Dax gains 250 points after the initial descent – ​​but which brands investors should be prepared for

Dusseldorf After an initial slide to a new low for the year, the leading German index is making an amazing comeback and is rising above the 16,800 point mark again. The stock market barometer is currently at 15,894 points, down 0.8 percent. With today’s daily high of 15,896 points, the situation has eased again. Because 15,895 points is the lowest price from Monday this week, the starting point of the downward movement.

In the very first hour of trading, the leading German index fell to a new low for the year at 15,630 points. The index thus appeared to be testing the 200-day moving average, which is primarily observed by long-term investors. It is currently 15,602 points.

A sustained undercut would probably have prompted some investors to sell further. But this test did not come about, the Dax is currently trading again in its previous range between 16,000 points on the top and 15,800 points on the bottom.

On the downside, the area around 15,000 points should be more decisive than the 200-day line. For Martin Utschneider, technical analyst at the private bank Donner & Reuschel, “this is where the wheat is separated from the chaff”. Which probably means: If there is a significant drop below 15,000 jobs, many of the young traders who are new to the stock exchange as part of the corona rally are likely to say goodbye to the market. Because this round mark has not been undershot sustainably since April of last year. Since then there has not been a correction, i.e. a decrease of at least ten percent.

Top jobs of the day

Find the best jobs now and
be notified by email.

Corrections are an integral part of every stock market year, since the turn of the millennium there have only been none in 2003 and 2021. Calculated from the record high of 16,290 points, a correction of 14,660 points would have been reached. 15 percent minus, as last happened in October 2020, would be a little more than 13,800 points.

These are all price fluctuations within a normal range that have nothing to do with a crash scenario. Since the financial crisis of 2008, there has been a veritable inflation of such crash scenarios, which, according to Robert Halver, capital market strategist at Baader Bank, “so far have all failed due to the omnipotence of the central banks”. Of course, for reasons of credibility, even a Fed cannot deny the current acceleration in inflation and must react. “Even if the Federal Reserve appears to have switched to caution, investors should read between the lines. Expecting a 180-degree turnaround now in terms of interest and monetary policy is wrong,” says Halver.

If the forecast based on the evaluation of the current Handelsblatt survey Dax-Sentiment should come true, that only a panic sell-off can slow down the downward trend, then the leading index still has a long way to go on the way down.

In the opinion of Thomas Altmann from the investment house QC Partners, there is still no panic on the market, just a good deal of uncertainty. In addition to the data from the Handelsblatt survey, an indication of panic is also the increase in the volatility indices, the so-called fear barometers on the stock exchange. The higher the value, the higher the fluctuations the futures market professionals expect in the next 30 days.

With the German VDax, with a value of 20.93, only a slight uncertainty can be determined at most. For classification: Values ​​below 20 signal a calm stock market phase on the domestic market, with 99 the VDax reached its highest value during the corona crash.

Only the US Nasdaq 100 technology barometer is more uncertain. The value there was over 30, which, according to Altmann, corresponds to a premium of 50 percent compared to the ten-year average.

Intact downward trend in the Dax

“The trend is your friend” is one of the best-known stock market proverbs. This means that investors should not go against an intact trend. Unfortunately, this friend has been a downward trend since the beginning of the year.

Since the annual high of 16,285 jobs on January 5, it has been steadily falling. Since then, both the highs of a week and the lows of a trading week have always been lower, the classic definition of such a trend.

With the slide to 15,630 points on Wednesday, the Frankfurt benchmark marked a new low for the year. This downward trend would only end if the Dax climbed above 16,090 points again up to and including Friday, the highest price of the previous week.

Such downtrends have an advantage: they don’t last as long compared to uptrends. The disadvantage: it always goes faster down than up. It’s easier to tear something down than build it up.

Interest rate turnaround is here

The yield on the ten-year federal bond has risen above the zero percent mark for the first time. On Wednesday it was up 0.016 percent. It has thus left negative territory for the first time since May 2019. Investors could therefore get money back for their loans to the German state.

The ten-year federal bond serves as a guideline for the development of long-term capital market interest rates not only in Germany but for the entire euro zone. Bond yields in other euro countries are measured against Bunds, as are corporate bond yields. The ten-year Bunds are also a crucial benchmark for mortgage interest rates.

Yields are also continuing to rise in the USA. The value for ten-year US Treasuries is now 1.8718 percent. At the beginning of January it was only 1.511 percent. In turn, bond prices fall.

So far, the bond market has not been able to benefit from the new appeal brought about by higher interest rates. Obviously, the majority on the trading floor expects yields to continue to rise. And for that long, hardly anyone is accessing bonds.

Look at individual values

The Dax winners on today’s trading day include the shares that have slipped significantly in recent weeks. The shares of the online fashion retailer Zalando, the recipe box mailer Hellofresh and the laboratory supplier Sartorius lead the list of winners, each with a plus of more than two percent. Bargain hunters were probably active, because these three stocks had fallen significantly in the past four weeks, with Sartorius stock showing a minus of more than 22 percent for this period.

Siltronic: The analyst firm Jefferies has raised the target price from EUR 150 to EUR 160 and issued a buy recommendation. The background is that the takeover by Globalwafers is becoming increasingly unlikely and the associated price correction now offers a buying opportunity. The share is listed unchanged.

Commerzbank: The MDax share rose by 1.8 percent after a buy recommendation from Deutsche Bank. Analyst Benjamin Goy praised the competitor’s improving profitability.

Here you can go to the page with the Dax course, here you can find the current tops & flops in the Dax.

.
source site-11