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Global Index Market Report — Dow Jones, S&P 500 & FTSE 100 | Capital Street FX Research Desk | April 3, 2026

April 3, 2026
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Global Index Market Report — Dow Jones, S&P 500 & FTSE 100 | Capital Street FX Research Desk | April 3, 2026
CAPITAL STREET FX  ·  RESEARCH DESK  ·  APRIL 3, 2026 MARKETS ACTIVE
Capital Street FX  ·  Global Index Market Report  ·  April 3, 2026

Indices Claw Back From War Lows as Ceasefire Hopes Flicker — But Fibonacci Resistance Walls Loom

Daily index market analysis covering the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI), S&P 500 (SPX), and FTSE 100 (UKX) — full technical levels, Fibonacci structure, trade setups, and Iran war impact for April 3, 2026.

⚠ Overall Bias: CAUTIOUSLY RECOVERING · Bear Risk Intact
Index Market Bias
SPLIT RECOVERY
S&P 500
6,582 ▲
Dow Jones
46,504 ▼
FTSE 100
10,436 ▲
VIX
23.87
S&P 500 (SPX)Cautious ◆
DOW JONES (DJI)Bearish ▼
FTSE 100 (UKX)Recovering ▲
Today’s Best Setups

Today’s Index Market Opportunities — April 3, 2026

BUY
FTSE 100 (UKX)
★★★★★
10,436
0.382 Fib bounce confirmed — energy sector + ceasefire bid lifting UK index.
Entry
10,340
TP
10,577
SL
10,180
R/R 2.1:1 · Best Setup
SELL
DOW JONES (DJI)
★★★★☆
46,504
Below 0.236 Fib — dead-cat bounce in progress, EMAs still capping price.
Entry
46,750
TP
45,200
SL
47,400
R/R 2.4:1 · Strong Setup
SELL
S&P 500 (SPX)
★★★★☆
6,582
Sitting on 0.382 Fib — weak NFP and Iran re-escalation = renewed sell pressure.
Entry
6,620
TP
6,320
SL
6,750
R/R 2.3:1 · Strong Setup
BUY
S&P 500 — BOUNCE
★★★☆☆
6,582
Speculative bounce off 0.382 Fib — if NFP beats and Hormuz news improves.
Entry
6,550
TP
6,745
SL
6,440
R/R 1.8:1 · Moderate Setup
1:10,000Maximum Leverage
2,000+Global Markets
900%Fully Tradable Bonus
$20/LotIB Rebate per Traded Lot
0.0Pip Spreads
Report Overview · April 3, 2026

What You Need to Know Before You Trade Today

The global index market is navigating one of the most treacherous geopolitical environments in decades. The five-week-old Iran war continues to bifurcate equity performance across sectors: energy stocks surge while consumer discretionary and tech names remain under pressure. Today, the market complex must absorb March Non-Farm Payrolls — released at 08:30 ET — against a backdrop where Iran’s Oman-brokered Hormuz protocol has injected the first credible ceasefire signal in weeks, triggering a sharp short-covering bounce in global indices overnight and into this morning.

  • FTSE 100 — Strongest Bounce Play: Up 0.69% to 10,436, recovering sharply off the 0.382 Fibonacci level at 10,356. Energy majors BP and Shell leading gains. Best risk-adjusted index trade today — long on dips toward 10,340.
  • DOW JONES — Weakest of the Three: Slipping 0.13% to 46,504 — the only major index in the red today. Price remains trapped below all major EMAs and the 0.236 Fibonacci level. Short on any bounce toward 46,750 remains the dominant trade.
  • S&P 500 — Pivotal Fibonacci Test: Marginally positive at +0.11%, sitting precisely on the 0.382 Fibonacci at 6,582. NFP data today will determine whether this level holds as support or breaks to 6,482 (0.236 Fib). The most binary index trade today.
  • VIX / Risk Backdrop: VIX at 23.87 — elevated but declining from multi-week highs above 27. The moderation in fear index confirms the ceasefire-driven risk-on attempt, but 20+ VIX still signals unstable conditions for sustained index market gains.
Overall Bias
CAUTIOUS
US Indices
MIXED ◆
UK Indices
BULLISH ▲
VIX Level
23.87
Today’s Key Events
08:30 ETUS Non-Farm Payrolls (March)HIGH
08:30 ETUS Unemployment RateHIGH
10:00 ETISM Services PMI (March)HIGH
Apr 5OPEC+ Production MeetingHIGH
Apr 6Hormuz Ultimatum DeadlineCRITICAL
Apr 8US Fed Minutes (March FOMC)MED
S&P 500 (SPX)Neutral ◆
DOW JONES (DJI)Bearish ▼
FTSE 100 (UKX)Bullish ▲
VIXElevated ⚠
Live Prices
S&P 500 · SPX
6,582.69
▲ +7.37  (+0.11%)
NEUTRAL
DOW JONES · DJI
46,504.67
▼ −61.07  (−0.13%)
BEARISH
FTSE 100 · UKX
10,436.29
▲ +71.50  (+0.69%)
BULLISH
VIX · FEAR INDEX
23.87
▼ −0.67  (−2.73%)
ELEVATED
Fundamental Analysis

