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Global Index Market Analysis – March 6, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100

March 6, 2026
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Global Index Market Analysis – March 6, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100
Daily Index Intelligence Friday, 06 March 2026 European Open / US Pre-Market Session Edition

Global Index Market Analysis
Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100

Global Index Market Analysis — Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100 · March 6, 2026
Global Index Market Analysis · Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100 · March 6, 2026 · CSFX Research

Iran war week six, NFP Friday, and the battle for index support — everything experienced traders need for the next 24 hours

DJI 47,954 ▼ −1.61% S&P 500 6,830 ▼ −0.56% FTSE 100 10,413 ▼ −1.45% Brent $84 ▲ +4% VIX 23.75 ▲ +12%

Global Market Snapshot — Thursday Close, 5 March 2026

Six days into the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, global equity benchmarks have shed significant value as oil prices near $84/barrel and the Strait of Hormuz remains under threat. Thursday’s session extended the week’s losses across all major indices, with the Dow suffering its worst weekly run since October 2025. Pre-market Friday futures show tentative stabilisation ahead of the February NFP print — the session’s defining catalyst.

Dow Jones
47,954
▼ −1.61%
S&P 500
6,830
▼ −0.56%
FTSE 100
10,413
▼ −1.45%
DAX 40
23,815
▼ −1.61%
Brent Crude
$84.0
▲ +4.2%
WTI
$77.0
▲ +3.9%
VIX
23.75
▲ +12.3%
10-Yr UST
4.15%
▲ +8 bps
10-Yr Gilt
4.50%
▲ +7 bps
Russell 2000
2,585
▼ −1.91%
Index / Asset Thu Close Mon Close Wk Chg % 52-Wk High 52-Wk Low YTD Trend
Dow Jones (DJI) 48,904 47,954 −2.10% 50,512 ~41,100 Correcting
S&P 500 (SPX) 6,881 6,830 −0.70% ~7,300 ~5,800 Near Support
FTSE 100 (UKX) 10,567 10,413 −1.50% ~10,930 ~8,810 Pullback
Nasdaq 100 (NDX) 21,490 21,350 +0.40% ~22,900 ~18,000 Wedge Pattern
Brent Crude $80.88 $84.00 +14.4% $84.00 ~$69 Geopolitical Bid
VIX (Fear Index) 21.15 23.75 +12.3% ~27 ~14 Elevated

Macro Context: Iran War — Week Six

⚠ Active Geopolitical Risk — High Market Impact

Joint US-Israeli airstrikes on Iran commenced 28 February 2026, including the assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Iran has retaliated by effectively closing the Strait of Hormuz — through which ~20% of the world’s crude oil and significant LNG volumes transit — sending Brent crude from ~$70 to ~$84/barrel inside five trading days. This is the primary driver of all index price action this week.

Theme Current Status Market Impact Key Watch
Strait of Hormuz Effectively closed by Iran; ~20% of global oil disrupted Brent +14.4% in 5 sessions Tanker movements, US Navy escort operation
Diplomacy Signals Iran signalled nuclear concessions; both sides still exchanging strikes Fragile; intraday volatility spike risk Iranian FM statements, White House briefings
Energy Inflation UK petrol at multi-year highs; Dutch TTF gas +7% Thursday BoE rate cut path clouds; gilt yields +7bps Eurozone CPI expectations, BoE communications
Oil Supply Response OPEC+ raised output; Trump admin exploring options $90–$100/bbl tail risk if Hormuz stays closed OPEC+ emergency statements
China Growth Caution NPC cut 2026 growth target to 4.5–5%, lowest since 1991 Weak global demand signal; commodity pressure 15th Five-Year Plan details, PBoC statements
Fed Policy Path Rate cut odds deteriorating; stagflation risk rising US 10-yr yield at 4.15%; equity multiples compressed February NFP today; March FOMC meeting
ℹ Friday Pre-Market

Dow futures +0.1%, S&P 500 futures marginally higher, Nasdaq futures +0.1% as of early Friday. European Stoxx 600 +0.5%; FTSE 100 +0.2%; DAX +0.6%. Oil pulling back modestly after the Trump administration signalled it is exploring options to address the price spike. Markets are in a binary state ahead of the 08:30 ET NFP release — a weak print could tip risk-off, while a stronger number could add “stagflation” complexity.


