DAX

The DAX (Deutscher Aktienindex (German stock index); German pronunciation: [daks] ) is a stock market index consisting of the 40 major German blue chip companies trading on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange. It is a total return index. Prices are taken from the Xetra trading venue. According to Deutsche Börse, the operator of Xetra, DAX measures the performance of the Prime Standard's 40 largest German companies in terms of order book volume and market capitalization.[2] DAX is the equivalent of the UK FTSE 100 and the US Dow Jones Industrial Average, and because of its small company selection it does not necessarily represent the vitality of the German economy as a whole.

DAX
Foundation1 July 1988
OperatorSTOXX (Qontigo, Deutsche Börse)
ExchangesFrankfurt Stock Exchange
Constituents40 (expanded from 30 in 2021)
TypeLarge cap
Market cap1,245 billion (7 May 2021)[1]
Weighting methodCapitalization-weighted
Related indicesMDAX, SDAX, TecDAX, ÖkoDAX
WebsiteDAX homepage

The L-DAX Index is an indicator of the German benchmark DAX index's performance after the Xetra trading venue closes based on the floor trading at the Börse Frankfurt trading venue. The L-DAX Index basis is the "floor" trade (Parketthandel) at the Frankfurt stock exchange; it is computed daily between 09:00 and 17:45 Hours CET.[3] The L/E-DAX index (Late/Early DAX) is calculated from 17:55 to 22:00 CET and from 08:00 to 09:00 CET. The Eurex, a European electronic futures and options exchange based in Zürich, Switzerland with a subsidiary in Frankfurt, Germany, offers options (ODAX) and Futures (FDAX) on the DAX from 01:10 to 22:00 CET or from 02:10 to 22:00 CEST.[4]

The Base date for the DAX is 30 December 1987, and it was started from a base value of 1,000. The Xetra technology calculates the index every second since 1 January 2006.

On 24 Nov 2020, Deutsche Börse announced an expansion of the DAX from 30 to 40 members and a tightening of rules in response to the Wirecard accounting scandal.[5] The expansion occurred in the 3rd quarter of 2021.[6]

Versions

The DAX has two versions, called performance index and price index, depending on whether dividends are counted. The performance index, which measures total return, is the more commonly quoted, however the price index is more similar to commonly quoted indexes in other countries.

Contract Specifications

DAX futures are traded on the Deutsche Borse Indices & ETF exchange (DBIndex). The contract specifications for the DAX Combined Index (ticker symbol DAXA) are listed below:

Contract Specifications[7]
DAX Combined Index (DAXA)
Exchange: DBIndex
Sector: Index
Tick Size: 0.01
Tick Value: 1 EUR
Big Point Value (BPV): 100
Denomination: EUR
Decimal Place: 2

Price history

On 16 March 2015, the performance index first closed above 12,000.[8] On 10 April 2015, the price index first closed above its closing high from 2000.

Record values

Category All-time highs
Closing16,469.75Friday, 28 July 2023
Intraday16,528.97Monday, 31 July 2023

Annual returns

The following collapsible table shows the annual development of the DAX, calculated retroactively up to 1950.[9][10]

Year Closing level Change in Index
in Points
Change in Index
in %
195030.18−2.42−7.42
195165.0134.83115.41
195259.75−5.26−8.09
195374.0914.3424.00
1954135.2861.1982.59
1955148.8113.5310.00
1956137.80−11.01−7.40
1957144.977.175.20
1958232.2387.2660.19
1959417.79185.5679.90
1960534.09116.3027.84
1961489.79−44.30−8.29
1962386.32−103.47−21.13
1963438.9552.6313.62
1964477.8938.948.87
1965422.36−55.53−11.62
1966333.36−89.00−21.07
1967503.22169.8650.95
1968555.6252.4010.41
1969622.3866.7612.02
1970443.86−178.52−28.68
1971473.4629.606.67
1972536.3662.9013.29
1973403.88−132.48−24.70
1974401.79−2.09−0.52
1975563.25161.4640.19
1976509.02−54.23−9.63
1977549.3440.327.92
1978575.1525.814.70
1979497.79−77.36−13.45
1980480.92−16.87−3.39
1981490.399.471.97
1982552.7762.3812.72
1983773.95221.1840.01
1984820.9146.966.07
19851,366.23545.3266.43
19861,432.2566.024.83
19871,000.00−432.25−30.18
19881,327.87327.8732.79
19891,790.37462.5034.83
19901,398.23−392.14−21.90
19911,577.98179.7512.86
19921,545.05−32.93−2.09
19932,266.68721.6346.71
19942,106.58−160.10−7.06
19952,253.88147.306.99
19962,888.69634.8128.17
19974,249.691,361.0047.11
19985,002.39752.7017.71
19996,958.141,955.7539.10
20006,433.61−524.53−7.54
20015,160.10−1,273.51−19.79
20022,892.63−2,267.47−43.94
20033,965.161,072.5337.08
20044,256.08290.927.34
20055,408.261,152.1827.07
20066,596.921,188.6621.98
20078,067.321,470.4022.29
20084,810.20−3,257.12−40.37
20095,957.431,147.2323.85
20106,914.19956.7616.06
20115,898.35−1,015.84−14.69
20127,612.391,714.0429.06
20139,552.161,939.7724.77
20149,805.55253.392.65
201510,743.01937.469.56
201611,481.06738.056.87
201712,917.641,436.5812.51
201810,558.96−2,358.68−18.26
201913,249.012,690.0525.48
202013,718.78469.773.55
202115,884.862,166.0815.79
202213,923.59−1,961.27−12.35

