Tag Archiv: DAX

DAX-Sentiment: The long-awaited correction

13. June 2013

Domestic equity investors leapt into the market as the German DAX pursued its downward correction last week. This is the finding of Boerse Frankfurt’s latest sentiment survey. Nine percent of the panel of asset managers shifted into the bullish camp over the past five sessions, a period during which the DAX slipped practically back to the 8,000 level.

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DAX-Sentiment: Japan is the Harbinger of Doom

6. June 2013

Will the DAX undergo a Nikkei-style slump?

5 June 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). Equity investors have spent a great deal of time pondering the outlook for global bond markets over the past week. The catalyst, of course, has been Japan. Despite unprecedented promises of money printing by the Bank of Japan, verbal intervention (also unconfirmed reports of real intervention) to defend the bond market, and government encouragement for Japanese pension funds to buy stocks, the Nikkei has plunged over 18 percent and JGB yields have tripled…

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DAX-Sentiment: An Unfulfilled Bearish Dream

30. May 2013

29 May 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). A stock market mini-crash of seven percent in one day, and a hefty sell-off in the bond market, is a dream scenario for sceptical investors. The only problem for the sceptics we discovered in Boerse Frankfurt’s weekly survey of domestic institutional investors was that the equity rout took place in Japan and not in Germany…

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DAX-Sentiment: The DAX must correct – mustn’t it?

23. May 2013

There is no doubt about it now: the German DAX is on a tear. It hasn’t just made a marginally higher all-time high; it has left its 2007 peak some 300 points behind. Nor is the rally idiosyncratic; major bourses across the world have also reached multi-year highs, if not all-time highs. Even if one had harboured doubts about the tenacity of the stock market rally some weeks ago, those doubts ought now to have been put to rest – oughtn’t they? The answer, it seems, is no…

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DAX-Sentiment: This time it’s different

16. May 2013

15 May 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). ‘Stock market rally’, ‘bull market’, or even ‘all-time high’, are all expressions that have long ceased to be reserved for investment professionals. Since the boom in internet stocks in the late 1990s, such references have found their way into dinner party conversations, taxi drivers’ banter, and the background murmur on public transport. Stock market booms not only decorated everyday conversations, it coloured retail stock portfolios too. In fact, amateur stock market commentary became so commonplace over the past two decades that some analysts even try to use it as a contrary indicator for equity performance. The argument goes: if the general public is getting excited, it is time get out…

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DAX-Sentiment: Bullishness-Aversion

9. May 2013

8 May 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). Last week (in fact, just four sessions ago due to a German public holiday) sentiment among domestic asset managers on Boerse Frankfurt’s survey panel registered the largest bearish shift in over three years. Since then, the DAX benchmark index not only climbed more than three percent, it also scaled its loftiest level ever. In retrospect, therefore, the sell decision that more than likely preceded this bearish shift was clearly the wrong one. To correct this decision now, at an all-time-high, would mean realising a real or opportunity loss, and expose investors to possible regret in the future if it turns out that the second decision is also the wrong one. This is precisely the situation where two very powerful psychological forces combine to produce inaction. By not making any decision at all, investors assuage their loss aversion by not concretising any losses; they also sidestep any regret aversion by not making any decision that could expose them to any immediate regret. They have done nothing…

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DAX-Sentiment: A delayed reaction to DAX’s tumble

3. May 2013

Year-low provoked more disquiet than investors let on

2 May 2013. FRANKFURT (Boerse Frankfurt). One of the notable characteristics of the DAX’s corrective decline from the mid-March highs was how little it seemed to influence investor opinion. For most of the past six weeks, the optimism of domestic asset managers on Boerse Frankfurt’s sentiment panel has held above both long-term and year-to-date averages. Indeed, judging by Cognitrend’s Bull/Bear-Index, they were decidedly more flustered when the benchmark index failed to hold on to the 8,000 level after having traded above there for two whole sessions, than they were when it subsequently slumped all the way back to the low-7,400s. We attributed this apparent stoicism to the fact that managers were not overly confident about the future for German stocks in the first place…

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DAX-Sentiment: Another unfathomable DAX move

25. April 2013

Or is German economic weakness bullish for stocks?

