Capital Street FX — Index Market Analysis | S&P 500, Dow Jones, FTSE 100 | March 30, 2026
Global Equity Indices Under Siege —
War, Oil & Rate Risk Define the Tape
INSTRUMENTS COVERED: S&P 500 (SPX) · DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE (DJI) · FTSE 100 (UKX) · MONDAY 30 MARCH 2026
Global equity markets enter the final trading session of March 2026 battered by five consecutive weeks of institutional selling, with the S&P 500 closing Friday at a seven-month low of 6,368 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average formally entering correction territory at 45,166 — more than 10% below its all-time peak of 50,529. The US-Iran military conflict, now in its fifth week, has driven Brent crude above $110 per barrel, forced the Federal Reserve into a restrictive hold at 3.50–3.75%, and prompted Wall Street economists to revise recession probabilities to between 30% and 49%. The FTSE 100, partially insulated by its energy-heavy composition, trades near 10,070 but faces its own structural test at the critical 0.618 Fibonacci level of 9,990. This holiday-shortened week culminates in Friday’s Non-Farm Payrolls report — the most consequential labour data release since hostilities began.
The Federal Reserve held its benchmark federal funds rate at 3.50–3.75% at the March FOMC meeting, a decision that markets viewed not as neutral but as structurally restrictive given the inflationary backdrop the US-Iran conflict has created. Prior to the outbreak of hostilities in late February 2026, financial markets had priced two 25-basis-point cuts for the full year. That pricing has been systematically unwound over the past five weeks. As of Friday, the CME FedWatch tool shows a roughly 39% probability that the first cut does not arrive until September 2026, while a growing segment of the market — indexed at nearly 50% — prices the possibility of a rate hike before year-end.
The inflation picture complicates the Fed’s path substantially. The OECD revised its full-year 2026 US inflation forecast to 4.2%, sharply above both the prior 2.8% projection and the Fed’s own 2.7% estimate released at the March meeting. Import prices surged 1.3% in February — the largest monthly gain in nearly four years — while export prices jumped 1.5%. The University of Michigan’s March consumer survey showed a headline reading of 53.3, with one-year inflation expectations rising to 3.8%. Fed Chair Powell is scheduled to speak on Monday March 30 alongside the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index, and his remarks on how the central bank intends to balance an energy-driven inflation spike against deteriorating consumer confidence will be the most closely watched statement of the week.
The structural issue for US equities is straightforward: the multiple-expansion narrative that drove the S&P 500 from 5,900 to 7,007 between mid-2025 and January 2026 was predicated on two rate cuts, normalising financial conditions, and declining energy costs. Every one of those assumptions has been inverted. The 10-year Treasury yield hit 4.48% last week, its highest since July 2025, while the 30-year briefly touched 5.00%. Bond and equity markets are now repricing simultaneously — a classically stagflationary configuration.
The US-Iran military conflict, which began on February 28, 2026, has entered its fifth week with no ceasefire agreement in sight. Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz — through which approximately 20 million barrels of oil transit daily — represents the first such closure in history and has been the singular most disruptive energy market event since the 1973 OPEC embargo. Brent crude, which traded at $72 per barrel at the end of February, surged to a peak of $112 before settling in the $100–$110 range as diplomatic signals created tactical volatility. WTI similarly climbed from the low $60s to above $93 at the peak of the conflict.
The diplomatic track has been characterised by alternating optimism and collapse. On March 22, President Trump publicly stated the US and Iran had held “productive” talks, triggering a 631-point Dow rally. Iran subsequently rejected a US 15-point ceasefire proposal, and Trump escalated rhetoric on March 26, stating he could “take the oil in Iran” and seize the export hub at Kharg Island. Iranian-backed Houthi forces in Yemen joined the conflict over the weekend by targeting Israeli positions. The net effect on equity markets has been a one-directional downtrend overlaid with headline-driven intraday swings of 1–2%.
Energy is the only positive S&P 500 sector since hostilities began, up approximately 5.9% in that time and 31.8% year-to-date. Meanwhile, technology, consumer discretionary, and financial sectors have led losses. Crude futures have surged 30% year-to-date. The conflict is directly compressing consumer purchasing power — regular gasoline prices in parts of California exceeded $8.29 per gallon last week — and raising corporate input costs across energy-intensive industries.