Macro Fundamentals — Global Index Market April 3, 2026

Iran War & Ceasefire Signal — The Single Biggest Index Market Driver of 2026: The fifth week of the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran has defined the global index market complex entirely. The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz — stranding an estimated 17–20% of daily global oil supply — triggered the most severe multi-week selloff in US and UK equities since 2022. However, Thursday’s emergence of a credible Hormuz protocol — with Iran reportedly working with Oman to create a managed shipping arrangement — has injected the first genuine ceasefire signal, triggering a violent short-covering rally. The index market is now being driven by a single binary question: does the Hormuz traffic protocol hold, or does Trump’s April 6 ultimatum escalate into a wider confrontation?

Federal Reserve Paralysis — The Hidden Headwind for US Indices: The Fed’s March meeting held rates steady at 3.5–3.75% and offered no dovish pivot comfort. Jerome Powell’s press conference, characterised by extreme uncertainty language, has caused markets to price out all 2026 rate cuts — CME FedWatch now shows a 75% probability of the Fed holding through all of 2026, with cuts not fully priced until October 2027. This is a profound structural negative for equity valuations: the index market’s bull run from 2024 to early 2026 was predicated on easing monetary conditions, and that tailwind has been removed entirely. Until either inflation falls materially or the labour market collapses, the Fed will not rescue equities — and today’s NFP will test whether that second trigger is emerging.

NFP March 2026 — Today’s Critical Index Market Catalyst: March Non-Farm Payrolls, released today at 08:30 ET, are forecast to show approximately 60,000 jobs added — a partial recovery from February’s shock −92,000 reading, which was the worst in four months. The index market impact depends entirely on the direction of surprise. A print above 100,000 confirms the labour market is holding up under geopolitical stress, reduces rate-cut expectations, and extends the current bear squeeze — likely pushing the S&P 500 above 6,600. A print below 40,000 would signal that the Iran war is beginning to cause genuine economic damage, could revive rate-cut expectations, and would paradoxically provide a short-term boost to indices via Fed pivot hopes — but with a complex secondary effect of rising recession fears weighing on corporate earnings multiples.

FTSE 100 — The Unique UK Dynamic: The FTSE 100 has shown notable relative strength versus US indices during the Iran war crisis, and today’s 0.69% gain is a continuation of that theme. The structural reason: the FTSE 100 has the highest energy sector weighting of any major global index, with BP and Shell together representing over 10% of the index. As oil prices surge, UK energy majors are directly benefiting — lifting the overall index even as domestically-focused mid-cap UK stocks remain under pressure from Bank of England rate hike fears. UK firms now expect price growth of 3.5% in the year ahead per the BoE’s Decision Maker Panel — a figure that adds hawkish pressure on the BoE and keeps UK gilts elevated. The index market in London is therefore a bifurcated story: energy giants up, domestic sectors struggling.

Cross-Market Correlations — How Bonds and the Dollar Are Driving the Index Market: The 10-year Treasury yield at 4.313% remains the dominant headwind for growth stocks within the S&P 500. The classic inverse correlation between yields and equity multiples is suppressing tech-heavy index components: a 10-year yield above 4.2% represents a direct competitor to equity risk premiums. The US Dollar Index (DXY) at 100.17 has strengthened modestly — adding pressure on S&P 500 multinationals with overseas revenue. For the FTSE 100, a stronger dollar is a net positive: approximately 75% of FTSE 100 revenues are earned overseas and reported back in sterling, meaning a weaker pound boosts reported profits from abroad. The pound’s 0.5% decline to $1.3237 is therefore paradoxically supportive of today’s FTSE 100 outperformance versus US index peers.

Forward Catalyst — April 5 OPEC+ and April 6 Hormuz Deadline: The two events most likely to move the global index market in the next 48–72 hours are the OPEC+ production meeting on April 5 and Trump’s Hormuz deadline on April 6. OPEC+ is debating whether to unwind voluntary production cuts into a supply-disrupted market — a decision that could either accelerate oil’s rally (if they hold cuts) or cap it (if they increase output). For equity indices, the outcome matters enormously: if oil stays above $110, energy sector tailwinds will continue to support the FTSE 100 while simultaneously threatening recession in oil-import-dependent economies. The April 6 deadline is the ultimate binary: a ceasefire would gap equities 3–5% higher overnight; a failed deadline with new strikes would push the index market to fresh 2026 lows below the early March panic lows.