24 April 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). The half-percent week-on-week gain registered on the DAX index at the time of today’s sentiment survey hides some considerable intra-week volatility. Just yesterday alone, the German benchmark surged 2.4 percent, a price move that for some was just as unfathomable as the similar-sized decline that unfolded in the prior week. Some commentators attribute the new-found enthusiasm for German blue-chips to the prospects for an ECB rate cut. Numerous analysts even predict the central bank will finally react to the eurozone’s slow growth and tepid inflation by reducing the refinancing rate by at least 25bp as early as at next week’s meeting. These pundits tend to overlook another essential pre-condition for a rate cut, namely a properly-functioning monetary transmission mechanism. Will, for example, a quarter-point rate cut allow a household in Portugal or a small business in Greece to borrow more cheaply? This much-lamented feature of the post-crisis eurozone has probably been the single reason why has ECB has not moved to cut rates so far…

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DAX-Sentiment: An understandable ‘flash crash’

18. April 2013

Investors know better than to catch a falling knife

17 April 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). Something resembling a German version of the ‘flash crash’ occurred this morning. In the matter of minutes the benchmark DAX plunged some 200 points to (briefly) record a new low for 2013. There was no obvious catalyst, although unconfirmed reports circulated shortly afterwards about rocket attacks in Israel, and about a potential sovereign ratings downgrade for Germany. Neither of these explanations would justify such an abrupt decline in normal times, but these have ceased to be normal times. This was not just any unexplained price slump; this was one that came against a backdrop that appeared very susceptible to sudden price slumps.
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DAX-Sentiment: Of Course! The Ides of March

11. April 2013

Another reason for DAX triple-top

10 April 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). A perennial market discussion about the prospects for a major sell-off in the German equity market was re-inflamed last week. Stock prices slid to new lows for the year last Friday ahead of the publication of the disappointing US nonfarm payroll numbers – an anomaly some market commentators attributed to the figures being leaked in advance. It was remarkable, nonetheless, that the German benchmark index suffered more heavily under the tepid American employment growth than the US equivalents.

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DAX-Sentiment: Try, Try Again

4. April 2013

A sell decision is never too far from investors’ thoughts

 3 April 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again,” counselled the US comedian W.C. Fields. “Then quit,” he went on. “There’s no point in being a damn fool about it.” Domestic institutional DAX investors seem to have taken this advice to heart, because after embarking on yet another correctional play on the benchmark index last week, they have already abandoned the effort and bought back the positions.
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DAX-Sentiment: ‘I Knew It!’

28. March 2013

DAX investors take another stab at a correctional bet

27 March 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). Even though German institutional investors have expressed a bullish opinion of the blue-chip DAX index every week for almost two full quarters, it would be wrong to describe this optimism as ‘unreserved’. To a large degree, fund managers’ opinions were a pragmatic response to a sizeable pick-up in inflows to their funds during that period. We suspect respondents to Boerse Frankfurt’s sentiment survey have always eyed warily what they see as a widening gap between the blistering performance of the DAX over the past nine months and the relatively sober outlook for the German and eurozone economies…

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DAX-Sentiment: Crisis; What Crisis?

21. March 2013

Media reports overstate investor anxiety

20 March 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). If financial journalists had a vote on Boerse Frankfurt’s DAX sentiment panel, optimism would be in the cellar. The controversial levy on Cypriot bank deposits has provided grist for a media mill that has been starved of eurozone crisis news since Draghi’s by-any-means-necessary speech last year. Now, even though asset prices have reacted modestly (one cannot be sure the brief equity declines were due solely to the situation in Cyprus) the press has gone to town…

Read more at Boerse Frankfurt’s website

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DAX-Sentiment: Death by Profit-Taking

14. March 2013

13 March 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). ‘Nobody ever died from profit-taking’ was an old market chestnut we heard last week for the first time in at least six months. Certainly, its revival had something to do with the DAX index reaching the 8,000 mark for the first time since 2008. For seasoned investors in German blue-chips this was quite an achievement and an invitation to profit-taking that was difficult to refuse.

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DAX-Sentiment: Empty Promises

7. March 2013

Institutional investors lost patience with the idea of a correction

6 March 2013. FRANKFURT (Boerse Frankfurt). For more than a month, the DAX had promised to move lower. The market had delivered an impressive, almost one-way performance since last November until the end January of this year and had reached a new multi-year high. For many of the domestic institutional investors on Boerse Frankfurt’s sentiment panel, this was a development worthy of a meaningful correction. However, although February began with a powerful sell-off, there was never any follow-through.