The Bank of England faces a structurally complex environment as it enters Q2 2026. UK inflation, running at approximately 2.4% as of the most recent March data, has been partially suppressed by sterling’s relative resilience against a broadly stronger dollar. However, the energy shock transmission into UK consumer prices is progressing — petrol and heating costs are rising, and the BOE’s preferred measure of domestically-generated inflation remains sticky above target. The BOE’s current benchmark rate sits at 4.50% following measured cuts in late 2025, positioning it marginally less restrictive than the Fed but still historically elevated.
The FTSE 100’s relative outperformance against US indices through much of the Iran conflict stems directly from its sectoral composition. BP and Shell — two of the index’s largest constituents by weighting — have benefited substantially from elevated oil prices, and the Big Four UK banks reported combined 2025 full-year profits of approximately £45 billion. This energy and financial tilt provided a cushion against the technology-driven selloff that hammered the Nasdaq and S&P 500. However, the structural support is now fraying: the FTSE 100 has fallen approximately 8% from its January peak of 10,924, and the breakdown of the 200-day moving average — now at approximately 10,084 — last week signals that even the UK market’s defensive premium is being eroded.
UK economic data this week is limited, with attention focused on the broader macro trajectory. The labour market remains relatively tight, supporting BOE caution on further easing. The FTSE 100’s heavy weighting toward commodity producers gives it dual exposure — upside if oil holds elevated, downside if a ceasefire deal causes a sharp crude correction. The 0.618 Fibonacci support at 9,990 is the pivot level that defines whether the index reprices toward the 0.786 zone at 9,730.
Professional market positioning has shifted decisively toward risk-off. The AAII (American Association of Individual Investors) bull-bear survey shows bullishness at 32.1%, below the historical average of 37.5% for the sixth consecutive week — a reading that reflects sustained institutional and retail caution rather than a single-week sentiment shock. Goldman Sachs has raised its 12-month US recession probability to 30%; Moody’s Analytics has it at 48.6%; Wilmington Trust at 45%. These are not marginal adjustments — they represent a genuine repricing of the probability distribution for US economic outcomes.
The US dollar has acted as a safe-haven throughout the conflict, rising 2.4% over the month. This dollar strength has provided a partial offset for UK investors in dollar-denominated assets but has compressed returns for European and EM equity holders. Gold surged above $5,400 per ounce — a clean flight-to-safety allocation that confirms institutional conviction in a prolonged risk-off environment. Short-term money market fund inflows have accelerated as traders seek yield without equity duration risk.
In terms of sector rotation, Energy is the sole S&P 500 sector with a positive return since the war began. Defense stocks — Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, AeroVironment — initially rallied sharply but have since partially reversed on ceasefire speculation. Technology and consumer discretionary remain under the most severe structural pressure, with the Nasdaq now approximately 13% below its October all-time high. The technical picture for all three covered indices reflects a “waterfall” configuration: price below all key moving averages, all EMAs pointing lower, and momentum indicators deeply oversold but not yet stabilising.
This holiday-shortened week — markets are closed Good Friday April 4 in the UK, with US markets also shutting early — carries an unusually compressed but consequential data calendar. The Non-Farm Payrolls report, scheduled for release on Friday April 4 (pre-market, 13:30 GMT), is the most significant single data event of the week and one of the most consequential NFP releases since the Iran conflict began. With the current US unemployment rate at 4.4% as of the last reading, any deterioration toward 4.6–4.7% would substantially complicate the Fed’s hold narrative and increase the probability of a rate cut pathway even in an inflationary environment.
Earlier in the week, Monday March 30 brings the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index alongside Fed Chair Powell’s public remarks — a combination that will be parsed intensely for any signals on the Fed’s tolerance for inflation overshoot versus growth protection. Wednesday April 1 delivers both US Retail Sales (consensus +0.4% MoM, recovering from February’s −0.2%) and ISM Manufacturing PMI (consensus 52.3). The Prices Paid component of the ISM is the inflation flashpoint within that release — consensus at 73.6 versus the prior 70.5, which if confirmed would be the highest input cost reading since the 2022 energy crisis.
