Frankfurt’s blue-chip index snapped Monday’s modest gains on Tuesday, sliding more than 1 percent as a wave of profit-taking across Asian technology stocks spilled into European trading. By midday the DAX stood at roughly 24,840 points, down 1.2 percent from the previous session’s close of 25,140. That left the benchmark’s year-to-date advance at a meager 1.2 percent — a stark contrast to the eight percent gain it had carved out by Monday’s finish.
The selloff in Asia was concentrated in Japan and South Korea, where technology heavyweights tumbled after recent records. Trading in Seoul was temporarily halted as losses mounted. The move came despite a fresh all-time high for the US semiconductor index SOX on Monday, underscoring the market’s jittery mood. “We are witnessing a highly sentiment-driven market,” said Jochen Stanzl of Consorsbank. “Anxiety spikes whenever prices approach record levels.” He also pointed to a “SpaceX effect”: losses in the space venture’s stock, which had attracted a wave of retail investors, were dragging down other AI-related names as those same traders liquidated positions across the board.
The day’s most dramatic single-name move belonged to Hochtief, which tumbled as much as 5.7 percent to €497. The trigger was not operational weakness but the mechanics of index rebalancing. Ahead of its official entry into the DAX, speculative buying had piled in ahead of mandatory purchases by passive funds. Once those funds completed their buying on Monday, the earlier speculators took profits — a pattern traders know as the “new entrant curse.” Despite the drop, the construction group’s stock remains up roughly 46 percent since the start of the year.
On the opposite side of the ledger, Brenntag managed to buck the broader trend. The chemical distributor raised its 2026 profit guidance late Monday, forecasting second-quarter operating EBITDA of around €450 million — above market expectations — on robust demand and improved margins, partly driven by supply disruptions in the Middle East. Brenntag now targets full-year operating EBITDA of €1.25 billion to €1.40 billion, up from the previous €1.15 billion to €1.35 billion range. Its shares gained 1.4 percent.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying DAX?
Monday’s session had been dominated by a sharp divergence among individual stocks. Infineon led the winners with a gain of some 6 percent, followed by Zalando at 4 percent and MTU Aero Engines up nearly 1.7 percent. RWE, however, acted as a drag after announcing a share placement to institutional investors worth roughly €4 billion. The placement price was set at €54.00 per share, with the proceeds earmarked to raise RWE’s indirect stake in grid operator Amprion to 55 percent. Anchor investors including Qatar Investment Authority and Norges Bank committed to purchases totaling around €1 billion. Shares of Scout24 and SAP each fell about 1.9 percent, while Deutsche Telekom lost nearly 1.8 percent.
The macro backdrop remains mixed. Germany’s industrial PMI dipped to 50.1 in June from 50.5 in May, barely staying in expansionary territory. The BDI industry lobby cut its 2026 growth forecast for the country to 0.4 percent from an earlier 1 percent, while the Ifo Institute remains more optimistic at 0.8 percent. The euro edged lower Tuesday morning to $1.1423. Futures for the S&P 500 and Euro Stoxx 50 pointed to opening declines of 0.12 percent and 0.28 percent, respectively. On the technical front, the DAX’s RSI stood at 59.3 — neutral to slightly elevated — while the MACD remained in negative territory. Support is seen near 24,600 points, with resistance around 25,400. A more immediate floor lies at 24,757, the intraday high from June 12; a break below that could open the path to the June 10 low of 24,038 points.
The DAX remains within striking distance of its January all-time high of 25,508 points — roughly 2.6 percent above Tuesday’s midday level — but the latest pullback highlights how fragile sentiment has become near those heights. Tuesday afternoon’s flash PMI readings for Germany and the euro area will provide the next catalyst, with the German industrial PMI forecast to slip to 54.8 from 55.1. A significant undershoot would likely intensify the selling pressure.
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