Economic Calendar — Friday 6 March 2026

High-impact events only. All times are approximate. Forecast figures sourced from pre-release consensus as of Thursday evening.

Time (GMT) Country Event Impact Forecast Previous Market Relevance
08:00 🇬🇧 UK Halifax House Price Index (Feb) HIGH +0.3% MoM +0.7% BoE rate cut timing; GBP/USD, FTSE housebuilders
10:00 🇪🇺 EZ GDP Flash Estimate Q4 2025 (Final) HIGH +0.1% QoQ +0.4% EUR/USD, ECB rate expectations, DAX, CAC
13:30 🇺🇸 USA Non-Farm Payrolls (Feb) CRITICAL +50K +130K All USD pairs, Dow, S&P, Nasdaq, Treasuries
13:30 🇺🇸 USA Unemployment Rate (Feb) CRITICAL 4.3% 4.3% Fed rate cut odds; USD; all major indices
13:30 🇺🇸 USA Average Hourly Earnings MoM (Feb) HIGH +0.3% +0.4% Wage inflation signal; Fed stagflation risk
Ongoing 🇨🇳 China NPC Two Sessions (GDP Target: 4.5–5%) MED 4.5–5% ~5% Global growth outlook; commodity indices; AUD
⚡ NFP Scenario Analysis — What to Expect

Bull Case (+70K or above): Suggests labour market resilience; reduces immediate recession fears but may complicate the Fed’s rate-cut timetable given rising oil-driven inflation. Likely initial rally in Dow (+200–400 pts), S&P (+0.5%), then fade if oil prices remain elevated.

Base Case (+40–60K): Confirms cooling labour market; mixed reaction. Some relief that the economy is slowing “naturally” without a crash. Indices range-bound to mildly positive.

Bear Case (Below 20K or negative): Recession fears amplify the Iran-driven sell-off. S&P 500 tests the critical 6,800 support level. Dow targets 47,000. Safe havens (gold, bonds) rally.


Dow Jones Industrial Average

Dow Jones Industrial Average

DJI · DIA · YM Futures · NYSE
47,954.74
▼ −784.67 (−1.61%) Thursday Close
Strong Sell Daily
Dow Jones Industrial Average · Channel Breakdown · RSI 36.74 · Mar 6, 2026
Dow Jones Industrial Average · Channel Breakdown · RSI 36.74 · Mar 6, 2026 · CSFX Research · TradingView

Candlestick Patterns

Bearish Engulfing (Daily) Dark Cloud Cover (Weekly) Lower Highs Pattern Evening Star (Forming)

Since the Dow’s all-time high of 50,512 on 10 February 2026, the daily chart shows a clear corrective wedge pattern — a series of lower highs and lower lows with each bounce selling off before the prior peak is recovered. Thursday’s session produced a large bearish engulfing candle on elevated volume, trapping the Wednesday relief-rally bulls and confirming that sellers remain in control on any intraday bounce. The weekly candle forming this week is a “Dark Cloud Cover” — a bearish continuation signal appearing after the prior week’s upper shadow rejection near 49,000–49,275.

