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The Great Transatlantic Divergence: FTSE Hits All-Time Highs While Nasdaq Stares at Its 200-Day Moving Average | The Capital Dispatch

March 9, 2026
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The Great Transatlantic Divergence: FTSE Hits All-Time Highs While Nasdaq Stares at Its 200-Day Moving Average | The Capital Dispatch
Capital Street FX · CapitalStreetFX.com · Weekly Report Series
The Capital Dispatch
Week of March 9–15, 2026  ·  Global Indices Edition  ·  Report 04 of 04
FTSE 100 10,850 ▲ +6.5% YTD · ONLY MAJOR INDEX IN BULL MODE · ENERGY-HEAVY BENEFITS FROM $90 OIL NASDAQ 100 21,800 ▼ · 50/200-MA CLUSTER 24,400–25,500 = “CEILING OF DOOM” · NFP PANIC S&P 500 6,739 · 200-MA AT 6,620–6,650 = CRITICAL SUPPORT · SELL RALLY 6,800–6,880 DOW JONES 47,502 · 200-MA AT 48,200 = RESISTANCE · SELL 48,200–48,500 DAX 40 24,100 ▲ · GERMANY €500B SONDERVERMÖGEN · ECB CUTTING · DZ BANK TARGET 27,500 ⚡ THE TRADE OF Q1: LONG FTSE 100 / SHORT NASDAQ 100 · ENTRY ON NDX RALLY TO 22,200+ US CPI WEDNESDAY MARCH 11 · HOT = NASDAQ -5% · SOFT = FTSE EXTENDS GAINS STAGFLATION TRADE: SELL TECH GROWTH · BUY ENERGY VALUE · BUY EUROPEAN FISCAL EXPANSION
Global Indices Weekly · Report 04 · March 9–15, 2026

The Great
Transatlantic Divergence:
FTSE Hits All-Time Highs
While Nasdaq Stares at Its
200-Day Moving Average.

One energy-heavy index is the only major benchmark in the world making new all-time highs as $90 oil powers its constituents. The other is a tech-laden behemoth staring down a 200-day moving average cluster that has become a structural ceiling of supply. Five indices. Five different macro stories. One cross-market trade that puts them all into a single elegant position. This is the indices playbook for the most consequential macro week of Q1 2026.

■ Global Indices By the Numbers — Friday March 7 Close
10,850
FTSE 100
+6.5% YTD · Bull Mode
21,800
Nasdaq 100
200-MA Ceiling Looms
6,739
S&P 500
200-MA $6,620 Critical Support
47,502
Dow Jones
200-MA at 48,200 = Resistance
24,100
DAX 40
€500B Sondervermögen Tailwind
78/22
FTSE Bear/Bull Bias
Strongly Bullish Conviction

The global equity map of March 2026 is the most geographically and sectorally bifurcated it has been in at least a decade. The same macro forces that are crushing US tech-heavy indices — $90 oil, stagflation risk, a paralysed Fed — are actively boosting the FTSE 100, providing qualified support to the DAX, and leaving the Dow Jones pinned at its 200-day moving average. This week, the most important investment thesis in global equities is not what to buy or sell in any single market. It is the relative value trade between them.

The transatlantic divergence that defines global indices in the week of March 9 is the direct consequence of a single, brutal arithmetic reality: not all major stock indices are built the same way. The FTSE 100 is dominated by energy companies (Shell, BP, Harbour Energy), global mining groups (Rio Tinto, Anglo American, Glencore), defence contractors (BAE Systems, Rolls-Royce), and global financial institutions whose revenue is priced in dollars. When oil is at $90/bbl, when the dollar is strong, and when geopolitical tension creates demand for defence spending, the FTSE’s constituents are structurally favoured. The Nasdaq 100, by contrast, is dominated by technology and growth companies — Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Meta, Amazon — whose valuations are built on discounted future earnings. When the discount rate rises (higher rates for longer from the stagflation narrative), the present value of those future earnings falls mechanically. The same macro event — $90 oil and stagflation risk — is simultaneously a structural positive for FTSE and a structural negative for Nasdaq. This is the divergence, and it is not a coincidence. It is arithmetic.

🇬🇧 Why FTSE 100 Is the Only Major Index Making New All-Time Highs

The FTSE 100’s +6.5% year-to-date performance and all-time high territory is not an accident of momentum. It is the systematic outperformance of a sector composition that benefits from exactly the macro environment of March 2026. Energy stocks (approximately 13% of FTSE 100 weight) have surged 30–40% on the oil shock. Mining and basic materials (approximately 12%) benefit from supply chain disruption premium. Defence stocks (BAE Systems up 42% year-to-date) benefit from elevated geopolitical spending. Global financials (HSBC, Standard Chartered) generate significant dollar revenues that translate to larger pound sterling profits as GBP weakens. The FTSE 100 is not a UK economy index — approximately 75% of its revenues are generated internationally. It is a globally diversified blue-chip index that happens to be priced in sterling and currently represents precisely the sector rotation that stagflation and geopolitical conflict demand.

