Munich, Re’s

Munich Re’s Record Cash Returns Can’t Halt Slide as Currency and Macro Risks Trump Fundamentals

29.05.2026 - 10:12:07 | boerse-global.de

Despite a €6.12B net profit and €5.3B capital return, Munich Re shares near 52-week low, weighed by euro rally and pricing discipline. Insider buying signals value but bears dominate.

Munich Re’s Record Cash Returns Can’t Halt Slide as Currency and Macro Risks Trump Fundamentals - Foto: über boerse-global.de
Munich Re’s Record Cash Returns Can’t Halt Slide as Currency and Macro Risks Trump Fundamentals - Foto: über boerse-global.de

The numbers coming out of Munich Re tell a story of a company firing on all cylinders: a €6.3 billion net profit target for 2026, a record €6.12 billion in 2025, and a capital return package worth roughly €5.3 billion for the year just ended. Yet the share price tells a different tale altogether. At €458.50, the stock is trading within a whisker of its 52-week low of €458.00, down nearly 19% over the past twelve months and 16.5% since the start of 2026.

The disconnect between operational strength and market price is glaring. Five board members bought shares near the year’s trough — a signal management seldom sends. The Solvency II ratio stands at 292%, well above the 200% strategic floor. And the ongoing buyback programme, which runs until April 2027, has a ceiling of €2.25 billion. Yet the bears have the upper hand, and the technical picture offers little reason to expect a near-term reversal.

Hardest is the euro’s rally. At the start of 2025 one euro bought roughly $1.03; by the first quarter of 2026 the exchange rate had climbed to between $1.15 and $1.20. That single shift has been enough to compress Munich Re’s euro-denominated premiums and profits, dragging insurance revenue down 5% to just over €15 billion. The currency headwind is blunt and persistent, and no buyback can offset it.

Pricing discipline adds further near-term friction. At the 1 April 2026 renewals, Munich Re turned away contracts it deemed insufficiently priced — those were on average 3.1% cheaper — causing the written volume to shrink 18.5% to €2.0 billion. That restraint protects margins but hits top-line momentum, exactly the kind of dynamic that unsettles momentum-driven investors. Meanwhile, institutional selling has added to the downdraft. Analysts at Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan have recommended underwhelming insurance exposure amid escalating Middle East tensions, and Munich Re was among the weakest stocks in the STOXX 50 on Thursday, losing 2.33%.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Münchener Rück?

A curious technical signal has emerged. The 14-day relative strength index sits at 73.9 — conventionally in overbought territory — even as the stock prints a new yearly low. Such RSI readings usually accompany a sharp run-up, not a month-long 13.45% slide. The implication is that selling pressure remains intense and has not yet exhausted itself. All major moving averages lie well above the current price; the 200-day line at €534.09 is more than 14% distant, underscoring the depth of the downtrend.

Weather risk, long a core variable for the reinsurer, is also shifting. Munich Re expects a slightly quieter-than-average Atlantic hurricane season in the second half of 2026, citing the likely development of an El Niño pattern — the US NOAA currently has an “El Niño Watch” in effect. But the company flags rising typhoon risks in the western Pacific and warns that even in mild seasons a single extreme event can do severe damage. The risk is deferred, not eliminated.

On the bullish side, the dividend of €24.00 per share and a payout ratio above 80% — backed by a target of more than 8% annual earnings-per-share growth — offer a floor that yield-seeking investors may find attractive. The buyback programme will continue to mop up shares, and the capital position leaves ample room for further distributions. The key milestones before the August 2026 half-year report are the pace of buybacks, the trajectory of reinsurance pricing, and a formal reaffirmation of the €6.3 billion profit goal.

Münchener Rück at a turning point? This analysis reveals what investors need to know now.

If all three fall into line, the valuation gap that has opened up between around €458 and the company’s underlying earning power will become harder for the market to ignore. For now, though, the macro and technical weight is heavy. Munich Re’s next support level has yet to be found.

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