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It looks like Goldman Sachs is going to make money on one of the most controversial trades of the year

Goldman Sachs has cashed out on some of the controversial bonds it bought from the Venezuelan government.

Critics have unloaded on Goldman Sachs for doing business with the government in Venezuela, where protests are raging against authoritarian President President Nicolás Maduro.

Goldman Sachs has cashed out on a portion of the $2.8 billion in Venezuelan bonds that the bank came under fire for purchasing from the cash-strapped country's central bank back in May.

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A small cadre of hedge funds recently bought $300 million of the bonds from Goldman Sachs, which enlisted small UK-based brokerage Liquidity Finance to arrange the trade, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The bank's asset management unit acquired the bonds of Venezuelan state oil company for $0.31 on the dollar — about $865 million — a little over a month ago, setting off a firestorm of controversy for conducting business with the country's authoritarian administration.

The group of hedge funds paid $0.325 cents on the dollar, according to the Journal, more than the $0.31 the bank paid. To be sure, Goldman Sachs is still holding a big chunk of the bonds, and the price could move up or down from here. The company declined to comment on the deal.

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Venezuela has been flirting with civil unrest amid deep economic struggles and shortages of basic food and supplies, which many in the country blame on embattled President Nicolás Maduro.

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