Chapter 01 — S&P 500 The 200-Day Moving Average at 6,620: America’s Most Important Line in the Sand

The S&P 500 at 6,739 is in a structurally precarious position. The index has declined approximately 6% from its January 2026 peak of approximately 7,100 — a correction that has been driven by the sequential accumulation of macro negatives: first the tariff uncertainty of Q4 2025, then the Iran war shock of late February, then the catastrophic NFP print of −92,000. At 6,739, the index sits approximately 1.8% above its 200-day moving average (approximately 6,620–6,650) — a level that has been tested but not broken since the bull market began in late 2023.

The 200-day moving average carries structural significance in equity markets because it is the single most widely watched technical level by institutional portfolio managers, quantitative funds, and risk management systems. When the S&P 500 closes below its 200-day MA on a daily basis, algorithmic de-risking triggers across thousands of institutional portfolios simultaneously — creating a self-reinforcing selling wave. The question for this week is whether Wednesday’s CPI provides the trigger. A hot CPI print — confirming stagflation and removing the last hope of a March FOMC cut — could push the S&P to 6,680 intraday, testing the 200-MA directly. A break below 6,620 on volume would be the most bearish technical signal the US equity market has produced in 18 months.

S&P 500 (SPX) — Technical Levels, Week of March 9–15
Current: 6,739 · Bias: Bearish · Critical Level: 200-Day MA at 6,620–6,650
6,950 · Stop Loss
Short Stop — Exit if breached
6,880 · Upper Sell Zone
Sell Zone Ceiling
6,800 · Lower Sell Zone
Sell Zone Entry
6,739 · Current ★
CURRENT PRICE
6,620–6,650 · 200-Day MA
Critical Support — TP1
6,500 · Next Support
TP2 — If 200-MA Breaks
6,200 · Bear Case Target
TP3 — Extended Bear / Recession

◆ Trade Setup: SELL rally to 6,800–6,880 · SL 6,950 · TP1 6,650 (200-MA) · TP2 6,500 · TP3 6,200 · Risk ~150–210 pts · Reward 90–680 pts · R:R from 0.5:1 to 3.2:1 · Best risk/reward on a confirmed hot CPI. Reduce short exposure sharply on any ceasefire headline (oil-shock reversal).

Chapter 02 — Nasdaq 100 The Ceiling of Doom: Why 24,400–25,500 Is a Wall of Supply, Not a Price Target

The Nasdaq 100 at 21,800 is the most straightforwardly bearish of the five major indices this week, and the conviction level on the short side is unusually high — approximately 72/28 bearish in the analytical framework. The “ceiling of doom” at 24,400–25,500 is not an editorial flourish. It is a precise description of the technical reality: this zone is the confluence of the 50-day moving average (currently approximately 24,400), the 200-day moving average (approximately 25,200), and the January 2026 breakdown level where the Nasdaq fell from approximately 25,500 on the combination of the Iran war news and the NFP miss. Three independently significant technical levels clustered in a 1,100-point range creates a supply zone of exceptional density — any rally toward that zone will be met with selling from: technical traders who use MAs as resistance, institutions that established short positions at the breakdown, and long-term holders who bought the last rally and want to reduce exposure at their cost basis.

The fundamental case for Nasdaq bears is the cleanest of any index this week. Technology companies at elevated valuations — the Nasdaq 100’s forward P/E is approximately 26× earnings — are the most sensitive to discount rate changes. In the stagflation narrative, the Fed cannot cut (so rates stay elevated), while corporate earnings are compressed by higher input costs AND slowing consumer demand. The double compression of both the multiple (rising discount rate lowers the P/E investors are willing to pay) and the earnings (deteriorating macro reduces actual profits) is the classic bear market mechanism for technology stocks. The 2022 episode, when the Nasdaq fell 37% in the rate hiking cycle, demonstrated this mechanism with unusual clarity.

“Technology valuations at 26× forward earnings were constructed for a world of near-zero rates and accelerating earnings growth. Neither condition currently applies. The Nasdaq’s 200-day moving average at 25,200 is not a target — it is a ceiling.”— Goldman Sachs Global Equity Strategy, March 2026 Monthly Note
Nasdaq 100 (NDX) — Technical Levels, Week of March 9–15
Current: 21,800 · Bias: Strongly Bearish (72/28) · “Ceiling of Doom”: 24,400–25,500
25,500 · 200-Day MA Top
200-Day MA / Jan Breakdown
24,400 · 50-Day MA
50-Day MA · Ceiling of Doom Base
22,800 · Stop Loss
Short Stop Loss
22,200–22,500 · Sell Zone
Rally Short Entry Zone
21,800 · Current ★
CURRENT PRICE
21,400 · Near Support · TP1
TP1 — First Target
20,800 · TP2
TP2
20,000 · Round Number TP3
TP3 — Hot CPI Extended Bear

◆ Trade Setup: SELL rally to 22,200–22,500 · SL 22,800 · TP1 21,400 · TP2 20,800 · TP3 20,000 · Risk ~300–700 pts · Reward 800–2,500 pts · R:R 2:1 to 8:1 · Highest conviction short in global indices this week. Soft CPI is the primary risk — reduce on any print below +0.3% MoM.

