Berliner Boersenzeitung - Tel Aviv’s Wartime rally

EUR -
AED 4.186804
AFN 72.962441
ALL 94.259056
AMD 418.549568
ANG 2.041136
AOA 1045.418899
ARS 1684.10666
AUD 1.651889
AWG 2.052077
AZN 1.936931
BAM 1.955487
BBD 2.296633
BDT 140.257564
BGN 1.927676
BHD 0.429931
BIF 3386.658257
BMD 1.140043
BND 1.475464
BOB 7.880051
BRL 5.900179
BSD 1.140318
BTN 107.028002
BWP 15.497201
BYN 3.307171
BYR 22344.835632
BZD 2.293293
CAD 1.616934
CDF 2587.896628
CHF 0.921609
CLF 0.026661
CLP 1049.283409
CNY 7.756679
CNH 7.75807
COP 3917.562706
CRC 517.717184
CUC 1.140043
CUP 30.21113
CVE 110.246881
CZK 24.264557
DJF 203.065532
DKK 7.474507
DOP 66.999283
DZD 151.982519
EGP 56.441918
ERN 17.10064
ETB 183.847154
FJD 2.583449
FKP 0.86269
GBP 0.862499
GEL 3.015381
GGP 0.86269
GHS 12.857451
GIP 0.86269
GMD 83.222763
GNF 9991.401736
GTQ 8.699608
GYD 238.651244
HKD 8.940488
HNL 30.510119
HRK 7.535342
HTG 149.03616
HUF 354.147428
IDR 20362.5295
ILS 3.418629
IMP 0.86269
INR 107.599675
IQD 1493.761052
IRR 1567615.623977
ISK 143.998889
JEP 0.86269
JMD 179.591272
JOD 0.808274
JPY 184.289059
KES 147.646835
KGS 99.696357
KHR 4577.267802
KMF 494.7783
KPW 1026.03877
KRW 1752.35789
KWD 0.35298
KYD 0.95029
KZT 553.271497
LAK 25028.996263
LBP 102117.195723
LKR 383.315495
LRD 207.715883
LSL 18.744002
LTL 3.366249
LVL 0.689601
LYD 7.319797
MAD 10.692496
MDL 20.218652
MGA 4823.143858
MKD 61.655153
MMK 2393.462693
MNT 4081.628965
MOP 9.21159
MRU 45.50872
MUR 54.39115
MVR 17.613684
MWK 1977.361744
MXN 19.968844
MYR 4.661976
MZN 72.849226
NAD 18.744002
NGN 1572.118647
NIO 41.963287
NOK 11.298147
NPR 171.247607
NZD 2.018041
OMR 0.438339
PAB 1.140368
PEN 3.888378
PGK 5.004156
PHP 69.892026
PKR 317.357353
PLN 4.286982
PYG 6959.856149
QAR 4.156517
RON 5.241007
RSD 117.374218
RUB 88.643027
RWF 1670.006102
SAR 4.282215
SBD 9.179569
SCR 16.010093
SDG 684.025293
SEK 11.076665
SGD 1.475445
SHP 0.851157
SLE 28.272923
SLL 23906.128197
SOS 651.724331
SRD 42.546623
STD 23596.580793
STN 24.496082
SVC 9.97736
SYP 126.011304
SZL 18.733003
THB 38.047216
TJS 10.553828
TMT 3.990149
TND 3.379908
TOP 2.74495
TRY 53.154875
TTD 7.749624
TWD 36.346152
TZS 2989.981828
UAH 51.183064
UGX 4185.220382
USD 1.140043
UYU 45.774685
UZS 13697.40965
VES 707.684868
VND 29983.121282
VUV 136.749145
WST 3.175585
XAF 655.852087
XAG 0.019615
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.081022
XCG 2.055071
XDR 0.816787
XOF 655.849211
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.042682
ZAR 18.768497
ZMK 10261.75068
ZMW 20.541075
ZWL 367.093263
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0190

    22.046

    -0.09%

  • BCC

    2.1000

    79.76

    +2.63%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    51.89

    +1.54%

  • RIO

    1.0800

    95.11

    +1.14%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    21.93

    -0.41%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.48

    +1.74%

  • BP

    -0.1400

    37.72

    -0.37%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.2

    0%

  • NGG

    0.5900

    83.42

    +0.71%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.58

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    18.7

    +3.74%

  • AZN

    2.6600

    185.68

    +1.43%

  • RELX

    -0.2300

    30.92

    -0.74%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    13.86

    +0.36%


Tel Aviv’s Wartime rally




Israel’s equity benchmarks have climbed to fresh records even as the country wages simultaneous conflicts. The blue-chip index has advanced sharply in recent months, with the broader market notching new highs during intense geopolitical escalations. Gains accelerated after major security events in June and continued into September, leaving year-to-date performance near the top of the global league tables.