S&P 500 (SPX)
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index · US Large-Cap Equity Benchmark · Daily Chart · CSFX Research Desk
NEUTRAL — FIBONACCI INFLECTION
6,582.69
▲ +7.37 · +0.11% · H: 6,601.91 L: 6,474.94
Fundamental View

S&P 500 — Earnings Risk Meets Geopolitical Whipsaw

The S&P 500 index market sits at arguably the most important technical level of its entire correction from the January 7,007 all-time high. At 6,582, price is directly on top of the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement — historically the minimum retracement in a corrective phase. The fundamental backdrop for this level to hold is mixed: ceasefire optimism provides a near-term bid, but the structural headwinds — Fed on hold, 10-year yields above 4.3%, and corporate earnings season approaching with Iran war uncertainty — make a sustained recovery above this level extremely challenging without a definitive geopolitical resolution.

Corporate earnings estimates for Q1 2026 have been revised sharply lower by major banks. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Morgan Stanley have collectively cut S&P 500 EPS forecasts by an average of 8% since the Iran war began in late February. Energy sector earnings are soaring — but they represent only 4.5% of S&P 500 market cap, insufficient to offset the drag from consumer discretionary, technology, and financial sector margin compression. Tesla’s Q1 deliveries miss — with 358,023 vehicles delivered versus expectations of 364,645 — is emblematic of this consumer-level pressure.

The S&P 500 index market’s most immediate fundamental driver today is the March NFP release. The prior month’s shocking −92,000 print was the worst in four months, driven largely by healthcare strike activity. A recovery toward the 60,000 forecast would confirm the labour market hasn’t cracked, but the index market has already priced a subdued recovery — meaning a miss would be disproportionately negative while a beat may produce only a modest bounce given the high uncertainty backdrop.

Technical Structure

Fibonacci Inflection Point — 0.382 Holds the Structural Verdict

The S&P 500 daily chart reveals a textbook Fibonacci retracement structure from the all-time high at 7,007.01 (Fib 1) down to the recent war panic low at 6,319.99 (Fib 0). Today’s price at 6,582.69 sits almost exactly on the 0.382 Fibonacci level at 6,582.44 — a coincidence that every institutional desk in the world has noted. The 0.382 Fib is the classic first major retracement target in any corrective sequence, and its ability to hold or fail as support will define the medium-term direction of the S&P 500 index market for the coming weeks.

The multi-timeframe technical picture is decisively bearish above the current level. The EMA20 at 6,808, EMA50 at 6,784, and EMA200 are all positioned above current price in a classic bearish fan formation — price trading below all three moving averages simultaneously signals that the path of least resistance for this index market is still lower. RSI at 46.18 is recovering from deeply oversold territory below 30 but has not crossed above 50, confirming that recovery momentum is tentative rather than trend-defining. The Stochastic at 37.07 remains in bearish territory.

The candlestick structure on the weekly chart shows a sequence of lower highs and lower lows since the January 7,007 peak — a confirmed primary downtrend. The daily chart has produced a potential recovery sequence from the 6,320 panic low, with the last three sessions printing higher lows. However, this recovery has only reached the 0.382 Fib — the most minimal of bullish retracements. A close above 6,663 (0.5 Fib) would be the first credible signal of a more meaningful recovery; below 6,482 (0.236 Fib) the index market risks revisiting the 6,320 war low.

S&P 500 SPX Daily Chart Fibonacci Retracement 0.382 Level 6582 Iran War Recovery Capital Street FX Research Desk via TradingView April 3 2026
S&P 500 Index (SPX) · 1D · TVC · Fibonacci: $6,319.99 Low → $7,007.01 High · Capital Street FX Research Desk via TradingView · April 3, 2026 | O: 6,512.61 H: 6,601.91 L: 6,474.94 C: 6,582.69 (+0.11%)
Candlestick Patterns & Chart Formations
📉 Confirmed Primary Downtrend 📉 Death Cross — EMA Fan (Price Below EMA20/50/200) 📉 Lower Highs / Lower Lows Sequence (Jan–Apr) ⚠️ 0.382 Fibonacci Inflection (6,582) ⚠️ Stochastic Recovering — Not Yet Bullish 📈 Hammer-Type Recovery From 6,320 War Low 📈 RSI Ascending From Oversold (46.18) 📉 Descending Channel From Jan ATH

The most significant pattern formation on the S&P 500 daily chart is the descending channel that has been in place since the January 7,007 all-time high. Price has consistently failed at the upper channel boundary — visible as the descending grey trendline on the chart — creating a sequence of lower highs at 6,900 (late January), 6,859 (0.786 Fib), and 6,744 (0.618 Fib). The current price at 6,582 sits on the 0.382 Fibonacci support with the lower channel boundary now acting as the critical support zone. The descending channel combined with the below-zero MACD and the full EMA bearish fan signal that the S&P 500 index market remains in a technically impaired state despite the surface-level green close.