Technical Indicators & Key Levels

IndicatorValueSignal
RSI (14-day)~45–48Neutral / Weak
MACDNegativeSell
50-Day MA~49,275Price Below
200-Day MA46,843Price Above
ATH (Feb 10)50,512−5.1% Off ATH
TradingViewDailyStrong Sell
LevelPriceType
50-Day MA / Key Resistance49,000–49,275Resistance
ATH Resistance50,034–50,512Major Resistance
Fibonacci Support S147,000–46,236Support
Fibonacci Support S246,020–45,014Key Support
200-Day MA (Bull/Bear Line)46,843Critical Floor
Weekly Pivot~48,383Pivot

Trend Analysis

The medium-term structure on the Dow has shifted from uptrend to corrective phase. The primary bull market that drove the index from ~41,100 to 50,512 remains structurally intact — but the corrective wedge since the February all-time high has broken two consecutive weekly supports. The 200-day moving average at 46,843 is now the single most important level: a weekly close below it would confirm a structural trend shift and open the door to 45,000–45,014. As long as that level holds, this is a corrective pullback within a broader bull cycle, not a cyclical top. Thursday’s high-volume bearish close is a meaningful deterioration signal; the week’s −2.1% performance reflects broad sector de-risking across industrials (Caterpillar −3.6%), financials (Goldman Sachs −3.7%), and aerospace (GE Aerospace −3.4%).

📊 Trade Setup — Dow Jones (DJI) — Friday 6 March 2026
Scenario Trigger Entry Zone Target 1 Target 2 Stop Loss Bias
NFP Bounce Long NFP ≥ 60K + oil stabilises below $83 47,800–48,000 48,500 49,000 47,300 Conditional Long
Breakdown Short NFP ≤ 20K or oil breaks above $86 47,900–48,100 47,000 46,400 48,600 Momentum Short
Neutral / Wait NFP 40–60K, oil $81–$84 48,200 Range-Bound

S&P 500 Index

S&P 500 Index

SPX · SPY · ES Futures · NYSE / Nasdaq
6,830.71
▼ −38.79 (−0.56%) Thursday Close
Strong Sell Daily
S&P 500 Index · Rising Channel · RSI 45.00 · Mar 6, 2026
S&P 500 Index · Rising Channel · RSI 45.00 · Mar 6, 2026 · CSFX Research · TradingView

Candlestick Patterns

Shooting Star (Tue Bounce Failure) Three Black Crows (Mon–Wed–Thu) Doji at 6,800 Support (Tue intraday) Rising Wedge Breakdown

The S&P 500’s week has been defined by a “Three Black Crows” sequence — three consecutive bearish candles following the failed Wednesday rally. Each attempt to hold the 6,850–6,870 zone has been rejected, confirming the 50-day MA at 6,863 as a live resistance rather than support. Tuesday’s intraday doji at 6,800 was the clearest signal of institutional support at that level, and Friday’s session open will either validate or break that floor. The most dangerous candlestick signal on the weekly chart is a “Shooting Star” formed during the rebound to 6,869 on Wednesday — an upper shadow rejection that confirms supply pressure above the 50-day MA.

Technical Indicators & Key Levels

IndicatorValueSignal
RSI (14-day)48.34Neutral
MACD−17.34Sell
5-Day MA6,799.87Price Above
50-Day MA6,863.37Price Below
200-Day MA6,896.67Price Below
MA Summary3 Buy / 9 SellBearish
TradingViewDaily / 5HStrong Sell
Fibonacci Pivot6,782.68Near
LevelPriceType
200-Day MA6,896.67Resistance
50-Day MA6,863.37Resistance
Weekly Resistance7,000Major Resistance
Critical Bull/Bear Line6,800⚡ Pivot Zone
Support S16,782 (Fib)Support
Support S26,700Key Support
Worst-Case (Oil Shock)6,000Bear Target

Trend Analysis

The S&P 500 is at a decisive technical juncture. The index is now trading below both its 50-day and 200-day moving averages — a “Death Cross” signal in the making if the current structure persists for another week. However, the weekly timeframe still shows a broader uptrend intact, and Investing.com’s Monthly reading remains “Strong Buy” based on longer-cycle moving averages. This dichotomy between daily bearish signals and monthly bullish structure is the defining characteristic of a cyclical correction within a secular bull market. The 6,800 level is the absolute line in the sand: on Tuesday, this level was tested and held within a few points; on Thursday it did not fully retest that level, suggesting a modest bid remains. However, two consecutive daily closes below 6,800 would shift the structural bias to bearish and target 6,700 and potentially 6,600. Wells Fargo has flagged 6,000 as an extreme tail risk if oil hits $100+ for an extended period. Goldman Sachs’ base forecast remains 7,500 for year-end.

