Chancellor Merz's comment signals official recognition that Germany's traditional export- and heavy-industry-led growth model needs structural change. Near-term this increases political and policy uncertainty for Germany's large cyclical exporters (autos, industrials, chemicals) and banks that finance them, and could weigh on DAX performance and the euro as investors re-price growth and profitability risks tied to slower global demand, energy/transition costs and competitiveness. Market reaction is likely modestly negative: investors may reduce exposure to capital‑goods and auto supply-chain names and rotate toward services, software, renewables and firms with strong balance sheets. Potential policy responses (industrial policy, labor/energy reforms, fiscal support or protectionism) could create both winners and losers — e.g., state-led support might help some domestic champions but raise costs/uncertainty for import‑dependent supply chains.
Affected segments: autos (OEMs & suppliers), industrials and machinery, chemicals, materials, banks with corporate loan exposure, exporters more broadly; also sovereign and corporate credit in Germany could see modest spread widening if uncertainty rises. FX: EUR may weaken vs safe havens (USD, CHF) on growth concerns.
Monitor: Merkel-era structural reform announcements (labor, energy, tax), German industrial production and export orders, DAX flows, Bund yields and spreads, and any targeted fiscal packages that might offset weakness.
Potentially affected tickers/pairs: Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes‑Benz Group, Siemens, Thyssenkrupp, BASF, Bayer, Deutsche Bank, Commerzbank, SAP; FX: EUR/USD (euro sensitivity).