For the FTSE 100, the UK-specific calendar is light this week, meaning UKX will trade largely in response to global risk sentiment, oil price movements, and US data outcomes. A strong NFP that delays Fed cuts further would likely be USD-positive and equity-negative across all three indices. A weak NFP that opens a cut pathway could trigger a sharp tactical relief rally, particularly in oversold US indices where RSI readings of 22–29 are at extreme lows.
| GMT Time | Event | Currency | Impact | Forex / Index Implication |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13:30 | Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index (March) | USD | Medium | A reading below the prior will deepen stagflation concerns, adding pressure on the S&P 500 and Dow Jones in the absence of any relief from the Iran conflict; a beat could support a tactical bounce. |
| 14:30 | Fed Chair Powell Speech | USD | High | Any dovish pivot language acknowledging growth risks over inflation would be immediately bullish for all three indices; a hawkish hold stance would extend selling pressure in SPX and DJI. |
| Wed 12:30 | US Retail Sales (February, final) | USD | High | Consensus is +0.4% MoM recovery from February’s −0.2% decline; a miss would confirm that the energy shock is actively depressing consumer spending and increase Dow Jones downside risk. |
| Wed 14:00 | ISM Manufacturing PMI (March) | USD | High | The Prices Paid sub-component (consensus 73.6 vs prior 70.5) is the primary inflation flashpoint; a print above 73 signals intensifying factory-floor cost pressures and would reinforce the Fed hold narrative. |
| Thu 12:30 | US Initial Jobless Claims | USD | Medium | Claims above 230K would be the first concrete sign of war-related labour market softening, potentially opening a discussion about Fed cuts that could support a relief rally in oversold US indices. |
| Fri 12:30 | Non-Farm Payrolls (March) + Unemployment Rate | USD | High | The week’s primary event risk; a weak print below 100K combined with rising unemployment would be the most significant data catalyst for a potential tactical recovery in the S&P 500 and Dow Jones from their current oversold extremes. |
The S&P 500 daily chart presents one of the most technically decisive bearish configurations of the past 18 months. The Fibonacci retracement drawn from the swing low at 6,351.40 to the swing high at 7,007.01 has been progressively breached level by level since the January peak. Price is now trading at 6,368.85 — effectively testing the 0.000 base extension at 6,351.40, the structural floor of the entire measured move. The three exponential moving averages visible on the chart (orange bands) have all rolled over and are now pointing uniformly lower, with price sitting below all three — a configuration technicians describe as a “waterfall” structure where each MA now acts as resistance rather than support. The most recent rally attempt into the 0.236 level at 6,506.12 during the March 22–25 period was decisively rejected, confirming that level as the nearest material resistance.
The RSI (14-period) at 28.66 on the daily timeframe signals extreme oversold conditions, matching the yellow indicator line visible at the bottom of the chart. The signal line (gold, approximately 36.47) remains above RSI — a negative crossover that confirms the bearish momentum structure is intact rather than turning. When both RSI and its signal line sit below 40 with price below all moving averages, the probability of a durable bottom is statistically low without a fundamental catalyst — specifically, either a ceasefire announcement or a definitive Fed pivot signal. The MACD at −51.54 is the most negative reading on this chart since early 2020, reinforcing the view that institutional momentum is overwhelmingly positioned to the downside.
From a structural perspective, a daily close below 6,351.40 would constitute a full breakdown of the Fibonacci base and open the path toward the Wells Fargo worst-case scenario target of 6,000, which multiple institutional analysts have cited as the next meaningful support zone. Conversely, any close above 6,506.12 (0.236 level) on the daily timeframe would represent the first higher close against resistance in five weeks and the minimum technical requirement to declare a potential inflection. Until that occurs, the path of least resistance remains south.