The recovery from the 6,319 panic low has produced a three-candle sequence of higher lows on the daily chart — a tentative engulfing structure that requires confirmation above the 0.382 Fib close. Today’s narrow-range candle (+0.11%) with an upper wick demonstrates that bulls attempted a move toward 6,602 but sellers pushed back — a sign that the 0.382 Fib resistance-turned-support is genuinely contested rather than cleanly defended. Confirmation of a base requires a strong bullish candle closing above 6,663 (0.5 Fib) with volume expansion. Absent that, the pattern remains ambiguous and the bearish default applies in this index market.

The RSI at 46.18 rising from below 30 (deeply oversold) is the single most constructive technical signal for the S&P 500 index market. An RSI recovery from sub-30 levels has historically preceded meaningful bounces, but the key test is whether RSI can cross and sustain above 50 — which would signal a genuine shift in momentum. If the NFP today provides a positive catalyst, watch for RSI to break above 50 as a secondary confirmation signal for the 0.382 Fib support thesis. If RSI fails to sustain above 50, the bearish trend resumption into the 0.236 Fib at 6,482 becomes the primary scenario for the index market.

Level TypePriceBasisSignificance
Strong Resistance7,007Fibonacci 1.0 — All-Time HighPeak of the entire bull run; structural ceiling for 2026
Resistance Zone6,860Fibonacci 0.786First major Fib resistance on recovery; prior support breakdown
Immediate Resistance6,745Fibonacci 0.618 — Golden RatioMost watched Fib level; EMA cluster zone
Key Resistance6,663Fibonacci 0.5 — MidpointBreak above here shifts bias to recovery; EMA20/50 overhead
Current Price6,582Fibonacci 0.382 — InflectionMost critical level today — hold = base forming; break = 6,482
Immediate Support6,482Fibonacci 0.236Next downside target if 0.382 fails; prior consolidation zone
Key Support6,320Fibonacci 0 — War Panic LowUltimate war low; break here = full trend reversal confirmed
RSI (14)
46.18 ↑ Rising
Stochastic
37.07 Oversold Zone
MACD
Negative Histogram ↑
EMA 20
6,808 Above Price
EMA 50
6,784 Above Price
EMA 200
~6,650 Above Price
Bollinger Bands
Mid-Band Recovering
ADX
28 Trend Intact
ATR (14)
~95 pts High Volatility
VIX
23.87 Elevated
SELL
S&P 500 — Sell the 0.382 Fib Rejection on Iran Re-escalation or NFP Miss
Entry6,620
Take Profit6,320
Stop Loss6,750

The S&P 500 is sitting exactly on its 0.382 Fibonacci retracement from the all-time high at 7,007 down to the 6,320 war low. With price below all major EMAs, a confirmed downtrend structure, and the MACD in negative territory, the path of least resistance for the index market remains lower. Enter on a bounce toward 6,620 — the upper end of today’s range — with a stop above the 0.5 Fib at 6,750, targeting the 6,320 war low for a 2.3:1 R/R setup. Reduce position by 50% if NFP prints above 120,000 today. This trade is invalidated by a daily close above 6,663 (0.5 Fib).

Dow Jones (DJI)
Dow Jones Industrial Average · 30 US Blue-Chip Stocks · Daily Chart · CSFX Research Desk
BEARISH — BELOW ALL MAJOR LEVELS
46,504.67
▼ −61.07 · −0.13% · H: 46,754.72 L: 45,897.24
Fundamental View

Dow Jones — The Weakest Index Market in Today’s Complex

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is the worst-performing major index today, registering a −0.13% decline to 46,504 even as the S&P 500 and FTSE 100 manage modest gains. This underperformance reflects the Dow’s composition: its 30 blue-chip components include a heavy concentration of consumer-facing, industrial, and financial names that are directly hurt by elevated oil prices and reduced consumer confidence. Boeing, Caterpillar, and American Express — each a substantial Dow component — face specific Iran war headwinds through elevated input costs, supply chain disruption, and reduced business travel demand respectively.

The Dow Jones index market has been structurally damaged by the Iran war in a way that is more permanent than the S&P 500’s damage. The Dow closed below its 200-day moving average in mid-March for the first time since June 2025 — a technical event that historically signals a multi-week regime change rather than a temporary dip. With the 200-day average now acting as overhead resistance rather than support, institutional investors who follow moving-average-based allocation models have been prompted to reduce equity exposure systematically.

