Fly On Wall Street

Germany’s stock market just hit a new record high despite a faltering economy. What gives?

Germany’s benchmark stock index opened at an all-time high Wednesday as investors’ growing confidence that interest rates will soon be cut outweighs worries that the country may be suffering a recession.

The previous day, the DAX closed at a record high of 16,533 points — only for that peak to be beaten Wednesday when trading began. By 11.46 a.m. ET, the DAX was up 0.9% on the day at 16,679 points.

The index, comprising the 40 most valuable companies in Europe’s biggest economy, has been climbing more or less steadily since late October. At the end of that month, official estimates showed that inflation in the 20 countries using the euro had slowed sharply, hitting its lowest level in more than two years.

Price rises — which had forced the European Central Bank into an unprecedented cycle of interest rate hikes — eased further in November, reaching 2.4%.

Investors’ expectations that borrowing costs would not be raised again got a boost on Tuesday, when ECB board member Isabel Schnabel effectively ruled out further hikes, citing a “remarkable” fall in inflation. Schnabel told Reuters that the central bank is on track to bring inflation down to its 2% target, which makes “a further rate increase rather unlikely.”

Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter Investors, said the DAX had been buoyed by “good news on inflation,” noting that investors now expect the ECB to start cutting rates as early as March.

Recent business surveys that suggested Europe’s economy may be bottoming out have also lifted the index, she said in a note.

A closely watched survey of purchasing managers, which tracks the eurozone’s manufacturing and services sectors, showed Tuesday that output had contracted at a slower pace in November than the previous month.

Germany’s struggling economy

Still, the stock market gains are at odds with the fragile state of the German economy, which has been underperforming other large regional economies such as France, Italy and Spain. German gross domestic product shrank by 0.1% in the third quarter, compared with the previous three-month period.

In the latest sign of Germany’s troubles, official data showed Wednesday that industrial orders in Europe’s manufacturing powerhouse fell 3.7% in October from the month prior, confounding economists’ forecasts for a slight rise.

German companies have also “significantly reduced their investment plans” for this year and next, according to asurvey of 5,000 firms by the Ifo Institute published Monday.

“The investment climate has deteriorated noticeably. This is the result of higher financing costs, weak demand, and uncertainty regarding economic policy,” Lara Zarges, economic expert at the institute, wrote in a press release.

Ben Ritchie, head of developed market equities at investment company abrdn, offers one explanation for the divergence between the DAX and the German economy. The exposure of the index’s constituents to the domestic economy is “modest,” he told CNN.

He also cited falling energy prices “supporting profitability,” as well as slower overall inflation, as additional reasons for the index’s strong recent run.

Wednesday’s gains on the DAX were led by Volkswagen, Europe’s largest carmaker, whose stock rose 5.4%.

The day before, the companysaid an independent audit of a plant it jointly owns with SAIC Motor in China had found no indications of forced labor. Volkswagen has faced criticism over the factory in Xinjiang, a region where human rights groups have documented the use of forced labor. China denies any abuses.

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