📊 Trade Setup — S&P 500 (SPX) — Friday 6 March 2026
Scenario Trigger Entry Zone Target 1 Target 2 Stop Loss Bias
Support Hold Long 6,800 holds + NFP ≥ 50K 6,790–6,820 6,870 6,950 6,740 Defensive Long
Breakdown Short Daily close below 6,800 6,800–6,810 6,700 6,600 6,870 Trend Short
Reclaim 50-Day MA Daily close above 6,863 + oil < $80 6,863–6,880 7,000 7,100 6,790 Breakout Long

FTSE 100 Index

FTSE 100 Index

UKX · ISF (ETF) · Z Futures · London Stock Exchange
10,413.94
▼ −153.71 (−1.45%) Thursday Close
Strong Buy Weekly / Monthly Near-term Sell
FTSE 100 Index · Rising Channel · RSI 48.13 · Mar 6, 2026
FTSE 100 Index · Rising Channel · RSI 48.13 · Mar 6, 2026 · CSFX Research · TradingView

Candlestick Patterns

Bearish Engulfing (Daily, Thursday) Consecutive Red Candles (Mon–Thu) Rising Wedge Breakdown (Weekly) Hammer Shadow at 10,400 (Potential)

The FTSE 100 topped out near 10,930 in late February 2026 — its highest reading ever — after a stellar 2025 in which it outperformed the S&P 500 with +20%+ returns driven by defence, mining, and energy. The Iran conflict has now unwound roughly 5% of that exceptional rally in just six days. Thursday’s daily candle is a large bearish engulfing — a powerful reversal confirmation signal — closing at the lows of the day and suggesting that Friday’s open will face significant selling pressure unless risk appetite improves materially on the NFP print. The weekly chart shows a clear “Rising Wedge Breakdown”: a pattern that historically signals 8–12% corrections from the breakdown point. However, all of the FTSE’s longer-term moving averages remain bullish, confirming that this is a correction in a powerful uptrend rather than a structural reversal.

Technical Indicators & Key Levels

IndicatorValueSignal
RSI (14-day)~45–50Neutral
MACD14.01Buy
5-Day MA10,224.75Price Above
50-Day MA10,177.58Price Above
200-Day MA9,987.34Price Above
MA Summary (Daily)12 Buy / 0 SellStrong Buy
Investing.com DailyStrong Buy
Fibonacci Pivot10,221.86Below Pivot
LevelPriceType
All-Time High~10,930Major Resistance
Resistance R310,536.62Resistance
Resistance R210,478.44Resistance
Resistance R110,432.34Resistance
Support S110,328.06Support
Support S210,269.88Support
Support S3 / 50-Day MA10,145–10,177Key Support
200-Day MA (Structural Floor)9,987.34Critical Floor

Trend Analysis

The FTSE 100 presents the most compelling “buy the dip” case of the three indices covered today — but requires patience and the right macro conditions to trigger the trade. All twelve major moving averages remain in a buy configuration; the MACD is still positive; and the 200-day MA at 9,987 remains an untested structural floor. The Iran conflict has inflicted near-term pain on UK-listed airlines (IAG −3.6%), travel companies (Wizz Air −11%), and miners (Rio Tinto, Fresnillo), while benefiting energy names (Shell, Harbour Energy +9.5%). The broader UK macro backdrop is also presenting headwinds: 10-year gilt yields at 4.5%+ are pricing out near-term Bank of England rate cuts, and rising oil prices risk pushing UK CPI back above 4%. However, the medium-term case for FTSE remains constructive — the BoE retains room to ease once energy inflation passes, UK defence stocks (BAE Systems, Rolls-Royce, Babcock) continue to benefit from the £500bn European defence expenditure cycle, and the index remains attractively valued relative to US peers. The first support zone to defend on Friday is 10,270–10,328; a close above 10,432 would be the first sign of stabilisation.