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DAX-Sentiment: Reference point makes Italian election look worse

28. February 2013

Investors had grappled with the prospect of gridlock two weeks ago

27 February 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). Investors have eyed the lofty levels of German blue-chips with thinly-veiled incredulity since the start of the year. Admittedly, there had been a marked reduction of tail-risk in the eurozone crisis, which justified lower risk premiums and higher stock prices, but how long would it last?

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DAX-Sentiment: The Correction that Never Was

21. February 2013

20 February 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). On the face of it, German institutional investors have given the domestic equity market a huge vote of confidence. Since last week’s survey there has been a marked bullish swing among members of Boerse Frankfurt’s sentiment panel – so much so that overall optimism, as measured by the Cognitrend Bull/Bear-Index, climbed to the loftiest level of the year.

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DAX-Sentiment: An Urgent Need to Buy

14. February 2013

DAX investors give up on ‘big’ correction

13 February 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). A little less than two weeks ago investors took fright in response to the latest developments in the eurozone. Reportedly, their concerns centred on upcoming elections in Italy, a scandal and the prospect of elections in Spain, and a lack of EU agreement about a resolution for Cyprus. All of those things added up to a meaningful risk of a revival of the entire eurozone crisis. We suspect that the unspoken reason for investor nervousness was the German benchmark’s January rally to multi-year highs. However, “too far, too fast” does not carry as much weight in strategy meetings as “political risk in three eurozone countries.” Either way, many members of Boerse Frankfurt’s sentiment panel quit the bullish camp moved into the ‘unchanged’ camp; most of them were former bulls

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DAX-Sentiment: Investors seek a refuge for the correction

7. February 2013

6 February 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). Fully nine percent of Boerse Frankfurt’s sentiment panel quit the bullish camp over the past week. And there are no prizes for guessing when this selling took place – Monday. Over that single session the DAX index lost 2.5 percent. Admittedly, it was only by the end of the day the reasons for the weakness in the benchmark were laid bare: an emerging political scandal in Spain had provoked calls for the resignation of Prime Minister Rajoy; and, in Italy, investors watched with reticence a resurgence of popular support for former Premier Berlusconi, thanks in part to budget-blowing electoral pledges.

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DAX-Sentiment: Investors open the throttle

31. January 2013

Overweight for the first time since the start of Q3 2012.

30 January 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). DAX investors who were hoping for a correction to provide cheaper levels to buy German blue chips have been left wanting. Since Boerse Frankfurt’s last sentiment survey one week ago, stock prices have essentially only gone higher – almost two percent at the last count. This time there were no spurious rumours to spook weaker hands into dumping stocks; those who needed to buy had to pay prices not seen since 2008

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DAX-Sentiment: Impatient Investors

24. January 2013

A DAX correction was welcome – whatever the reason.

23 January 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). The DAX index suffered a puzzlingly mid-session setback yesterday. Without any apparent news release or event, it slid 1.5 percent within minutes to the year low. It later emerged that traders had been spooked by an unconfirmed report that German Bundesbank chief, Jens Weidmann, had resigned.

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DAX-Sentiment: Falling optimism without sales

17. January 2013

Investors hope for a cheaper buying opportunity.

16 January 2013. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). The latest data from EFAMA, the European Fund and Asset Management Association, confirmed this week that inflows into European investment funds accelerated for a second consecutive month in November. Equity products were the clear winners; they attracted double the inflow of fixed-income products – a sharp reversal of the pattern seen earlier in 2012. And these were not just any investors: insurance companies were the major buyers of equity funds. Without knowing it, this is precisely the development we believed had to be behind the sudden shift in sentiment in Boerse Frankfurt’s weekly sentiment survey at the start the third quarter. Although, at the time, fund managers might not have shared the beliefs of these new investors, they were at least smart enough to fight the flow.

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DAX-Sentiment: The market is NOT overbought

20. December 2012

“The majority of investors on the panel had been outright bearish during practically all of the third quarter – pessimism of unprecedented duration in the history of this survey. So it is difficult to imagine they would have been able to perform the mental gymnastics necessary to switch from stubborn bear to dyed-in-the-wool bull in the space of seven days.”

