Quels impacts du conflit en Iran vous semblent les plus probables ?1. impact haussier de court-terme sur les cours du pétrole
2. impact haussier de long-terme sur les cours du pétrole
3. impact baissier transitoire sur la bourse (correction en V)
4. impact baissier prolongé sur la bourse (bear market)
5. pas d'impact notable en bourse (simple respiration)
6. impact inflationniste transitoire
7. impact inflationniste prolongé
8. pas d'impact notable sur l'inflation
9. mon angoisse pour mon portefeuille
10. mon indifférence (sur le plan de la bourse)
Total : 446 votes (29 votes blancs)
Sondage à 4 choix possibles.
Profil supprimé | Avis de Marc Faber:
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I think a correction is overdue, yes, but you may have heard today the Swiss National Bank pegged the Swiss franc to the euro. In other words, one more currency that was perceived to be a safe haven, is no longer a safe currency because it’s pegged to a relatively weak currency, the euro.
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Citation :
He believes the gold price should be put into a context of its relative value against rapid devaluations of the world’s primary reserve currencies—the U.S. dollar, euro, yen, and British pound—and, now, the Swiss franc, following the SNB decision last week to peg the franc to the declining euro.
“In fact, I could make an analysis to show that the price of gold today is probably cheaper than when it was $300 per ounce based on the increase in government debt, based on the increase in monetary base in the United States and based on the expansion of wealth in Asia,” Faber explained.
Spot gold reached a high of $1,923.70 per ounce on September 6, whose price has since pulled back to the $1,800-$1,850 trading range following the SNB announcement that the franc, de facto, will no longer become a refuge of the currency.
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