Tesla’s Q1 2026 delivery miss — 358,023 vehicles vs 364,645 expected — is symbolic of the broader consumer demand deterioration that the Dow Jones index market is pricing in. While Tesla is not a Dow component, the delivery miss speaks to the macro theme: consumer spending on big-ticket discretionary items is being squeezed by rising fuel costs, declining confidence, and elevated borrowing costs. This theme applies directly to multiple Dow members including Home Depot and Nike.

Technical Structure

0.236 Fibonacci Resistance — Dead Cat Bounce Territory

The Dow Jones daily chart shows a Fibonacci retracement from the November 50,529 all-time high down to the March war panic low at 45,041. The current price at 46,504 sits just above the 0.236 Fibonacci level at 46,336 — the weakest of the standard Fibonacci retracements, typically associated with dead-cat bounces rather than genuine reversals. The fact that the Dow can barely sustain above this minimal recovery level confirms the structural weakness of this index market. EMAs at 48,171 (EMA20) and 48,107 (EMA50) are nearly 4% above current price, creating a dense overhead resistance cluster that will cap any recovery attempt.

The multi-timeframe technical picture for the Dow Jones is the most bearish of the three indices covered today. On the weekly chart, the Dow has produced three consecutive weeks of lower highs and lower lows — a clear primary downtrend signal. The 50-week moving average, previously a reliable bull market support, has now been breached to the downside. The Stochastic at 34.81 is recovering from oversold but has not generated a bullish crossover. RSI at 45.49 mirrors the S&P 500’s tentative recovery pattern, with both indices RSI readings stuck in the 40–50 zone — the “no-man’s land” between bear and bull momentum.

Today’s intraday range for the Dow Jones — from a low of 45,897 to a high of 46,754 — represents a 857-point swing that exemplifies the extreme volatility driven by competing Hormuz ceasefire headlines and Trump’s aggressive rhetoric. The inability to sustain the intraday high of 46,754 and the subsequent close at 46,504 produced an upper wick on today’s daily candle — a classic shooting-star type formation at the 0.236 Fibonacci resistance that adds to the bearish case for the index market. A confirmed daily close below 46,336 (0.236 Fib) would open the path to the 45,041 war low.

Dow Jones Industrial Average DJI Daily Chart Fibonacci Retracement 0.236 Level 46504 Iran War Bearish Capital Street FX Research Desk via TradingView April 3 2026
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) · 1D · TVC · Fibonacci: 45,041.43 Low → 50,529.25 High · Capital Street FX Research Desk via TradingView · April 3, 2026 | O: 46,469.36 H: 46,754.72 L: 45,897.24 C: 46,504.67 (−0.13%)
Candlestick Patterns & Chart Formations
📉 Primary Downtrend — Lower Highs / Lower Lows 📉 Shooting Star Upper Wick at 0.236 Fib 📉 Price Below EMA20, EMA50 (Full Bearish Fan) 📉 200-Day MA Breach (Mid-March 2026) ⚠️ 0.236 Fib Resistance Zone (46,336) ⚠️ Stochastic Mid-Recovery — Not Yet Bullish 📈 Recovery From 45,041 War Low

The Dow Jones daily chart has produced a key reversal pattern on today’s session that adds conviction to the bearish trade setup: price rallied intraday to 46,754 — precisely testing the 0.236 Fibonacci resistance at 46,336 from above — before sellers pushed price back down to close at 46,504. This created an upper wick on today’s candle that is characteristic of a shooting star or bearish upper shadow formation when it occurs at a defined resistance level. The significance is amplified by the fact that 46,336 represents the minimum Fibonacci resistance in the current correction — if the Dow index market can’t sustain above even the weakest retracement level, the medium-term directional pressure remains decisively downward.

The broader chart pattern on the Dow Jones is a classic descending channel from the November 50,529 high. The channel boundaries are well-defined: the upper boundary connects the highs of November, December, and February; the lower boundary traces through the December consolidation low and the March war panic low at 45,041. Current price at 46,504 sits in the middle of this channel — neither at the upper resistance boundary nor at the lower support. This middle-channel position means the next major directional move will be determined by external catalysts (NFP today, Hormuz April 6) rather than pure technical pattern completion.

The Stochastic at 34.81 is the only tentatively constructive indicator for the Dow Jones index market. It is recovering from the deeply oversold zone (below 20) that coincided with the March panic lows, and a bullish crossover of the Stochastic lines would signal a potential short-term bounce. However, in a confirmed primary downtrend environment — where ADX trend strength reading confirms directional momentum — Stochastic bounces tend to be counter-trend corrections rather than genuine reversals. Confirmation of a real base for the Dow Jones requires a daily close above 46,750 and then 47,137 (0.382 Fib) on strong volume.

