The DAX Index Closes 2.23% Lower

2026-07-08 16:11 By TRADING ECONOMICS 1 min. read

The DAX Index dropped 568 points or 2.23 percent on Wednesday to close at 24897 points.

Losses were led by Vonovia (-6.03%), HeidelbergCement (-5.02%) and Deutsche Bank (-5.00%).



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The DAX Index Closes 2.23% Lower
The DAX Index dropped 568 points or 2.23 percent on Wednesday to close at 24897 points. Losses were led by Vonovia (-6.03%), HeidelbergCement (-5.02%) and Deutsche Bank (-5.00%).
2026-07-08
DAX Closes Deeply in the Red
The DAX 40 settled about 2.2% lower at 24,897.5 on Wednesday, the biggest daily decline since March 19, as rising Middle East rensions fueled risk aversion. President Trump said at the NATO summit that the ceasefire with Iran had collapsed following mutual attacks, adding that the US would "probably strike the country hard again tonight". Oil prices subsequently jumped on fears of renewed military action and disruptions to energy supplies, heightening inflation concerns. At the same time, traders continued trimming exposure to semiconductor and AI stocks amid valuation concerns. Losses were broad-based, led by banks, financials, autos, consumer discretionary and industrials. Real estate Vonovia led losses, slipping 5.7%, followed by Deutsche Bank (-5%), Heidelberg Materials (-4.6%) and Rheinmetall (-4.5%). Mercedes-Benz Group slid 3.9%, weighing on auto stocks after reporting an 8% drop in Q2 car sales. Lufthansa fell 6.5% on higher oil prices and a Citigroup downgrade to "Sell"
2026-07-08
DAX Dips Further
The DAX 40 extended losses to over 2% on Wednesday, trading at more than one-week lows, amid heightened geopolitical concerns. At the NATO summit, President Trump said he believes the US-Iran memorandum of understanding is "over" and that negotiations with Tehran are a waste of time. His remarks raised fears of renewed military action and oil supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz, fueling inflation concerns and reinforcing expectations of further ECB rate hikes. Market sentiment was already fragile following new exchanges of attacks between the two countries and Washington's reinstatement of sanctions on Iran's oil sector after alleged attacks on three ships in the Strait of Hormuz. Meanwhile, investors continued reducing exposure to semiconductor and AI-related stocks amid growing concerns over high valuations. Losses were broad-based, led by banks, autos, software, technology, industrials, and consumer discretionary stocks, while utilities remained the lone bright spot.
2026-07-08