Components

Below is the list of companies which are a component of the DAX 40, as of 20 March 2023. The current stock prices and list of DAX companies are available from financial websites.[11][12] The index weighting refers to the DAX performance index.[13]

LogoCompanyPrime Standard SectorTickerIndex weighting (%)1EmployeesFounded
AdidasApparelADS.DE2.0061,401 (2021)1924
AirbusAerospace & DefenceAIR.DE6.0126.495 (2021)1970
AllianzFinancial ServicesALV.DE7.1155,411 (2021)1890
BASFChemicalsBAS.DE3.5111,047 (2021)1865
BayerPharmaceuticalsBAYN.DE4.8099,637 (2021)1863
BeiersdorfConsumer goodsBEI.DE0.9020,567 (2021)1882
BMWAutomotiveBMW.DE2.5118,909 (2021)1916
BrenntagDistributionBNR.DE0.9017,200 (2021)1874
CommerzbankFinancial ServicesCBK.DE0.8040,181 (2021)1870
ContinentalAutomotiveCON.DE0.6190,875 (2021)1871
CovestroChemicals1COV.DE0.6017,909 (2021)2015
Daimler TruckAutomotiveDTG.DE1.1099,849 (2021)2021
Deutsche BankFinancial ServicesDBK.DE1.6082,969 (2021)1870
Deutsche BörseFinancial ServicesDB1.DE2.7010,200 (2021)1992
Deutsche PostLogisticsDHL.DE3.4592,263 (2021)1995
Deutsche TelekomTelecommunicationDTE.DE6.5216,528 (2021)1995
E.ONUtilitiesEOAN.DE1.9078,126 (2021)2000
FreseniusHealthcareFRE.DE0.8316,078 (2021)1912
Hannover ReInsuranceHNR1.DE0.8003,346 (2021)1966
Heidelberg MaterialsConstruction MaterialsHEI.DE0.7051,209 (2021)1874
HenkelConsumer GoodsHEN3.DE0.9052,450 (2021)1876
Infineon TechnologiesTechnologyIFX.DE3.9050,280 (2021)1999
Mercedes-Benz GroupAutomotiveMBG.DE4.8172,000 (2021)1926
MerckPharmaceuticalsMRK.DE1.8008,081 (2021)1668
MTU Aero EnginesAerospace & DefenceMTX.DE1.0010,833 (2022)1934
Munich ReFinancial ServicesMUV2.DE3.6040,177 (2022)1880
PorscheAutomotiveP911.DE1.1036,996 (2021)1931
Porsche SEAutomotivePAH3.DE0.6000,882 (2021)2007
QiagenBiotechQIA.DE0.8005,900 (2021)1984
RheinmetallAerospace & DefenceRHM.DE025.486 (2022)1889
RWEUtilitiesRWE.DE2.2018,246 (2021)1898
SAPTechnologySAP.DE10.1107,415 (2021)1972
SartoriusMedical TechnologySRT3.DE0.8018,832 (2021)1870
SiemensIndustrialsSIE.DE9.0303,000 (2021)1847
Siemens EnergyEnergy technologyENR.DE0.7092,000 (2021)2020
Siemens HealthineersMedical EquipmentSHL.DE1.2066,000 (2021)2020
SymriseChemicalsSY1.DE1.1011,276 (2021)2003
Volkswagen GroupAutomotiveVOW3.DE2.4672,800 (2021)1937
VonoviaReal EstateVNA.DE1.1015,900 (2022)2001
ZalandoE-CommerceZAL.DE0.7017,000 (2021)2008

^Note 1 : Weightings as of 23 March 2023[13]

Former DAX components

This table lists former DAX components and the companies which replaced them.

