Nous agrégeons les sources d’informations financières spécifiques Régionales et Internationales. Info Générale, Economique, Marchés Forex-Comodities- Actions-Obligataires-Taux, Vieille règlementaire etc.
Enjoy a simplified experience
Find all the economic and financial information on our Orishas Direct application to download on Play StoreAs the American parliamentarians crossed
Monday evening, a new step to end the budgetary paralysis in
United States (“shutdown”), European stock exchanges should open in
Rise on Tuesday.
On this November 11 holiday, no publications
No business indicators or economic indicators are on the agenda.
Around 7:30am, the CAC 40 futures contract
grew by 0.4%, according to data from broker IG.
While risk appetite has improved thanks to the prospect of
Exiting the fiscal impasse across the Atlantic, futures contracts on
European indexes rose on Tuesday.
Around 7:30, the DAX 40 futures contract at
Frankfurt gained 0.4%, while the one on the FTSE 100 in London increased
0.6%, according to data from the broker IG.
On Monday evening, the US Senate passed a text of
funding to end the longest “shutdown” in history,
Democrats having brought in enough votes for the measure to be
validated.
The text was approved by 60 votes to 40. Eight Democrats joined
almost all Republicans to support this bill.
For the leader of the Republican majority in the Senate,
John Thune, “It's been a very long way, literally the 'shutdown'
the longest in history.”
The text will now be sent to the House
representatives, controlled by the Republicans, for a final vote as soon as
Wednesday, then will arrive on the desk of the American President, Donald Trump. Les
House Republicans are expected to support the bill, which also
approved by the White House.
The US Senate passed a
agreement in principle to put an end to the budgetary paralysis in
United States, which has lasted since October 1.
The New York Stock Exchange regained ground on Monday,
driven by technology stocks, while investors were
encouraged by the progress made in ending the “shutdown.”
The Dow Jones index closed up 0.8%, at 47,368.63 points, and the
S&P 500 gained 1.5% to 6,832.43 points. Nasdaq Composite has been awarded
2.3%, at 23,527.17 points.
The technology sector, which last week had its strongest
pullback since April, fuelled Monday's recovery: Nvidia jumped by
5.8%, Micron Technology took 6.5% and Broadcom 2.6%.
According to Paul Hickey, co-founder of Bespoke Investment Group, “he
It may seem strange to think that the market recovered in early October, at
The start of the 'shutdown', and that it is recovering now, while the
administrations are about to reopen”.
The reopening of federal administrations should
lead to an influx of economic data that will be used to guide the decision
of the Federal Reserve (Fed) at its meeting on 9 and 10 December. For
At the moment, the market attributes a 64% probability to a rate reduction
by a quarter point next month.
Tuesday, the American bond market will be closed
for the Veterans Day holiday in the United States. The stock markets will be
open.
In Asia, the Nikkei index on the Tokyo Stock Exchange lost 0.2% on Tuesday at the end of
session. The Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.4%, while the Hang Seng of
Hong Kong stock exchange fell 0.2%.
The greenback rose by 0.1% against the currency
Japanese, at 154.23 yen. At around 7:30am, the euro was stable at 1.1561 dollars.
In a context of continuing fears of a
An overabundance of supply, oil prices fell this morning. According to Antonio
XS.com Di Giacomo, of,
“the general trend remains bearish.” For the analyst, “the
main reason lies in the expectations that the global supply
will continue to exceed demand in the coming months.” The production
of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies (OPEC+) remains
high and the United States is reaching record levels of extraction of
oil.
The December contract on Light sweet crude (WTI) traded on Nymex lost 27 cents, or 0.5%, to 59.86 dollars per barrel. Around 7:30am, the January contract on Brent de Mer from North listed in London lost 26 cents, or 0.4%, to $63.80 per barrel
.
Vous devez être membre pour ajouter un commentaire.
Vous êtes déjà membre ?
Connectez-vous
Pas encore membre ?
Devenez membre gratuitement
11/02/2026 - Information générale
10/02/2026 - Information générale
09/02/2026 - Information générale
06/02/2026 - Information générale
05/02/2026 - Information générale
04/02/2026 - Information générale
03/02/2026 - Information générale
02/02/2026 - Information générale
30/01/2026 - Information générale
11/02/2026 - Information générale
10/02/2026 - Information générale
09/02/2026 - Information générale