A market built for resilience. The Tel Aviv market is unusually heavy in banks, software, pharmaceuticals, and defense technology—sectors whose earnings are either globally diversified or directly insulated from domestic demand shocks. Banks benefit from still-elevated policy rates that support net interest margins, while leading software and cybersecurity names draw the majority of sales from overseas clients, muting local disruption. Defense contractors have logged outsized backlogs and new export orders as regional tensions lifted procurement cycles, translating quickly into revenue and earnings beats. 

Policy cushions under the market. The central bank has held rates steady at 4.5% this year, balancing inflation control with financial-stability aims. That stance—combined with a well-telegraphed readiness to act in FX markets—has limited shekel volatility and anchored discount-rate assumptions in equity models. A more stable currency lowers the risk premia investors demand and supports multiples on exporters’ future cash flows. 

War spending and external backstops. Wartime budgets channel orders into domestic defense supply chains and supporting services, while external security aid and strong diaspora/foreign flows mitigate balance-of-payments stress. For listed primes and tier-one suppliers, firm multi-quarter visibility on contracts reduces earnings uncertainty; investors price that visibility at a premium during crises. Recent quarterly results from a flagship defense name showed double-digit revenue and EPS growth alongside large new awards, reinforcing the thesis. 

Sentiment mechanics: “buy bad news.” After initial drawdowns around major flare-ups, Israel’s market has often staged fast recoveries. Traders cite three dynamics: (1) systematic money returning once volatility spikes subside; (2) local pensions and provident funds averaging in on weakness; (3) foreign funds reassessing tail-risk after rapid, decisive military responses. That pattern was visible around the late-June strikes, when the main indices jumped across all five sessions and pushed to records. 

Micro drivers: banks and defense lead, tech follows. Bank shares, a heavy index weight, re-rated on net interest income resilience and benign credit metrics. Defense stocks rallied on expanding backlogs and export deals; one leading contractor surged on earnings and a multi-billion-dollar award. Software and cyber names, with dollar-linked revenues, benefited from a firmer shekel and ongoing AI/digitization demand. Together, these groups offset pockets of weakness in domestically exposed small caps. 

FX and rates as valuation levers. Equity multiples in Tel Aviv are sensitive to real yields and the ILS path. A steady policy rate and contained FX swings keep discount rates from ratcheting higher, while any signal of future cuts would, at the margin, lift present values for long-duration growth names. Central-bank communication this summer emphasized market stabilization alongside inflation convergence—guidance that helped compress risk premia. 
boi.org.il

Global context: flows chase relative strength. In a year of choppy global equities, relative-momentum strategies and ETF rebalancing tend to channel flows into the best-performing markets. As Israel’s benchmarks outperformed, incremental passive and active allocations reinforced the move, pushing indices to successive highs. Daily print data in early September captured that continued grind higher. 

What could stop the rally
- Escalation risk. A broader regional conflict that disrupts critical infrastructure or mobilization on a much larger scale would hit earnings expectations and risk appetite. Short, sharp flare-ups have been “buyable”; a drawn-out expansion may not be. 
- Policy disappointment. A surprise tightening or a disorderly FX episode would lift discount rates and pressure valuations, especially in tech and rate-sensitive financials. 
- Earnings air-pockets. If defense deliveries slip or banks guide to weaker credit growth/fees, the index’s two pillars wobble. Recent prints were strong but leave little room for execution errors. 
- Valuation gravity. After a swift re-rating, some strategists warn momentum may outpace fundamentals; breadth indicators already flag froth in mid-caps. A modest pullback would not be surprising. 

The bottom line
Israel’s stock surge is less a paradox than a reflection of market structure, policy buffers, and profit visibility in key sectors. Banks, software exporters, and defense suppliers can thrive even when domestic demand is strained; stable currency policy and predictable funding reinforce that resilience. The setup remains constructive while earnings and policy hold—yet highly sensitive to escalation, policy missteps, or an abrupt turn in global risk appetite.