German shares ended Wednesday on a downbeat note, with the blue-chip DAX index closing 0.51% lower, as the market weighed fresh earnings and corporate updates alongside news on tensions in the Middle East.
BASF (BAS.F) was one of the index's worst-performing stocks, ending the session 2.93% in the red, after the publication of its preliminary second-quarter results. Investors looked past the German chemical company's year-over-year sales jump to 17.2 billion euros from 14.8 billion euros, choosing instead to focus on BASF's negative free cash flow for the quarter and a downgraded macroeconomic outlook impacted by the geopolitical volatility caused by the US-Iran war.
Meanwhile, BofA Global Research cut the price objective of Rheinmetall's (RHM.F) buy-rated stock to 1,300 euros from 1,770 euros, citing concerns about the defense group's weapons and ammunition growth outlook amid shifting procurement priorities.
"Weapons & Ammunition (W&A) remains the largest division in Rheinmetall's 2030 framework. At the [capital markets day], management outlined a path to EUR14-16bn of revenue & c.30% EBIT margins by 2030, driven by artillery, medium-calibre ammo and missiles. However, the conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East increasingly demonstrate the importance of drones and precision strike systems, which we believe will divert spending away from traditional artillery," BofA wrote.
Separately, Rheinmetall said it signed a memorandum of understanding with Space Norway to strengthen the joint development of space-based defense technologies, particularly related to maritime domain awareness. Rheinmetall lost 0.33% at the end of the trading day.
On the geopolitical front, oil prices continued to climb as the US initiated fresh strikes and reimposed its naval blockade against Iran, while Tehran threatened to disrupt more regional energy exports in retaliation. The tit-for-tat attacks come as US President Donald Trump abandoned a planned 20% Strait of Hormuz shipping tax in favor of "Trade and Investment Deals that the various Gulf States will be making into the United States."
"As confidence in the security of the Strait continues to erode, markets will increasingly need to price in the prospect of more prolonged supply disruptions, a shift that has already contributed to firmer global gas prices over the past week," Rystad Energy said in a gas and liquefied natural gas market update.
In economic news, Eurostat data showed a 0.2% monthly decline in the euro area's industrial production for May, compared with a revised 0.3% increase in the previous month and a market forecast of a 0.3% gain. Annual eurozone industrial production fell by 1.2%, against the revised 0.4% growth earlier and the expected 0.5% decline.