📊 Trade Setup — FTSE 100 (UKX) — Friday 6 March 2026
Scenario Trigger Entry Zone Target 1 Target 2 Stop Loss Bias
Support Bounce Long Hold above 10,270 + NFP in-line or better 10,270–10,328 10,432 10,537 10,180 Dip Buy
Breakdown Short Close below 10,270 + oil spikes above $87 10,270–10,300 10,145 9,987 10,450 Momentum Short
Iran De-escalation Rally Credible ceasefire / diplomatic headline Any on-close dip 10,600 10,713 (Fib) 10,270 Event Long

Frequently Asked Questions

Why have the Dow Jones and FTSE 100 underperformed the Nasdaq this week?
The Dow and FTSE are significantly more exposed to the sectors hit hardest by the Iran conflict: industrials, energy-intensive manufacturers, airlines, financials, and materials. The Nasdaq, by contrast, is dominated by cash-rich, domestically-oriented technology firms (Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple) whose revenue streams are less directly tied to physical commodity prices or global supply chains. Tech stocks also benefited from a flight toward quality — investors view mega-cap tech as a relative safe haven compared to highly cyclical sectors. The Dow is down approximately 2.1% for the week, the FTSE approximately 1.5%, while the Nasdaq has managed a fractional gain of around 0.4%.
What does the February NFP report mean for index traders today?
The February Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) report, due at 8:30 AM ET (13:30 GMT), is the session’s binary risk event. The consensus forecast calls for just +50,000 jobs — a sharp deceleration from January’s 130,000. If payrolls come in above 70,000, markets are likely to bounce on “resilient economy” sentiment, though the Fed rate-cut narrative becomes more complicated given oil-driven inflation. A reading below 30,000 would trigger recession fears on top of the existing geopolitical-driven sell-off, potentially sending the S&P 500 below the critical 6,800 support level and the Dow toward 47,000. The “Goldilocks” zone of 50,000–70,000 would likely result in a neutral-to-mildly-positive session, particularly if oil prices continue to moderate.
Is the FTSE 100’s recent correction a buying opportunity?
From a structural technical perspective, yes — but timing matters. Every major moving average (5-day, 50-day, 200-day) on the FTSE 100 still points to a buy signal, and the index had built up an extraordinary 2025 bull run (+20%+). The current ~5% drawdown from all-time highs is shallow relative to historical corrections. However, the near-term catalyst for a recovery requires at minimum oil prices to stabilise below $83–85/barrel, which in turn requires either diplomatic progress on Iran or a credible alternative oil supply response. Experienced traders should identify the 10,270–10,328 zone as the first tier of support for accumulation, with a wider horizon trade aiming for 10,713 (the 261.8% Fibonacci extension target identified by IG Group) on a 3–6 month basis, if the structural bull case remains intact.
What are the key levels for the S&P 500 to confirm a trend reversal?
The three levels to watch on the S&P 500 are: (1) 6,800 to the downside — two consecutive daily closes below this level confirm a bearish breakdown and target 6,700–6,600; (2) 6,863 (50-day MA) as the first meaningful resistance — a confirmed close above this level is needed before a rally becomes credible; and (3) 7,000 as the major resistance and psychological ceiling that must be reclaimed to put the medium-term bull case back on the table. Currently, the TradingView summary on the daily and 5-hour timeframe shows “Strong Sell,” with 9 out of 12 moving averages signalling bearish momentum. The monthly timeframe, however, remains “Strong Buy” — reflecting the long-term structural uptrend.
How does China’s reduced growth target affect global indices?
China’s decision to lower its 2026 GDP growth target to 4.5–5% — the lowest since 1991 — removes a key pillar of global demand expectations. This is negative primarily for: commodity-heavy indices like the FTSE 100 (mining stocks: Rio Tinto, BHP, Fresnillo); commodity exporters like Australia’s ASX; and global industrial conglomerates with significant China revenue exposure in the Dow (Caterpillar, 3M). It also reduces the probability of a rapid oil demand recovery that might otherwise cap Brent crude’s geopolitical premium. For traders, the China signal reinforces the “weak global growth + high energy prices = stagflation risk” narrative — which is bearish for equities and bullish for gold and inflation-linked bonds.
What could trigger a sharp reversal and rally across all three indices?
Three catalysts could produce a swift and significant reversal: (1) A credible ceasefire or diplomatic breakthrough between the US, Israel, and Iran — this would immediately collapse the oil risk premium, reduce inflation expectations, and allow central banks to resume their rate-cut paths; (2) A surprise strong NFP print (+80K+) that signals the US economy is resilient enough to absorb the oil shock without entering recession; and (3) A confirmed decline in Brent crude below $78/barrel, signalling that markets are no longer pricing in a prolonged Strait of Hormuz closure. Any combination of these factors could produce a 2–4% single-session rally across the major indices from current depressed levels.