Level TypePriceBasisSignificance
Strong Resistance50,529Fibonacci 1.0 — All-Time HighNovember 2025 peak; ultimate bull market high
Major Resistance49,382Fibonacci 0.786Prior structural resistance; EMA cloud overhead
Resistance Zone48,383Fibonacci 0.618 — Golden RatioEMA20 (48,171) and EMA50 (48,107) cluster here
Key Resistance47,785Fibonacci 0.5 — MidpointMedium-term pivot — break above = structural improvement
Resistance47,137Fibonacci 0.382Minimum bull recovery; confirmation level for genuine bounce
Current Zone46,504Current Price — Above 0.236 FibDead-cat bounce territory; shooting star formation today
Immediate Support46,336Fibonacci 0.236Minimum retracement — break confirms path to war low
Major Support45,041Fibonacci 0 — War Panic LowUltimate war low; break = major structural breakdown
RSI (14)
45.49 ↑ Rising
Stochastic
34.81 Low Zone — Recovering
MACD
Negative Below Signal
EMA 20
48,171 Far Above Price
EMA 50
48,107 Far Above Price
EMA 200
~47,200 Above Price
Bollinger Bands
Lower Half Recovering
ADX
32 Strong Trend
ATR (14)
~760 pts Extreme Volatility
200D MA
Breached Mar 2026
SELL
Dow Jones — Short at 0.236 Fib Resistance / EMA Rejection Zone
Entry46,750
Take Profit45,200
Stop Loss47,400

The Dow Jones index market has produced a shooting-star upper wick today at precisely the 0.236 Fibonacci resistance zone. With price below all major EMAs, the 200-day moving average breached, and ADX confirming trend strength, this is a clean counter-trend-continuation setup: sell into any bounce toward the 46,750 resistance, targeting the 45,200 area (above the war panic low) for a 2.4:1 R/R trade. Stop above 47,137 (0.382 Fib). Close 40% of position ahead of the April 6 Hormuz deadline — a ceasefire announcement would gap the Dow 3–5% higher and invalidate the short thesis.

FTSE 100 (UKX)
FTSE 100 Index · London Stock Exchange Top 100 Companies · Daily Chart · CSFX Research Desk
BULLISH RECOVERY — 0.382 FIB DEFENDED
10,436.29
▲ +71.50 · +0.69% · H: 10,465.24 L: 10,287.90
Fundamental View

FTSE 100 — Energy Heavyweights Provide Structural Support

The FTSE 100 index market is the clear outperformer in today’s global equity complex, rising 0.69% to 10,436 and recovering decisively off the 0.382 Fibonacci support. The fundamental driver of this outperformance is structural and self-reinforcing: the FTSE 100 has the highest energy sector weighting of any major developed-world index. BP and Shell — both Brent crude-sensitive majors — are the top gainers today, buoyed by WTI’s multi-session surge above $100. Energy sector earnings revisions for FTSE 100 members are going in the opposite direction to US index peers, with oil majors seeing dramatic EPS upgrades as crude prices remain elevated by the Hormuz supply shock.

The FTSE 100 index market also benefits from its currency exposure dynamic. Approximately 75% of FTSE 100 revenues are earned overseas — in US dollars, euros, and emerging market currencies — and reported back in sterling. With the pound weakening 0.5% to $1.3237 against the dollar today, the FTSE 100 gets a direct earnings translation boost: the same dollar revenues are worth more pounds when converted back. This structural hedge against UK economic weakness is why the FTSE 100 often outperforms during periods of sterling weakness — a counterintuitive dynamic that confuses casual observers but is well understood by institutional market participants.

The Bank of England’s hawkish pivot risk — with UK firms now pricing in 3.5% price growth year-ahead per the BoE DMP survey — adds complexity to the FTSE 100 fundamental picture. Higher-for-longer BoE rates would compress domestic sector valuations (housebuilders like Berkeley Group are already selling off) while simultaneously supporting the pound (which would be negative for the overseas earnings translation). The net effect for the FTSE 100 index market is sector bifurcation: energy and mining up, domestic cyclicals under pressure.

Technical Structure

0.382 Fibonacci Successfully Defended — Recovery Building

The FTSE 100 daily chart presents the most technically constructive picture of the three indices covered in today’s index market report. The Fibonacci retracement from the 9,426 base (Fib 0) to the 10,931 all-time high (Fib 0) has provided a clear structural map of the correction: price tested the 0.382 Fib at 10,356 and has now recovered above it to close at 10,436. This represents a successful Fibonacci support defence — textbook technical analysis — and suggests that the FTSE 100 index market has completed its corrective phase at the 0.382 retracement level.