Chapter 03 — Dow Jones & DAX 40 The Industrial Value Index and the Fiscal Bazooka Index

The Dow Jones at 47,502 occupies an intermediate position in the global indices hierarchy. Unlike the Nasdaq (highly tech-weighted, high valuation multiples, maximum rate-sensitivity), the Dow’s 30 components include significant weighting in industrials, defence, healthcare, and financial services — sectors that are either rate-insensitive or mildly rate-positive. This makes the Dow more resilient to rate-driven selloffs than the Nasdaq, but it does not make it a bull trade this week. The primary technical issue is the 200-day moving average sitting at approximately 48,200 — essentially the same as the current price. The prior decline from the January peak of approximately 49,400 means the 200-MA has now become resistance rather than support. Every rally attempt toward 48,200 is likely to face institutional selling from accounts using the MA as a de-risking trigger.

The DAX 40 is the most interesting macro story in European equities this week, and arguably the most genuinely bullish medium-term setup of any major global index. Germany’s Bundestag voted in February 2026 to establish the €500 billion Sondervermögen — a special off-balance-sheet infrastructure and defence fund — in what represents the largest peacetime fiscal expansion in German history. For an economy that has run structural fiscal surpluses since the 2010s (the famous “schwarze Null” — black zero), this is an epochal shift. The European Central Bank simultaneously began a new rate-cutting cycle in March, reducing rates to 3.00%. The combination of fiscal stimulus + monetary easing is the most pro-equity policy mix available, and the DAX’s composition — heavy in industrials (Siemens, BASF), auto (Volkswagen, BMW), and global export champions — is exactly the sector that benefits from fiscal spending on infrastructure and defence. DZ Bank’s year-end target of 27,500 for the DAX — approximately 14% above current levels — reflects this structural tailwind.

🇩🇪 Germany’s €500B Sondervermögen — The Most Important European Policy Event of 2026

The Sondervermögen (literally “special assets” — Germany’s constitutional mechanism for off-balance-sheet spending) will allocate approximately €300 billion to defence and security infrastructure and €200 billion to domestic infrastructure (energy transition, railways, digital, climate). The spending will occur over 10–12 years, meaning approximately €40–50 billion per year in new fiscal stimulus in an economy with a GDP of approximately €4.1 trillion. That is roughly 1–1.2% of GDP annually in new demand — a meaningful Keynesian stimulus in a country that had been near recession for three consecutive years. The direct beneficiaries in the DAX: Rheinmetall (defence, +340% in 12 months), Siemens Energy, ThyssenKrupp (steel/infrastructure), and BASF (industrial chemicals). The indirect beneficiary: the entire DAX index via improved German economic growth expectations for 2026–2028.

DAX 40 (GER40) — Technical Levels, Week of March 9–15
Current: 24,100 · Bias: Cautious Bull Medium-Term · DZ Bank Target: 27,500 year-end
27,500 · DZ Bank Target
DZ Bank Year-End Target
25,500 · Structural Target
TP3 Medium-Term
24,800 · Near Resistance
TP2
24,400 · TP1
TP1 — First Week Target
24,100 · Current ★
CURRENT PRICE
23,700–23,900 · Entry Zone
Buy-the-Dip Zone
23,200 · Stop Loss
Hard Stop — Structural Support

◆ Trade Setup: BUY dips to 23,700–23,900 · SL 23,200 · TP1 24,400 · TP2 24,800 · TP3 25,500 · Year-end 27,500 · Risk ~200–900 pts · Reward 500–3,600 pts · R:R 2:1 to 4:1 · Medium-term conviction: HIGH. Weekly conviction: moderate pre-CPI. Fiscal + ECB = structural bull case.

Chapter 04 — FTSE 100 The Only Bull in the Room — Why $90 Oil Made Britain’s Index the World’s Best Trade

The FTSE 100 at 10,850 — in all-time high territory and up +6.5% year-to-date — is the most unambiguous directional trade in global indices this week. The analysis is unusually clean: the FTSE’s sector composition means it is structurally positioned to benefit from the exact macro environment of March 2026, and the technical picture (new all-time highs, above all major moving averages, positive trend on weekly and monthly timeframes) is the strongest of any major index globally. The 78/22 bullish conviction rating is the highest in this report.