| Indicator | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Daily Signal | — | Strong Sell |
| Moving Averages (MA5–MA200) | 0 Buy / 12 Sell | Strong Sell |
| RSI (14-period) | 22.08 | Oversold / Sell |
| MACD | −51.54 | Sell |
| 5-Day SMA | ~6,450 | Sell |
| 50-Day SMA | ~6,676 | Sell |
| Fibonacci Pivot | ~6,506 | Resistance |
| Fibonacci Level | Price Level | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 1.000 (Swing High) | 7,007.01 | Resistance — Far |
| 0.786 | 6,866.71 | Resistance |
| 0.618 | 6,756.57 | Resistance |
| 0.500 | 6,679.21 | Resistance |
| 0.382 | 6,601.84 | Resistance |
| 0.236 | 6,506.12 | Nearest Resistance |
| ◀ CURRENT PRICE | 6,368.85 | Below 0.236 |
| 0.000 (Swing Low) | 6,351.40 | Critical Support |
The Dow Jones Industrial Average chart delivers a starkly bearish technical picture. The Fibonacci retracement is anchored from the swing low at 45,041.43 to the all-time high at 50,529.25. With the index closing Friday at 45,166 — just 125 points above the 0.000 base level — the index is testing the lowest structural support within the entire retracement framework. The three visible exponential moving averages (yellow, orange, brown) have fanned downward and formed a bearish spread: the 20-period EMA (~48,406), 50-period EMA (~48,147) and a shorter-period EMA (~46,967) are all sitting well above current price, forming a dense overhead resistance cluster that price will need to reclaim in sequence before any structural recovery narrative becomes viable. This EMA configuration, combined with the persistent decline since the January 50,529 high, confirms the primary trend as bearish.
The RSI (14-period) at 29.41 is deeply oversold, with the yellow signal line at approximately 32.07 — both lines below 30 and still tracking lower. This is the first time the Dow’s daily RSI has been this deeply depressed since the early stages of the Iran conflict in early March, and it mirrors the broader cross-asset risk-off positioning visible in VIX at 30.72 and gold above $5,400. Critically, RSI divergences have not yet formed: price is making new lows and RSI is also making new lows, meaning momentum has not yet begun to decelerate. A bullish RSI divergence — where price makes a new low but RSI prints a higher low — would be the first technical signal of potential stabilisation.
The correction from the all-time high of 50,529 to Friday’s close of 45,166 represents a decline of approximately 10.6%, formally placing the Dow in correction territory by the standard 10%+ definition. The next key Fibonacci level above current price is the 0.236 retracement at 46,336.56, which coincides with the most recent corrective high from mid-March. Only a sustained daily close above 46,336 would shift the near-term technical bias to neutral. The 0.382 level at 47,137 and the 0.500 level at 47,785 represent medium-term recovery targets on any sustained bounce.
| Indicator | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Daily Signal | — | Strong Sell |
| Moving Averages | Multi Sell | Strong Sell |
| RSI (14-period) | 29.41 | Oversold / Sell |
| MACD | −183.04 | Sell |
| 5-Day SMA | 45,505.77 | Sell |
| 50-Day SMA | 46,077.73 | Sell |
| Fibonacci Pivot | 45,488.60 | Pivot |
| Fibonacci Level | Price Level | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 1.000 (Swing High / ATH) | 50,529.25 | Resistance — Far |
| 0.786 | 49,356.91 | Resistance |
| 0.618 | 48,432.91 | Resistance |
| 0.500 | 47,785.34 | Resistance |
| 0.382 | 47,137.78 | Resistance |
| 0.236 | 46,336.56 | Nearest Resistance |
| ◀ CURRENT PRICE | 45,166.64 | At Fib Base |
| 0.000 (Swing Low / Base) | 45,041.43 | Critical Support |
The FTSE 100 chart paints a markedly different picture from its US counterparts, reflecting the index’s dual nature as both a risk-off beneficiary (through energy and financial weightings) and a victim of the global equity selloff. The Fibonacci retracement is drawn from the swing low at 9,412.73 to the swing high at 10,924.68 — a range of 1,511.95 points. The 0.618 retracement level at 9,990.29 has emerged as the decisive battleground: the index broke below it in the initial March selloff, made a severe low near the 0.786 level at 9,730.28, and has since staged a recovery to current levels of 10,070.03. Monday’s intraday low of 9,958.05 probed below the 0.618 level again, with price recovering to close above — a constructive technical signal but not yet a confirmed break. The three moving averages (two orange EMAs and one yellow EMA) have all turned lower and are now clustered in the 10,084–10,346 zone, providing layered overhead resistance above current price.
