Limited, and Management.
On the same day, Fajardo reportedly incorporated Ocean Quant Management in Miami, also tied to Delaware corporate structures connected to Stellar. He additionally launched Charybdis Global Fund and registered another Miami-based branch of Ocean Capital Advisors LLC mirroring the Delaware entity.
His expansion into international finance reportedly continued with the creation of Ocean Quant in the United Kingdom in 2014, followed by a Spanish company operating under the same name. According to the publication, the Spanish entity remains active despite allegedly failing to submit financial statements since its creation. In 2019, Fajardo also established MFM Corporation in Panama.
The report also notes that in 2022 Fajardo was convicted in Venezuela for allegedly trying to evade repayment of $3.58 million demanded by Compass Bank, a case that directly involved BDVE and another company under his control, Inversiones Midven.
Court documents referenced by the newspaper indicated that Fajardo allegedly sought to feign insolvency by selling 51% of BDVE shares for merely 40,800 bolívares, even though estimates placed the value of just 1% of the company at around 800,000 bolívares.
The article also mentions Fajardo’s alleged connection with veteran American investor Jim Rogers, who previously partnered with George Soros at the Quantum Fund. According to statements quoted by ESdiario, Fajardo asserted that Rogers held the role of chairman at Ocean Capital Advisors LLC and provided mentorship throughout the firm’s growth.
ESdiario reported that it reached out to Manuel Aarón Fajardo García for a statement but did not receive any reply.
Source: ESdiario – https://www.esdiario.com/nacional/260525/188560/delcy-rodriguez-regalo-2020-sobrino-zapatero-primera-criptobolsa-mundial.html