The arithmetic of why FTSE benefits from $90 oil is precise. Shell (approximately 8.5% FTSE 100 weight) reported that every $10/bbl increase in Brent crude adds approximately $2.8 billion to its annual free cash flow. At $90 Brent versus the $65 pre-war level, that is a $7 billion annual FCF boost to Shell alone — from a single index constituent. BP (approximately 5.5% weight) has similar sensitivity. The combined oil and gas sector represents approximately 13% of FTSE 100 market capitalisation. When that 13% surges 30–40% on the oil shock, the mechanical boost to the index is approximately 3.9–5.2 percentage points — which closely explains the YTD outperformance versus other indices. The mining sector’s additional 12% weight (also benefiting from supply disruption premium on metals) adds another layer of structural support.

FTSE 100 (UKX) — Technical Levels, Week of March 9–15
Current: 10,850 · Bias: Strongly Bullish (78/22) · Only major index at all-time highs
11,400 · Extended Bull Target
TP3 — If oil hits $100+
11,200 · Major Resistance
TP2
11,000 · Psychological Level
TP1 — Round Number Target
10,950 · Near-Term Target
First Week Target
10,850 · Current ★
CURRENT — ATH Zone
10,800–10,820 · Entry Zone
Buy-the-Dip Zone
10,720 · Support
First Support Level
10,600 · Stop Loss
Hard Stop — Trend Broken

◆ Trade Setup: BUY dips to 10,800–10,820 · SL 10,600 · TP1 10,950 · TP2 11,000 · TP3 11,200 · Risk ~200–250 pts · Reward 130–400 pts · R:R 0.5:1 to 1.8:1 standalone · Best expression as the LONG leg of the FTSE/NDX pair trade below, where combined R:R improves materially.

⚠️ FTSE’s One Risk — A Rapid Hormuz Ceasefire

The FTSE 100 bull case has one specific vulnerability: a sudden, credible ceasefire announcement that collapses the oil war premium from $25/bbl to $5/bbl in a single session. If Brent crude falls from $90 to $70 on a ceasefire, the FTSE’s energy constituents (Shell, BP, Harbour Energy) could fall 15–20%, dragging the index down 2–4% simultaneously. This is the stop-loss scenario for FTSE longs — not a fundamental deterioration in the UK economy, but a rapid reversal of the specific macro driver that has powered the index. Keep stops at 10,600 and define your maximum acceptable exposure accordingly.

FTSE 100
● Strongly Bullish (78/22)
Buy 10,800–10,820 · SL 10,600 · TP 11,000/11,200. Only ATH index globally. Energy-heavy beneficiary of $90 oil.
DAX 40
● Cautious Bull Medium-Term
Buy 23,700–23,900 · SL 23,200 · TP 24,800/25,500. Sondervermögen + ECB cuts = structural bull. Near-term: pre-CPI caution.
S&P 500
● Bearish
Sell rally 6,800–6,880 · SL 6,950 · TP 6,650/6,500. 200-MA at 6,620 is the week’s critical level. Hot CPI = test imminent.
Nasdaq 100
● Strongly Bearish (72/28)
Sell rally 22,200–22,500 · SL 22,800 · TP 21,400/20,800. “Ceiling of doom” at MAs. Stagflation = worst scenario for growth stocks.
Dow Jones
● Bearish
Sell rally 48,200–48,500 · SL 48,800 · TP 47,000/46,000. 200-MA at 48,200 = resistance. Less extreme than NDX but same directional bias.
FTSE / NDX Pair Trade
● The Trade of Q1
LONG FTSE at 10,800 + SHORT NDX at 22,200+. Entry when NDX rallies to sell zone. Combined R:R 3:1+. See Divergence Band below.

The Trade of Q1 2026:
Short the Ceiling of Doom,
Long the Only Bull in the Room.

The most elegant expression of the transatlantic divergence theme is not two separate trades managed independently. It is a single pair trade that captures both legs simultaneously, where the natural hedge of holding a long and a short in negatively correlated markets reduces single-event risk while amplifying the relative value capture. The LONG FTSE 100 / SHORT Nasdaq 100 pair trade is the analytical centrepiece of this week’s indices report.

The pair trade removes the binary CPI risk that makes standalone directional positions uncomfortable pre-Wednesday. A hot CPI is simultaneously bearish for Nasdaq (stagflation = tech selloff) and largely neutral-to-mildly-positive for FTSE (stagflation = oil stays high = energy sector bid). A soft CPI is bullish for Nasdaq but also bullish for FTSE (risk-on lifts all boats, but FTSE’s energy composition provides structural support). The correlation asymmetry between the two indices means the pair trade generates alpha in multiple scenarios — not just one.