The multi-timeframe picture for the FTSE 100 is nuanced but constructive. The daily chart shows price recovering above the 0.382 Fib at 10,356 with today’s solid +0.69% close — a candle that closes in the upper third of its range, indicating buying pressure dominated the session. RSI at 57.28 is in bullish territory above 50, and the Stochastic at 42.81 is recovering from the mid-zone. Crucially, the EMA20 at 10,358 and the 0.382 Fib at 10,356 have merged into a combined support cluster — price needs to hold above both for the recovery thesis to remain valid.

The FTSE 100 weekly chart provides the most important context: the primary uptrend from mid-2025 that drove the index from 9,426 to 10,931 remains structurally intact as a long-term bull market. The current correction is a retracement within a longer bull trend rather than a trend reversal — supported by the fact that price has not closed below the critical 0.382 weekly Fibonacci level on a sustained basis. If the FTSE 100 index market can close the week above 10,356, the technical case for a recovery toward 10,576 (0.236 Fib from high) and ultimately a retest of 10,931 within 60 days becomes compelling.

FTSE 100 UKX Daily Chart Fibonacci 0.382 Support 10356 Recovery 10436 Capital Street FX Research Desk via TradingView April 3 2026
FTSE 100 Index (UKX) · 1D · FTSE · Fibonacci: 9,426.07 Low → 10,931.63 High · Capital Street FX Research Desk via TradingView · April 3, 2026 | O: 10,366.34 H: 10,465.24 L: 10,287.90 C: 10,436.29 (+0.69%)
Candlestick Patterns & Chart Formations
📈 0.382 Fibonacci Support Successfully Defended 📈 Bullish Engulfing Recovery Sequence (Last 3 Days) 📈 RSI Above 50 — Bullish Momentum Zone (57.28) 📈 Today’s Candle Closes Upper Third — Buyer Control ⚠️ EMA20 and EMA50 Still Above — Overhead Resistance ⚠️ Stochastic Recovering — Mid-Zone (42.81) 📉 Below 0.236 Fib (10,576) — Not Yet Fully Recovered 📈 Primary Uptrend From 9,426 Base Structurally Intact

The most significant candlestick pattern on the FTSE 100 daily chart is the three-candle recovery sequence from the 9,836 war panic low (early March) to today’s close at 10,436. This sequence has produced a series of higher lows and higher closes that mirrors a classic three-white-soldiers pattern — one of the most bullish reversal formations in Japanese candlestick theory. The completion of today’s candle, which opened at 10,366 and closed at 10,436 — a close in the upper 70% of the day’s range — demonstrates consistent buying pressure throughout the session. This is materially different from the shooting star formations produced today by the Dow Jones, and explains why the FTSE 100 index market is generating the strongest technical signals of the three indices.

The FTSE 100 chart also shows a unique technical structure: after the March crash, price formed a double-bottom pattern between the 9,836 low and a subsequent test of the 10,000 psychological support level. This double-bottom base, combined with the 0.382 Fibonacci defence and the EMA20 (10,358) acting as dynamic support, creates a three-layer technical support cluster that suggests the correction is complete — or at minimum, well-defended. The previous resistance zone around 10,356 is now acting as support, confirming a classic support/resistance flip that is a key indicator of trend resumption in technical index market analysis.

The RSI reading of 57.28 for the FTSE 100 is the most constructive of the three indices — above the critical 50 midline, indicating that bullish momentum is now dominant on a net basis. This contrasts with the S&P 500 (46.18) and Dow Jones (45.49), both of which remain below 50 in bearish momentum territory. The Stochastic at 42.81 has room to continue rising before reaching overbought territory above 80, suggesting there is technical headroom for the FTSE 100 index market to continue its recovery toward the 10,576 target (0.236 Fib from the high) before encountering meaningful resistance.

Level TypePriceBasisSignificance
All-Time High10,931Fibonacci 0 High — ATHPeak from early 2026; ultimate bull target on full recovery
Strong Resistance10,577Fibonacci 0.236 from HighNext major Fib resistance; first meaningful test of recovery
Immediate Resistance10,465Today’s Intraday HighSession high — break above opens path to 10,577
Current Price10,436Current — Above 0.382 FibDefended key support; recovery gaining traction
Key Support10,358EMA20 + Fibonacci 0.382Double support cluster — must hold for bull thesis
Major Support10,178Fibonacci 0.5 — MidpointBull/bear threshold; break below = recovery failed
Deep Support10,001Fibonacci 0.618 — Golden RatioWar panic low area; psychological 10,000 support
Base Support9,426Fibonacci 0 — Base LowOrigin of the entire 2025–26 bull run
RSI (14)
57.28 ↑ Bullish Zone
Stochastic
42.81 Recovering Mid-Zone
MACD
Negative → Histogram Rising
EMA 20
10,358 ≈ Current Price
EMA 50
10,194 Below Price
EMA 200
10,102 Below Price
Bollinger Bands
Above Mid Bullish
ADX
22 Trend Weakening
ATR (14)
~180 pts Elevated
0.382 Fib
10,356 Defended ✓
BUY
FTSE 100 — Long on Dips to EMA20 / 0.382 Fib Support Cluster
Entry10,340
Take Profit10,577
Stop Loss10,180

