· Dax has been off to a flying start this year, despite the ECB
lifting rates.
· However, the German economy has been showing signs of weakness.
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Does the rally have legs?
On Thursday, the European central bank lifted its key deposit rate to 3.5%.
This marked the eighth consecutive increase and the highest level in more
than two decades – in line with economists’ expectations.
Rates up, German Economy down
The steep rate hikes secured economic recessions in Germany and the
Eurozone as Europe’s top economy shrunk for two back-to-back quarters.
Further signs of weaknesses emerged from the building up of inventories for
some companies, such as Zalando, indicating retail weakness, which could
spell trouble for German companies.
Not to mention that German Manufacturing PMIs have been crashing,
However, despite all those headwinds, the Dax continues to make new highs.
Dax flying high
The Dax has been in a steep uptrend since the start of the European Central
Bank (ECB) rate hiking cycle. Germany’s largest index is up over 37% since
the September lows of last year.
Will the rally nosedive, or will it continue its impressive run? To a large
degree, the answer lies in the path of interest rates, a function of
inflation. Hence, the next question becomes what the markets are expecting.
One more rate hike, and that’s it?
However, this rosy scenario may not play out as the ECB looks far behind
the curve, and unlike in the US, where actual rates have entered positive
territory, Eurozone real rates are still deeply negative at -2.6%.
Not only that but core inflation, despite tumbling more than expected at
5.3% year-over-year for May, is still way off the ECB target of 2%. ECB
President Lagarde said, “There is no clear evidence that underlying
inflation has peaked” after the latest inflation print. And rightfully so.
Labour costs in Germany continue to rise way ahead of expectation, giving
fear to wage pull inflation.
Stronger earnings have underpinned the market’s resilience, contrary to
some economic sentiment indicators such as the Zew Indicator, which further
dipped to -10 in June from -9.4 in the prior month.
Lastly, earnings recession may be another major threat the markets might
have underestimated. Most positive catalysts look already priced in, and
the P/E ratios may need to adjust to factor in the potential weaker macro
and earnings outlook, especially if the services inflation continues to
show signs of persistence and turns out to be stickier than expected.
All in all, expectations seem quite rosy, hoping for the immaculate
soft-landing scenario to materialize.
Traders can long the Dax using our
3x
Germany 40.
Alternatively, traders can short the Dax using our
-3x
Germany 40.