The RSI at 43.22 is stronger than either US index and has been moving higher since the March low, with the signal line at approximately 40.51 beginning to show a positive crossover — the first tentative evidence of momentum stabilisation in this index. The MACD at −5.75 remains in sell territory but is compressing toward zero, a convergence that precedes directional inflection points. The chart structure since the March low shows a series of higher lows — a constructive development that does not yet negate the bearish structure (all MAs still declining) but does suggest institutional accumulation in the 9,800–10,070 range.
For the FTSE 100, the critical decision point is whether the 0.618 Fibonacci level at 9,990.29 holds as support on a closing basis. The 200-day SMA at approximately 10,084 — visible as the lowest orange line on the chart — is the next upside resistance target after 9,990. A sequence of daily closes above 10,084 would represent a structural shift. However, an oil price collapse triggered by a ceasefire deal would be structurally negative for UK energy stocks and would likely cause a rapid de-rating of the FTSE 100’s relative premium versus other European indices.
| Indicator | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Overall Daily Signal | — | Strong Sell |
| Moving Averages (MA5–MA200) | 4 Buy / 8 Sell | Sell |
| RSI (14-period) | 43.22 | Sell |
| MACD | −5.75 | Sell |
| 5-Day SMA | ~10,084 | Sell |
| 50-Day SMA | ~10,215 | Sell |
| Fibonacci Pivot | ~10,084 | Pivot / Resistance |
| Fibonacci Level | Price Level | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 0.000 (Swing High) | 10,924.68 | Resistance — Far |
| 0.236 | 10,567.86 | Resistance |
| 0.382 | 10,347.11 | Resistance |
| 0.500 | 10,168.70 | Near Resistance |
| ◀ CURRENT PRICE | 10,070.03 | Between 0.618 and 0.500 |
| 0.618 | 9,990.29 | Critical Support |
| 0.786 | 9,730.28 | Secondary Support |
| 1.000 (Swing Low) | 9,412.73 | Structural Low |
All three covered indices carry Strong Sell daily signals from Investing.com as of March 30, 2026, though the technical severity and structural context differ materially between the UK and US markets. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones have broken to their Fibonacci bases — testing 6,351 and 45,041 respectively — with RSI readings of 22 and 29 that rank among the most extreme oversold levels recorded in the past five years. The FTSE 100, by contrast, holds above its 0.618 support at 9,990 with RSI at 43 and MACD beginning to converge — a relative technical resilience that reflects the index’s energy and financial composition rather than a broad equity recovery signal. The US-Iran conflict remains the single largest macro variable governing the direction of all three indices.
The fundamental backdrop is defined by a stagflationary feedback loop: elevated oil prices above $110 per barrel drive headline inflation toward 4%+ in 2026 (OECD projection), which constrains the Federal Reserve’s ability to cut despite deteriorating growth and consumer confidence data. The University of Michigan sentiment reading of 53.3, Moody’s 48.6% recession probability, and the S&P 500’s fifth consecutive weekly decline collectively paint a picture of institutional conviction in sustained weakness rather than a temporary correction. The event calendar for this week — Powell (Monday), ISM Manufacturing/Retail Sales (Wednesday), Jobless Claims (Thursday), Non-Farm Payrolls (Friday) — provides multiple opportunities for data-driven directional moves. A weak NFP print with rising unemployment is the highest-probability near-term catalyst for a sustained tactical bounce in US indices from their extreme oversold readings.
The macro-technical convergence across all three instruments is coherent: the S&P 500 and Dow Jones carry the highest structural downside risk if the 6,351 and 45,041 Fibonacci bases give way, respectively, while the FTSE 100 offers a defined long opportunity at 9,990 with oil prices sustaining UK energy sector earnings. Traders entering any position this week should account for elevated VIX at 30.72, holiday-shortened liquidity conditions into Good Friday, and the binary headline risk from any Iran ceasefire or escalation development, which has demonstrated the capacity to move US indices by 1.5–2% within minutes.
Wed — ISM Mfg / Retail Sales
Thu — Jobless Claims
Fri — NFP (Primary Risk)
Ongoing — Iran War Headlines