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.
newportable Laboris gloria Ludi | Reprise du message précédent :
Citation :
LONDON, June 16 (Reuters) - Oil surged to a new record high on Monday of nearly $140 a barrel, propelled by weakness in the U.S. dollar which offset the bearish impact of plans by Saudi Arabia to boost output. U.S. light, sweet crude for July delivery (CLc1) was up $3.74 at $138.60 a barrel by 1317 GMT, after falling as much as $1.40 a barrel, or about 1 percent, earlier in the session. U.S. crude set a record high of $139.89 a barrel. London Brent crude (LCOc1) was up $3.05 at $138.16. Prices leapt as the dollar fell after publication of data from the New York Federal Reserve that showed manufacturing in the state of New York contracted in June for the fourth time in five months (nNAT004137) "Prices rose sharply in three minutes. U.S. manufactring data was weak, so it is pressuring the dollar down," said Mike Wittner, energy analyst at Societe General. Earlier in the session prices had dropped back after United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon said over the weekend that Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, was set to increase output to 9.7 million barrels per day in July, its second supply boost in as many months. (nL15482776) That would be a rise of 550,000 bpd or over 6 percent since May and would take Saudi output to its highest monthly rate since August 1981, according to U.S. government data. Saudi plans emerged ahead of a meeting of oil producers and consumers on June 22 to find a solution to record oil prices that have caused consumer protests in Asia and Europe. Some analysts view Saudi output increase as a signal that other members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries might follow. "I think OPEC will add more barrels next week and it will have to be significant enough for the world to stand up and take notice," said Rob Laughlin, analyst at futures broker MF Global.
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“Losing money is the least of my troubles. A loss never bothers me after I take it. I forget it overnight. But being wrong – not taking the loss – that is what does the damage to the pocketbook and to the soul.”
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