The gap between Munich Re’s operational achievements and its stock market performance has rarely been wider. Less than a week ago, the reinsurer was named “Cyber Reinsurer of the Year” in New York, an accolade that underscores its leadership in one of the industry’s fastest-growing segments. Yet the market has shown little enthusiasm for the trophy: the share price continues to drift near its 52-week low, having lost more than 16% of its value since the start of the year.
The stock changed hands at €458.90 on the latest session, a 1.52% decline that leaves it just 5% above the year’s trough of €437.50 reached in early June. Technical indicators paint a grim picture: the relative strength index sits at 42.1, well into bearish territory, and the price is now roughly 13% below the 200-day moving average of €529.60. The 50-day average at €504.25 is also far out of reach. Still, the fact that the shares have stabilized just above the €450 mark offers a glimmer of hope that a floor may be forming.
Management has not been idle. Between 2 and 9 June, the company repurchased roughly 92,000 of its own shares as part of a buyback programme that can reach up to €2.25bn. That buyback, combined with a commitment to return as much as 80% of annual net profit to shareholders, provides a natural support mechanism. Yet even this capital-return firepower has failed to ignite a sustained rally.
The European Central Bank’s latest policy decision should, on paper, be a tailwind for Munich Re. The deposit rate now stands at 2.25%, gradually improving the yield on the insurer’s massive investment portfolio. But the ECB also slashed its eurozone growth forecast to just 0.8% and raised its 2026 inflation expectation to 3.0%. For any insurer, the mix of slowing growth and sticky inflation is a double-edged sword: higher rates lift investment income, while rising costs inflate claims. Stagflation fears appear to be dominating investor psychology for now.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Münchener Rück?
Amid the macro gloom, Munich Re is sticking to an operating strategy that prizes profitability over volume. In the renewal rounds, the company has walked away from business where pricing does not meet its hurdle rate, even if that means shrinking market share. More notably, it has slashed its own reinsurance coverage against natural catastrophes, choosing to rely on its own capital strength instead. With the Atlantic hurricane season just beginning, this is a calculated gamble. A benign storm season would boost profits; a major event would hit the balance sheet directly.
None of this has deterred the board from reaffirming its 2026 profit target of €6.3bn. The same conviction is visible in the expansion of specialty lines: Philip Steinbach has been appointed to lead surety insurance in Australia, a sign that the company sees growth opportunities even in a subdued macroeconomic environment.
For the coming days, three factors will determine whether the stock can reclaim lost ground. The buyback programme should continue to put a floor under the price at current levels. The ECB’s rate message may eventually sink in: Munich Re is one of the few beneficiaries of a higher-for-longer rate regime. And on a relative valuation basis, a 16% year-to-date decline versus a confirmed €6.3bn profit target makes the shares look increasingly cheap compared with other DAX components.
The technical resistance level to watch is €480. A clean break above that would be the first reliable signal of a sustained recovery. Until then, the market remains caught between a fundamentally sound insurer and a macro environment that refuses to cooperate.
Ad
Münchener Rück Stock: Buy or Sell?! New Münchener Rück Analysis from June 13 delivers the answer:
The latest Münchener Rück figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for Münchener Rück investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from June 13.
Münchener Rück: Buy or sell? Read more here...