Conclusion & 24-Hour Outlook

Global equity markets enter Friday, 6 March 2026 in a state of fragile but not broken equilibrium. The week’s dominant driver — the US-Israeli military conflict with Iran and the consequent disruption to the Strait of Hormuz — has inflicted meaningful technical damage on all three indices covered in this report, yet the structural bull cases remain intact above their critical moving average floors: 46,843 for the Dow, 6,800 for the S&P 500, and 10,145–10,177 for the FTSE 100.

The next 24 hours pivot around a single number: the February NFP print at 08:30 ET. A reading at or above consensus (+50K) will likely provide temporary relief — a technical bounce rather than a trend reversal — while a reading below 30K risks amplifying the geopolitical-driven sell-off and breaking critical support levels. For experienced traders, the current environment demands smaller position sizes, wider stop-losses to accommodate binary event risk, and an absolute respect for the key support levels identified in each index’s trade setup.

Of the three indices, the FTSE 100 offers the most attractive medium-term risk-reward for a patient long entry in the 10,270–10,328 zone, given its all-moving-averages-bullish configuration, the ongoing structural tailwinds from European defence spending, and the BoE’s credible path to easing once energy-driven inflation subsides. The S&P 500’s most critical battle is defending 6,800 — a level that has twice attracted institutional buying this week. The Dow Jones requires the most caution: the bearish engulfing on Thursday and the depth of industrial-sector selling suggest that a retest of 47,000–46,843 is more likely than a swift recovery to 49,000.

Above all, respect Brent crude. As long as it trades above $82–83/barrel, the risk-off floor remains. The moment it decisively breaks below $78, the calculus shifts — and that, more than any single jobs number, will determine whether this is a week that markets ultimately remember as a buying opportunity.

Index 24-Hr Bias Critical Support Critical Resistance Key Trigger
Dow Jones Cautious Sell 47,000–46,843 48,500–49,275 NFP print + oil price
S&P 500 Neutral / Sell Bias 6,800–6,782 6,863–6,897 6,800 hold vs. break
FTSE 100 Dip Buy Zone 10,270–10,145 10,432–10,537 Oil < $83 + diplomacy

Published: Friday, 06 March 2026 · Daily Index Intelligence Edition
Data sources: Reuters, Bloomberg, Yahoo Finance, Investing.com, TradingView, Trading Economics, CNBC, City AM, Morningstar UK
Prices reflect Thursday 5 March 2026 closing levels. Pre-market data accurate as of early Friday morning European session.
DISCLAIMER: This report is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice or a solicitation to trade. Index analysis, technical indicators, and trade setups are based on publicly available data and analyst consensus and carry no guarantee of outcome. Trading financial instruments involves significant risk of loss. Always trade within your risk tolerance and consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.