Date Component excluded Component included Reason for exclusion/ Comments
03.09.1990 Feldmühle Nobel Metallgesellschaft Takeover of Feldmühle Nobel by Stora Enso
Nixdorf Germany Preussag (now TUI) Merged with Siemens to form Siemens-Nixdorf
18.09.1995 Deutsche Babcock SAP Replaced by SAP because of lower market capitalisation
22.07.1996 Kaufhof METRO Merger of Kaufhof and Metro Cash & Carry
23.09.1996 Continental Münchener Rück Continental was added back to the DAX on 22 September 2003, though it was demoted again in 2008 and added back again in 2012
18.11.1996 Metallgesellschaft Deutsche Telekom IPO of Deutsche Telekom
22.06.1998 Bayerische Hypotheken-
und Wechselbank
Adidas Merger of Vereinsbank and Hypobank to form HypoVereinsbank
Bayerische Vereinsbank HypoVereinsbank
21.12.1998 Daimler-Benz DaimlerChrysler
(now Daimler)
Merger of Daimler-Benz with Chrysler
22.03.1999 Degussa Degussa-Hüls Merger of Degussa AG with Hüls AG and renaming to Degussa-Hüls AG
25.03.1999 Thyssen ThyssenKrupp Merger of Thyssen and Krupp
20.09.1999 Hoechst Fresenius Medical Care Merger of Hoechst and Rhône-Poulenc with Aventis
14.02.2000 Mannesmann Epcos Takeover of Mannesmann by Vodafone
19.06.2000 Veba E.ON Merger of Veba and Viag to form E.ON
VIAG Infineon
18.12.2000 Degussa-Hüls Degussa Merger of Degussa-Hüls AG and SKW Trostberg AG to new Degussa AG
19.03.2001 KarstadtQuelle Deutsche Post IPO of Deutsche Post
23.07.2001 Dresdner Bank MLP Vz. Takeover of Dresdner Bank by Allianz
23.09.2002 Degussa Altana Inadequate market capitalisation
23.12.2002 Epcos Deutsche Börse Fast-exit of Epcos, as Epcos' market capitalisation became inadequate.[14]
22.09.2003 MLP Continental Inadequate free float and market capitalisation.
31.01.2005 Lanxess Lanxess was spun off from Bayer, for calculating reasons added to the DAX as a temporary 31st component, and removed a day later. It was added to the DAX in 2012 and removed again in 2015.
01.02.2005 Lanxess
19.12.2005 HypoVereinsbank Hypo Real Estate Takeover of HypoVereinsbank by UniCredit
18.09.2006 Schering Postbank Takeover of Schering by Bayer
18.06.2007 Altana Merck After the sale of Nycomed, inadequate market capitalisation[15]
22.09.2008 TUI K+S Fast-entry of K+S, inadequate market capitalisation of TUI[16]
22.12.2008 Continental Beiersdorf Fast-exit of Continental because of inadequate free-float market capitalisation after the acquisition by Schaeffler Group
22.12.2008 Hypo Real Estate Salzgitter Fast-exit of Hypo Real Estate because of inadequate free-float market capitalisation after a stake by American investor JC Flowers, as well as huge decline in market capitalisation during the Financial crisis of 2007–2010
23.03.2009 Deutsche Postbank Hannover Re Fast-exit due to inadequate market capitalisation[17]
Infineon Technologies Fresenius Vz
21.09.2009 Hannover Re Infineon Technologies Inadequate market capitalisation
21.06.2010 Salzgitter HeidelbergCement Inadequate market capitalisation
24.09.2012 MAN Continental Inadequate free-float capitalisation after acquisition by Volkswagen
24.09.2012 Metro Lanxess Inadequate market capitalisation
21.09.2015 Lanxess Vonovia Inadequate market capitalisation
21.03.2016 K+S ProSiebenSat.1 Media Inadequate market capitalisation
19.03.2018 ProSiebenSat.1 Media Covestro Inadequate market capitalisation
24.09.2018 Commerzbank Wirecard Inadequate market capitalisation
23.09.2019[18] ThyssenKrupp MTU Aero Engines Inadequate market capitalisation
22.06.2020[19] Deutsche Lufthansa Deutsche Wohnen Inadequate market capitalisation
19.08.2020[20] Wirecard Delivery Hero new Insolvency Rule (section 5.1.1)
22.03.2021[21] Beiersdorf Siemens Energy Inadequate market capitalisation
16.09.2021 Vitesco Vitesco was spun off from Continental, for calculating reasons added to the DAX as a temporary 31st component, and removed a day later.
17.09.2021 Vitesco
20.09.2021 Airbus 10 companies added to expand DAX to 40 components
Brenntag
HelloFresh
Porsche SE
Puma
Qiagen
Sartorius
Siemens Healthineers
Symrise
Zalando
29.10.2021 Deutsche Wohnen Beiersdorf
10.12.2021 Daimler Truck Daimler Truck was spun off from Mercedes-Benz, for calculating reasons added to the DAX as a temporary 41st component, and removed next trading day. It was added to the DAX again in 2022.
13.12.2021 Daimler Truck
21.03.2022 Beiersdorf Daimler Truck
Siemens Energy Hannover Re
20.06.2022 Delivery Hero Beiersdorf
19.09.2022 HelloFresh Siemens Energy
19.12.2022 Puma Porsche Initial public offering of Porsche
27.02.2023 Linde Commerzbank Delisting of Linde on Frankfurt stock exchange
20.03.2023 Fresenius Medical Care Rheinmetall
DAX 30 chart at the Frankfurt Stock Exchange
The headquarters of DAX companies in 2013

