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Financial assets at a record level: Germans have saved 7.7 trillion euros

2022-01-02T07:24:11.364Z


All in all, the people in Germany are as rich as never before. This is also due to the fact that they dare to approach stocks more often, according to an analysis.


Enlarge image

Hands full of money (symbol image): financial assets grow by more than seven percent

Photo: Sven Hoppe / dpa

In the past year, many people in Germany continued to increase their wealth.

Overall, private households are as rich as never before, as DZ Bank has calculated.

Accordingly, their financial assets are likely to have increased by more than seven percent to the record value of almost 7.7 trillion euros in the past year.

Official figures from the Deutsche Bundesbank are expected in the spring.

These evaluations take into account cash and bank deposits, securities such as stocks and funds, and claims against insurance companies.

Neither the DZ Bank nor the Bundesbank provide any information about the distribution of assets.

"The main driving force behind the accumulation of wealth was the saving, though slightly lower, but again extremely high in historical comparison," explained DZ bank economist Michael Stappel.

The DZ Bank is the central bank of the Volks- and Raiffeisenbanken.

Stappel assumes that the savings rate in 2021 was again comparatively high at over 15 percent.

For every 100 euros of disposable income, private households would then have put 15 euros on the high edge.

In the crisis year 2020, the rate jumped to a record 16.1 percent.

Because of concerns about short-time working or unemployment as a result of the pandemic, many people had held back with purchases, trips were also canceled, and temporary closings in retail stores slowed consumption.

It was only in the summer of 2021 that the relaxation of the corona restrictions and the hope of getting the pandemic under control did the private savings rate noticeably decrease again.

According to calculations by the Federal Statistical Office, it fell to 10.7 percent in the third quarter and thus came close to the level of the time before the pandemic.

"However, private households' consumption pleasure again deteriorated in autumn when the fourth corona wave set in with full force and the newly emerged Omikron variant caused uncertainty," describes Stappel in his analysis.

Savers are increasingly daring to buy stocks

Many households simply park money in their current account at such times.

Because so often large sums of money without interest - or in the worst case even charged with penalty interest - lie around at the bank, the more risk-averse savers in Germany are increasingly daring to go to the stock market.

"As the period of extremely low interest rates increased and there was no prospect of a noticeable rise in interest rates anytime soon, more and more citizens reacted with an adjusted investment behavior," summarizes the DZ Bank analysis.

"Many were new to the securities business - especially young investors." In the period from September 2019 to September 2021, for example, the number of securities accounts in Germany increased by 3.9 million to 27.1 million.

According to the industry association BVI, 2021 was likely to be the best sales year in its history for the fund industry in Germany: 167.9 billion euros flowed into funds by the end of September alone.

In the previous record year of 2015, it was 186.6 billion euros in twelve months.

Price gains on the stock exchanges increased the value of stocks, funds and certificates - and thus, in total, the financial assets of private households.

Stappel expects that this will also be the case in the new year: »The increase in financial assets will be somewhat weaker in 2022 than in the previous year due to a lower savings rate, but the upswing should support the price development on the stock exchanges and again lead to increases in the value of private financial assets contribute."

lov / dpa

Source: spiegel

All business articles on 2022-01-02

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