Le cours du baril de light sweet crude (WTI) pour livraison en mai a gagné 2,46 dollars à 39,72 dollars sur le New York Mercantile Exchange (Nymex), pour une progression de plus de 11% en quatre séances.
A Londres, le baril de Brent de la mer du Nord pour livraison en juin a gagné 2,51 dollars à 41,94 dollars sur l’Intercontinental Exchange (ICE). Il a atteint vers 15H30 GMT le niveau de 42,01 dollars, un maximum depuis plus de deux semaines.
Il n’y a rien de concret pour justifier la hausse de vendredi, mais les différentes actualités (sur la réunion du 17 avril) combinées à la baisse surprise des stocks de brut aux Etats-Unis ont changé l’état d’esprit du marché, a estimé Andy Lipow, de Lipow Oil Associates.
[Bloomberg] Oil Rises Most in Two Months on U.S. Output Drop, Freeze Talks
[CNBC] First-quarter economy looks bleaker by the day
[Bloomberg] Italy to Miss Previous Debt Target as Growth Forecast Reduced
[Bloomberg] Brazil Heads for Cliffhanger on Impeachment in Decisive Showdown
[Bloomberg] Paulson’s Advantage Funds Each Tumbled 15% in First Quarter
[Bloomberg] North Korea Tests Rocket Engine as U.S. Talks Up Missile Shield
[Bloomberg] U.S. Stocks Rebound as Crude Rally Boosts Commodity Producers
[Reuters] Oil surges 6% on freeze hopes, economic growth
[Bloomberg] Emerging Markets Pare Weekly Loss as Energy Shares Gain With Oil
[Reuters] Yen stalls as finance minister warns on intervention
[Bloomberg] Bank of America: The Biggest Part of the U.S. Economy Might Be Rolling Over
[Reuters] Shenzhen, Shanghai home sales plunge after rules tightened
[WSJ] Fed’s Yellen Joins With Predecessors to Calm Recession Fears
[FT] Global bond default tally hits highest since 2009
[Reuters] Germany may punish companies with connections to tax havens-Spiegel
[Bloomberg] Hammered Hedge Funds Recovering as March Best Month in Two Years
[Reuters] Exclusive – Norway’s high-yield bond market becomes latest casualty of oil turmoil