See also

Stock market lists
Other lists
Other stock market indices
  • List of stock market indices
  • CDAX, every listed German company
  • HDAX, union of DAX, MDAX and TecDAX (successor to DAX 100, and equivalent of the FTSE 100 or the S&P 100)
  • MDAX, the next 50 largest companies after the DAX
  • SDAX, the next 70 largest companies after the MDAX
  • ÖkoDAX, top 10 companies in renewable energy
  • TecDAX, top 30 companies trading in the "new economy"

References

  1. "DAX Market capitalization | Markets Insider". markets.businessinsider.com.
  2. "DAX". deutsche-boerse.com.
  3. "Trading Parameter Xetra Frankfurt" (PDF). Xetra. 23 November 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 August 2021.
  4. "Extension of trading hours for selected benchmark futures and MSCI futures" (PDF). Eurex Exchange. 15 November 2018. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 August 2021.
  5. Reuters Staff (24 November 2020). "Germany's DAX to expand to 40 members from 30 in index shake-up". Reuters via www.reuters.com. {{cite news}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  6. Ramakrishnan, Shriya; Kumaresan, Shivani (24 November 2020). "Germany's DAX index gets shake-up in wake of Wirecard scandal - Metro US". www.metro.us.
  7. "Historical DAX Combined Index Intraday Data (DAXA)". PortaraCQG. Retrieved 30 September 2022.
  8. "Dax breaks 12,000 barrier". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022.
  9. "Index DAX (846900) | Indexstand | Börsenkurs | Kurs | Tool - boerse.de". 19 October 2010. Archived from the original on 19 October 2010. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  10. DAX. "DAX Digital | DAX® (TR) EUR". dax-indices.com. Retrieved 20 January 2020.
  11. "DAX 30 Liste | DAX Werte | DAX Aktien". finanzen.net (in German). Retrieved 24 September 2019.
  12. "DAX 30 Liste: Dax Realtime-Kursliste | DAX Aktien | DAX Werte | Dax Unternehmen". boerse.de (in German). Retrieved 24 September 2019.
  13. dax-indices.com. "Index Composition Report" (xls). Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  14. Deutsche Börse: Deutsche Börse ab dem 23. Dezember im DAX Archived 11 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Pressemitteilung, 12. November 2002
  15. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung: Merck ersetzt Altana im DAX
  16. Deutsche Börse: K+S ersetzt TUI in DAX Archived 11 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Pressemitteilung, 3 September 2008
  17. "Fresenius und Hannover Rück steigen in Dax auf". Handelsblatt (in German). 4 March 2009. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  18. "Sep 2019 Media release" (PDF).
  19. "Deutsche Lufthansa to leave Germany's DAX Index". Marketwatch. 5 June 2020. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  20. "Unscheduled Component Change in DAXSelection Indices" (PDF). STOXX. 19 August 2020.
  21. "Composition Changes for DAX, MDAX, SDAX and TecDAX Indices" (PDF). STOXX. 3 March 2021.
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