LONG
FTSE 100 (UKX)
The only major global index at all-time highs. Energy-heavy (Shell + BP = ~14% weight). Mining sector at additional 12%. Dollar revenue from global operations. BoE dovish = GBP weak = international earnings translate to more sterling. +6.5% YTD. Sector composition structurally favoured in stagflation and geopolitical stress environments.
Entry: FTSE dip to 10,800–10,820
Stop Loss: 10,600 (firm)
Target 1: 11,000 · Target 2: 11,200
Instruments: FTSE futures · ISF ETF · UK equity CFDs
SHORT
Nasdaq 100 (NDX)
Tech-heavy at 26× forward P/E. 50-day + 200-day MA cluster at 24,400–25,500 = structural supply ceiling. NFP −92K signals recession. Stagflation compresses both the multiple (higher discount rate) and the earnings (slowing growth). January breakdown at 25,500 created a wall of overhead supply. Strongly bearish conviction at 72/28.
Entry: NDX rally to 22,200–22,500
Stop Loss: 22,800 (firm)
Target 1: 21,400 · Target 2: 20,500
Instruments: NDX futures · QQQ puts · NDX CFDs
■ Why This Pair Trade Makes Sense Right Now

The FTSE/NDX divergence is not a recent development — it has been building throughout Q1 2026 as the macro regime rotated from “growth optimism” to “stagflation reality.” But it has reached an inflection point this week where the valuation gap, the technical setup, and the fundamental catalysts are all aligned in the same direction simultaneously. FTSE is making new all-time highs while Nasdaq is 14% below its own peak. That 14% spread in performance, between two indices that were broadly correlated for most of 2023–2025, is the pair trade’s embedded profit-and-loss cushion before it even begins.

The risk management of a pair trade is different from two standalone positions. The position sizing should be calibrated to dollar-value neutrality: if you are long £100,000 notional of FTSE, you should be short an equivalent dollar-notional of Nasdaq — not equal contract numbers. The natural hedge reduces the aggregate market beta of the combined position, meaning it is more appropriate for larger sizing than either standalone position would be pre-CPI. This is the one position where sizing at 80–90% of normal is justified even ahead of Wednesday’s binary event, because both legs of the trade have a reasonable reaction to both CPI outcomes.

Global Equities Bull Case vs. Bear Case: Does the Divergence Deepen or Collapse?

■ The Global Equities Bull Case
Why Indices Recover and the Divergence Compresses
  • A soft CPI print triggers the rate-cut narrative — all global equities rally, risk-on conditions return, and the Nasdaq’s bearish setup is temporarily invalidated.
  • Germany’s €500B Sondervermögen is structural — it will support DAX regardless of short-term macro noise. European equities decouple from US.
  • FTSE 100’s energy and mining heavy composition means it continues to make new highs even in a soft-CPI scenario — oil stays elevated, FTSE stays bid.
  • The NFP −92K could be revised significantly higher next month — the initial print has historically been the most volatile and least reliable.
  • Fed rate cut at FOMC March 18–19 becomes possible if CPI is soft — 50bp cut would be a powerful risk-on catalyst for all indices simultaneously.
  • Iran ceasefire could happen within weeks (historical precedent: Gulf War I resolved in 4 months) — rapid de-escalation would reduce the stagflation fear premium.
  • Nasdaq at 21,800 is approximately 14% below its January high — at some point, the correction brings bargain-hunters back into mega-cap tech.
■ The Global Equities Bear Case
Why the Divergence Deepens and US Indices Break Lower
  • Hot CPI (+0.4%+) removes the last hope of a March Fed cut — risk assets reprice for “higher for longer” and all US equity indices fall simultaneously.
  • The S&P 500’s 200-day MA at 6,620 breaks on a hot CPI or an Iran escalation — triggering algorithmic de-risking across thousands of institutional portfolios.
  • NFP −92K is not noise — it is the leading edge of a genuine US recession. Recession EPS revisions have not yet been fully priced into Nasdaq’s 26× forward P/E.
  • Stagflation is the worst macro environment for growth equities — simultaneously compresses multiples (higher discount rate) AND reduces earnings (slowing growth).
  • $90 oil is a tax on consumer spending — every dollar spent on energy is a dollar not spent on iPhone upgrades, Netflix subscriptions, or Amazon Prime. Tech earnings compress from the demand destruction side.
  • The Nasdaq’s three-week failure to close above 22,000 is a distribution pattern — smart money is selling rallies, not buying dips.
  • FTSE’s sustained outperformance signals global capital is rotating away from US growth equity — once started, sector rotation tends to persist for quarters, not days.
■ The Capital Dispatch Analytical Verdict

The analytical verdict for global indices this week is the clearest of the four reports in this series. The transatlantic divergence is real, structural, and likely to persist for longer than consensus expects. The sector composition difference between FTSE (energy, mining, defence, global financials) and Nasdaq (tech growth, consumer discretionary, semiconductors) maps precisely onto the macro regime of stagflation and geopolitical stress. When the macro regime changes — when oil falls, inflation normalises, and rate cuts become a reality rather than a hope — the divergence will compress. But that normalisation is months away, not weeks.

