The DAX enters one of the most consequential weeks of the year nursing a 2.32 percent weekly loss, having closed Friday at 24,129 points — barely a whisker above its 200-day moving average of roughly 24,115 points. The index finds itself in a technical tug-of-war, with short-term momentum reading neutral even as longer-term moving averages across 20, 50 and 200 sessions continue to flash buy signals. Only the slow stochastics indicator has turned bearish, underscoring the uncertainty gripping Frankfurt.
What stands out is the growing divergence between German equities and their US counterparts. While the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 have managed to grind higher, the DAX has been stuck in consolidation mode. Still, the uptrend that began on March 23 remains intact — the index has continued to form higher reaction lows. The VDAX-New, a gauge of implied volatility, eased slightly to 22.93 percent, hinting at a modest calming of market nerves.
A Week Packed with Corporate Firepower
The coming days will test that calm severely. Roughly four dozen companies are due to report quarterly results, making this one of the heaviest earnings weeks of the year. The pace picks up noticeably on Tuesday, when Airbus releases its numbers after the closing bell. But Wednesday bears the heaviest load: Deutsche Bank, Mercedes-Benz, Adidas, DWS and Wacker Chemie all open their books on the same day. Thursday brings BASF, DHL, Volkswagen, MTU and Puma, followed by Apple after the US close.
Deutsche Bank will draw particular scrutiny. Analysts forecast revenues of roughly €8.54 billion, little changed from a year earlier, with net profit expected around €1.93 billion. The fixed-income trading desk, traditionally a strength for the German lender, may disappoint — recent comments from management have hinted at headwinds in that division.
The week opens more quietly on Monday, with Südzucker, Nordex and Deutsche Börse reporting. The exchange operator’s results will offer an early read on trading volumes and market sentiment during a turbulent first quarter.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying DAX?
Macro Data Piles Pressure on the ECB
The earnings flood coincides with a dense calendar of economic releases that could reshape the policy outlook. On Tuesday, Germany publishes preliminary April consumer prices — a key input for the European Central Bank. Wednesday, April 30, is the main event: the ECB announces its latest rate decision alongside a first-quarter GDP flash estimate for the eurozone and German retail sales and employment data.
The central bank is widely expected to hold its deposit rate at 2.00 percent for a seventh consecutive meeting. But ECB President Christine Lagarde’s press conference will be scrutinized for any shift in tone. The latest eurozone purchasing managers’ indices showed activity contracting for the first time in 16 months, with the services sector suffering its worst downturn since the Covid lockdowns. Meanwhile, inflation is creeping higher — the ECB now projects 2.6 percent price growth in 2026 against just 0.9 percent economic expansion.
That combination spells stagflation, severely limiting the ECB’s room for maneuver. Markets have begun pricing in one or two rate hikes by year-end, though Lagarde has pushed back, insisting the council needs more data on the energy price shock before acting. The Bank of Japan also meets on Tuesday, adding to the global central bank calendar.
Chart Levels to Watch
Technically, the DAX faces an immediate support zone between 24,118 and 24,155 points. A break below that opens the door to 23,992 and then 23,938 points. A sustained move under 23,408 would call the entire long-term bullish scenario into question. To the upside, resistance sits at 24,232 to 24,357 points, with a more significant barrier at the April high of 24,606 points — the session peak from April 21. Only a clean push above that level is likely to reignite buying interest.
The week ends early: German exchanges are closed on Friday, May 1, for the Labour Day holiday. That leaves just four trading sessions to absorb what promises to be a relentless flow of earnings, economic data and central bank signals — a recipe for heightened volatility in Europe’s largest equity market.
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