The evidence provided strongly and consistently supports the statement that Venezuela's stock market reacted following the capture of Nicolás Maduro. The core of the claim is directly substantiated by several high-authority financial news sources. A Bloomberg article explicitly reports a massive "124% rally" in the country's stock exchange post-Maduro, directly linking the market's behavior to the event. This is corroborated by a Yahoo Finance report which, while using the phrase 'shrugging off', clarifies this as a "positive response" from the market. Further indirect evidence of a significant market reaction includes a report on the filing of a new 'Venezuela Exposure' ETF, indicating renewed investor interest spurred by the event.The prerequisite event—the capture of Maduro—is authoritatively confirmed by primary sources including the U.S. State Department, CBS News, and ABC News, establishing the timeline. Sources that do not discuss the stock market are focused on different aspects, such as the global oil markets or the legal aftermath of the capture, and therefore do not contradict the claim. One source notes a "muted" reaction in *global* markets, which is not inconsistent with a strong reaction in the specific, domestic Venezuelan market. The convergence of multiple, credible sources directly describing a significant market movement makes the statement highly probable.