For this specific week, the conviction hierarchy is: FTSE long is the highest-conviction standalone position. Nasdaq short on a rally to 22,200–22,500 is the second. The FTSE/NDX pair trade is the most risk-adjusted expression of the entire thesis. S&P short at 6,800–6,880 and Dow short at 48,200–48,500 are valid but secondary — they are effectively the same trade as Nasdaq short with slightly lower volatility and slightly less conviction.

The key discipline: Wednesday’s CPI governs the execution timing, but it does not change the thesis. A soft CPI means wait for a better entry on Nasdaq shorts as the index rallies toward the ceiling of doom. A hot CPI means the Nasdaq short becomes immediately actionable at current prices. In both scenarios, the directional bias is the same — only the entry point differs.

Frequently Asked Indices Questions

Six questions every experienced equity trader is asking this week — answered in full.

Why is the FTSE 100 outperforming so dramatically when the UK economy is actually weak? +
This question reveals the most important conceptual distinction in understanding the FTSE 100 — and it is one that confuses investors so routinely that it has become a cliché among UK equity analysts. The FTSE 100 is not the UK economy index. It is a globally-composed blue chip index that happens to be denominated in British pounds. The critical statistic: approximately 75–77% of FTSE 100 constituent revenues are generated outside the United Kingdom. Shell’s oil revenue is denominated in US dollars. Rio Tinto’s iron ore and copper revenue comes from global commodity markets. HSBC’s earnings are generated across Asia, the Middle East, and North America. BAE Systems sells defence equipment to governments worldwide. AstraZeneca’s pharmaceutical revenue is global. When the UK economy contracts — as it has been doing in the 2025–2026 period, with GDP growth near zero and unemployment rising to 5.2% — these companies are barely affected, because they are not selling to British consumers. What they are affected by is: commodity prices (Shell, BP, Rio Tinto — all benefit from $90 oil), the pound sterling exchange rate (a weaker GBP translates their dollar and euro revenues into larger sterling amounts), and global demand for their specific products. The current macro environment — $90 oil, weak sterling, strong global defence spending — is the FTSE 100’s ideal operating backdrop regardless of what is happening on UK high streets. The FTSE 100 making all-time highs while the UK enters a potential mild recession is not a paradox. It is a direct consequence of the index’s global composition.
The S&P 500’s 200-day moving average — how reliable is it as a level in practice, and what happens after it breaks? +
The 200-day moving average’s importance in equity markets is self-reinforcing in a way that makes it more reliable than most technical indicators. Unlike smaller-timeframe indicators that represent the decisions of a narrow group of short-term traders, the 200-day MA is explicitly used by institutional portfolio managers — pension funds, endowments, sovereign wealth funds, and large mutual funds — as a systematic risk management tool. When the S&P 500 closes below its 200-day MA, a specific subset of these institutions automatically reduces equity exposure: some by mandate (investment policy statements that limit equity exposure below the 200-day MA), some by algorithmic rule, and some by risk committee action. The aggregate selling from these institutional de-risking programmes creates the self-fulfilling character of the level — when the price approaches the 200-day MA from above, selling increases because institutions prepare for a potential break, which itself increases the probability of the break. Historically, since 1950, the S&P 500 has broken its 200-day MA on a closing basis approximately 25–30 times in bull market contexts. In bull markets (defined as uptrends intact), these breaks tend to be brief (2–8 weeks) before recovery. In deteriorating macro environments (which the current setup — stagflation, rising unemployment, geopolitical shock — arguably qualifies as), breaks below the 200-MA have historically been followed by extended drawdowns: the 2020 COVID break led to a further 25% decline before the low; the 2022 break led to a further 20% decline before recovery. The honest assessment: the 200-day MA at 6,620 is a meaningful level, not an infallible one. The probability of a bear market following a break is elevated in the current macro environment but not certain. The critical variable is what happens at the FOMC on March 18–19. A hold with a dovish pivot signal recovers the 200-MA quickly. A hold with a hawkish statement extends the breakdown.
How does Germany’s €500B Sondervermögen actually flow into DAX earnings — and why is DZ Bank’s 27,500 target credible? +
The Sondervermögen’s €500 billion translates into DAX earnings through four distinct channels, each with different timing and magnitude. The first and most immediate channel is defence procurement. Germany’s defence budget will increase from approximately €51 billion in 2025 to approximately €90–100 billion annually once the fund is deployed — roughly a doubling. The direct beneficiary is Rheinmetall, which manufactures Leopard tank ammunition, artillery systems, and armoured vehicles under German and NATO contracts. Rheinmetall’s order backlog has grown from €24 billion to €52 billion in 18 months. The second channel is infrastructure investment — railways (Deutsche Bahn), digital infrastructure, energy grid upgrades. Siemens Energy, Siemens AG, and ThyssenKrupp all win contracts from this pipeline. The third channel is the demand multiplier: government spending of €40–50 billion annually flows through the German economy, stimulating private consumption and business investment, which improves revenue for the broader DAX universe including consumer brands, financial institutions, and business service companies. The fourth channel is the signal effect: the Sondervermögen’s announcement has already shifted Germany’s economic growth expectations from near-recession (Q4 2025 GDP growth was approximately 0.1%) to +1.5–2.0% in 2026 and +2.5% in 2027 — a multi-year upgrade that institutional equity analysts translate into upward earnings revisions. DZ Bank’s 27,500 target is credible because it assumes: (1) the DAX’s forward P/E re-rates from its current 13× to approximately 14–15× as growth expectations improve, and (2) consensus EPS estimates for the DAX in 2026–2027 are revised up 8–12% on the fiscal stimulus flow-through. Both assumptions are reasonable given the magnitude of the spending commitment and Germany’s track record of efficient capital allocation in infrastructure.