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DAX-Sentiment: DAX storms pre-crisis levels

13. December 2012

“The bulk of the bullishness reflected in the Cognitrend Bull/Bear-Index derives from a large, mostly passive group that adopted this opinion some nine weeks ago and haven’t budged since. This group, we have long suspected, probably recognised a notable uptick in inflows to their respective equity funds and concluded that stock prices were unlikely to fall under those conditions. These institutional investors are unlikely to have overweighted their portfolios immediately, though. One must remember, these same investors had previously spent the entire third quarter clinging to a bearish opinion of unprecedented tenacity. News of an improved cash inflow in Q4 may have been sufficient for them to put this bearishness on hold, but to become immediately bullish would have been the psychological equivalent of jumping through burning hoops…”

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DAX-Sentiment: Bullishness still overstates conviction

6. December 2012

“For the vast majority of the institutional investors on the panel there has been no change in vote; we had expected none. This is because the principal factor fuelling this bullishness has never been the index price. Since the start of the quarter when overall optimism, as measured by the Cognitrend Bull/Bear-Index, reversed dramatically from stubbornly bearish to just as obstinately bullish, we have attributed the change to cash inflows to equity funds. The fund managers in the survey might not have been convinced about the persistence of these inflows, or even of its wisdom, but they were smart enough not to fight the flow…”

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DAX-Sentiment: ‘Not bearish, and not neutral either’

29. November 2012

Optimism doesn’t mean investors are prepared for new DAX highs

28 November 2012. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). The easiest prediction to be made from last week’s DAX sentiment poll was that the bullishness would not last. This was not because overall optimism, as measured by the Cognitrend Bull/Bear-Index was already at the year’s high, but because one sub-section of the sentiment panel was certain to be very sensitive to any change in prices. As the index rose over two per cent since last week, the move was more than enough to prompt selling…

Read further on Boerse Frankfurt’s website

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DAX-Sentiment: Not all DAX bulls are equal

22. November 2012

21 November 2012. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). At first glance it appears rather benign, the 0.3 per cent week-on-week in the DAX index since last week, but it hides a more than 200-point slide and an even more robust recovery. Observers could easily explain the drop, as there were many things for investors to worry about. To start with there was a resurgence of eurozone worries.

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DAX-Sentiment: New Sentiment Highs for the Year

15. November 2012

Bullish majority have no desire to sell at any price

 A 3.5 percent week-on-week decline is nothing really exceptional for the DAX index. What makes this particular sell-off stand out is: 1) it reversed a prior rally; and 2) it arrived in the wake of the US presidential result. In addition, as it subsequently dragged German blue-chips to their lowest level in two months, it encouraged commentators to talk about it in the context of the bull trend that has persisted since early-June; a starting point that, coincidentally, was the last time the DAX marked such a sharp one-week drop.

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DAX-Sentiment: An Electoral Red-Herring

8. November 2012

Major news headlines have contained something for everyone

7 November 2012. FRANKFURT (Börse Frankfurt). Equity investors have faced two ‘event risks’ in the week since the previous sentiment poll: the monthly US jobs report and, of course, the US presidential election. At the margins, both may have swung opinion and may explain why Boerse Frankfurt’s sentiment survey reveals an increase in both the number of optimists and the number of pessimists. The answer lies in the prospects for a continuation of the aggressive monetary policy pursued by the US central bank. This has been one of the dominant preoccupations of stock investors in recent months. Although the Federal Reserve has promised to keep rates low for an extended period, and to engage in unlimited money printing, there were growing doubts among investors that it would be able to keep that promise…

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DAX-Sentiment: Business as Usual

1. November 2012

Nothing has stirred investors’ recently-found bullishness

Germany’s largest IPO in the past five years was certainly the highlight of the trading week since Boerse Frankfurt’s last weekly sentiment survey. However, as there has been practically no movement at all in the opinions of the institutional investors on the panel, the IPO was more of a spectacle than a watershed event. Indeed, investors were wholly unimpressed by much of the news flow over the past five sessions: earnings announcements came and went; market expectations of an imminent bailout for Spain rose and fell; and monster storm, ‘Sandy’, swept across the US eastern seaboard. All of this took place without raising more than an institutional eyebrow.

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