How does the FTSE/Nasdaq pair trade work mechanically, and how should position sizes be calculated? +
The FTSE/NDX pair trade is a relative value trade, not a directional bet, and its mechanics require careful attention to ensure the hedge is genuine rather than notional. The fundamental principle is dollar-value neutrality: the notional GBP value of the FTSE long position should approximately equal the notional USD value of the Nasdaq short position, after converting through the GBP/USD exchange rate. Here is an illustrative example at current market prices: if you want to run £50,000 notional of FTSE 100 long, you buy approximately 4.6 FTSE futures contracts (each contract represents £10,000 per index point × 10,850 points = approximately £108,500 per contract at current prices; so 50,000/108,500 = 0.46 contracts — in practice, 1 contract minimum, allocating approximately £108,500). On the Nasdaq short side, you convert that GBP amount to USD at the current GBPUSD rate (approximately 1.33), giving approximately $144,000 notional. One NDX futures contract (NQ) represents $20 per index point; at 21,800, that is $436,000 per contract. You would therefore sell approximately 0.33 contracts — rounding to no less than 0.5 in micro futures (NQ mini is $2 per point = $43,600 per contract at 21,800). In practice, most retail traders execute this through CFDs or ETFs where any size is achievable: long FTSE CFDs + short QQQ or SQQQ (leveraged inverse). For institutional execution: FTSE futures (ICE Europe, contract size £10 per point) + NQ futures (CME, contract size $20 per point). The P&L attribution: if FTSE rises 200 points and Nasdaq falls 800 points as the divergence deepens, the combined gain on a properly sized pair is the sum of both moves expressed in a common currency. The loss scenario: if a soft CPI triggers a simultaneous risk-on rally in both indices, the Nasdaq long leg gains while your short loses — but because FTSE also rises and you are long it, the pair should be approximately neutral in a pure risk-on rally, as both indices appreciate at broadly similar rates in that environment. The alpha comes specifically from the macro-driven divergence between them.
Is the Nasdaq at 26× forward P/E genuinely expensive, or is that the “right” valuation for its companies? +
This question sits at the heart of the permanent valuation debate between growth investors and value investors, and the honest answer requires acknowledging the legitimate basis for both positions. The bull case for 26× forward P/E: the Nasdaq 100’s constituents — Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta — are exceptional businesses by any historical measure. Microsoft generates approximately $70 billion in annual free cash flow growing at 15–20% per year. Nvidia is the infrastructure supplier for the AI buildout, with pricing power and market share that would have been considered implausible five years ago. These companies have demonstrated the ability to compound earnings at high rates for decades. In a world of 10-year Treasury yields at 4.0–4.5%, a 26× P/E on a collection of businesses compounding at 15–20% is arguably not expensive in an absolute sense — the implied earnings yield of approximately 3.8% is close to the risk-free rate, and the growth premium is what you are paying up for. The bear case for 26× forward P/E: the fundamental value of any asset is the present value of its future cash flows. When risk-free rates rise — as they have from near-zero in 2021 to 4.5% today — the discount rate applied to those future cash flows rises, mechanically reducing their present value. A business worth $1,000 at a 2% discount rate is worth approximately $650 at a 5% discount rate, even if nothing else changes. The Nasdaq’s 37% decline in 2022 was largely this mechanism operating in real time. The current stagflation scenario is the worst version of this dynamic: the Fed cannot cut (rates stay high, keeping the discount rate elevated) while earnings are simultaneously pressured by the economic slowdown (reducing the future cash flows being discounted). The result: both the numerator (earnings) and the denominator (discount rate) move against growth valuations simultaneously. 26× forward P/E in that specific environment is not “the right valuation” — it is a valuation built for a world that no longer currently exists.
What would a hot CPI on Wednesday actually do to each index in the minutes and hours following the release? +
The sequence of events following a hot CPI (+0.4%+ MoM) in the current environment would unfold in a specific and somewhat predictable order, and understanding the mechanics helps traders execute at better prices rather than reactively chasing moves that have already happened. In the first 30 seconds to 2 minutes: US 2-year Treasury yields spike immediately — this is the leading indicator that all equity traders should watch in real time. The 2-year reflects the market’s repricing of near-term Fed expectations, and it moves before equity futures because the options and rates markets have deeper liquidity and faster algorithmic reaction. In minutes 2–5: S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures fall sharply as algorithmic trading systems read the yield spike and immediately begin selling the most rate-sensitive indices. The opening gap down in US equity futures is likely to be 0.8–1.5% within 5 minutes of the CPI release. In minutes 5–20: Market makers begin adjusting options strikes, creating delta hedging flows that amplify the directional move. VIX futures spike, reflecting the repricing of implied volatility across the entire options market. The initial move tends to overextend in the first 20 minutes as algorithms operate with limited position size constraints. In minutes 20–60: Fundamental traders begin to assess whether the hot print is a one-month anomaly or a trend, creating some mean reversion from the initial algorithmic flush. This is typically the best entry point for directional traders — after the initial algo-driven overextension, but before the confirmation of the new directional trend. For individual indices: Nasdaq typically leads the decline with the largest percentage move (highest rate sensitivity), followed by S&P 500, followed by Dow. FTSE, depending on whether GBP weakens simultaneously (which would reduce sterling terms of loss for dollar-earning companies), may actually trade approximately flat or even slightly higher in the initial reaction as oil prices hold and the energy sector is bid. DAX typically follows US equities but with a lag and with less magnitude due to its fiscal stimulus tailwind. The key practical point for pair traders: a hot CPI print is the ideal entry timing for the FTSE long / NDX short pair — the Nasdaq flushes while FTSE holds, and you get a better relative entry than waiting.

Conclusion: The Arithmetic of Divergence — and the One Trade That Captures It All.

The global indices map of March 9–15, 2026 presents experienced equity traders with an unusually clear analytical framework. The transatlantic divergence between FTSE 100 and Nasdaq 100 is not a temporary fluctuation — it is the direct, mechanical expression of how two structurally different indices respond to the same macro environment in opposite directions. Energy + mining + defence = FTSE bull market. Tech growth at 26× P/E + rising discount rates = Nasdaq ceiling of supply. Both statements are arithmetic, not opinion.

The five indices tell five different stories, but they reduce to three macro buckets. The US indices (S&P 500, Nasdaq, Dow) are all in varying degrees of bearish territory — capped by moving average resistance, pressured by stagflation, vulnerable to Wednesday’s CPI. The European indices (FTSE, DAX) are both constructively positioned, but for different reasons — FTSE from commodity sector composition, DAX from the epochal fiscal policy shift. The pair trade (LONG FTSE / SHORT NDX) is the single most elegant expression of the entire analytical framework in one position.

Wednesday’s CPI governs execution timing — as it does in every report in this series. But for global indices, the CPI’s role is more nuanced than a simple bull/bear toggle. A hot CPI is the ideal entry timing for the pair trade, because Nasdaq flushes while FTSE holds. A soft CPI delays the Nasdaq short entry but provides a better FTSE long re-entry. In either scenario, the directional biases identified in this report remain valid — only the timing and entry prices change.

In equity markets, the most durable alpha comes not from predicting what will happen but from understanding why two assets respond differently to the same event. The FTSE and the Nasdaq just showed you exactly that — in real time, over the course of one extraordinary week.

Published March 9, 2026 by The Capital Dispatch at Capital Street FX (capitalstreetfx.com). For informational and educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Not investment guidance. Sources: DZ Bank Research, Goldman Sachs Global Equity Strategy, Barclays Equity Research, ECB, Bundesbank, MSCI Index Research, Bloomberg Indices, Shell investor relations, BP investor relations.

■ Key Takeaways

01
FTSE 100 is the only major index at all-time highs. Energy + mining + defence composition = structurally favoured in stagflation. Buy 10,800–10,820.
02
Nasdaq 100’s “ceiling of doom” at 24,400–25,500 is three converging MA levels. Sell rallies to 22,200–22,500 with conviction.
03
S&P 500’s 200-day MA at 6,620 is the week’s single most important equity market level. Break on volume = cascade of institutional de-risking.
04
Germany’s €500B Sondervermögen is structural, multi-year, and real. DAX to 27,500 by year-end (DZ Bank) is a credible base case.
05
The FTSE/NDX pair trade is the most risk-adjusted expression of the divergence. Size at 80–90% normal — the natural hedge reduces binary event risk.
06
Hot CPI is the ideal pair trade entry. Nasdaq flushes, FTSE holds. Enter both legs simultaneously on the initial post-CPI algo-driven overextension.
07
The divergence is arithmetic, not opinion. Same macro event = opposite outcomes for two different sector compositions. This continues as long as oil stays elevated.
THE CAPITAL DISPATCH  ·  CAPITAL STREET FX  ·  capitalstreetfx.com  ·  All information for educational purposes only  ·  Not financial advice  ·  Not investment guidance  ·  March 9, 2026