The FTSE 100 index market has produced the most technically valid long setup of the three indices today. The 0.382 Fibonacci support at 10,356 has been successfully defended, RSI is bullish above 50 (57.28), and the EMA20 has converged with the Fib level to create a formidable support cluster. Enter on any dip back toward 10,340 — below today’s close but above the combined EMA20/Fib support — targeting the 0.236 Fibonacci at 10,577 for a 2.1:1 R/R trade. Stop below the 0.5 Fib at 10,178. Take 50% profit at the session high of 10,465 to lock in gains ahead of the binary Hormuz event on April 6.

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The Dow’s shooting-star at the 0.236 Fibonacci and full EMA bearish fan signal the index market’s weakest link. Short into the 46,750 resistance with a tight stop at 47,400, targeting 45,200. With the ATR at 760 points, today’s index market volatility demands zero-slippage execution — which is exactly what Capital Street FX’s institutional routing delivers.

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The Index Market Is Moving Right Now.
FTSE 100 +0.69% · S&P 500 +0.11% · Dow Jones −0.13% · 3 Live Setups Active
Economic Calendar

Today’s Key Events — April 3, 2026

GMT TimeCurrency/MarketEventForecastPreviousActualImpact
07:00GBPHalifax House Price Index (Mar)+0.2%+0.4%Pending MED
08:00EUREurozone PPI (Feb)+5.1% YoY+4.8% YoYPending MED
12:30USDNon-Farm Payrolls (March)+60K−92KPending HIGH
12:30USDUnemployment Rate (March)4.4%4.4%Pending HIGH
12:30USDAverage Hourly Earnings (Mar)+0.3% MoM+0.4% MoMPending HIGH
14:00USDISM Services PMI (March)52.853.5Pending HIGH
OngoingOILHormuz Shipping Protocol UpdatesProtocol AnnouncedMonitoring CRITICAL
Apr 5OILOPEC+ Production Decision MeetingHold CutsVoluntary −400K bpdPending HIGH
Apr 6GEOPTrump Hormuz Ultimatum DeadlineStrait ClosedBINARY CRITICAL
Apr 8USDFederal Reserve FOMC Minutes (March)HawkishHold 3.5–3.75%Pending HIGH
Apr 9USDUS CPI Inflation (March)+3.8% YoY+3.5% YoYPending HIGH
⚠ Next Major Index Market Catalyst — NFP at 12:30 GMT Today
US Non-Farm Payrolls for March 2026 release at 12:30 GMT (08:30 ET). Forecast: +60,000 jobs. Previous: −92,000 (worst in 4 months). A print below +30K would be catastrophic for index market sentiment and could force the Fed’s hand on rate cuts, initially boosting but then dragging indices on recession fears. A print above +100K would confirm labour market resilience, extend the bear squeeze, and push the S&P 500 above 6,620. Expect 150–250 point S&P 500 point swings in the 15 minutes post-release. Widen all stops by 2x ATR ahead of the print.
Frequently Asked Questions

Today’s Index Market — Trader FAQ

01
Why is the FTSE 100 outperforming the Dow Jones and S&P 500 today when the same Iran war affects all three?
The FTSE 100 index market’s outperformance (+0.69%) versus the Dow Jones (−0.13%) and S&P 500 (+0.11%) comes down to two structural factors unique to London’s blue-chip index. First: the FTSE 100 has the highest energy sector weighting of any major global index — BP and Shell together represent over 10% of the index, and both are surging as WTI crude sustains above $100 on Hormuz supply fears. US indices have lower energy weights (4.5% for the S&P 500) and are therefore more hurt than helped by high oil. Second: approximately 75% of FTSE 100 revenues are earned in foreign currencies and reported back in sterling. Today’s pound weakness to $1.3237 translates directly into higher reported sterling profits for FTSE 100 multinationals — a built-in earnings hedge that US index peers do not have in the same magnitude.
Why does the 6,582 level matter so much for the S&P 500 index market today?
02
6,582.44 is the exact 0.382 Fibonacci retracement of the S&P 500’s correction from the all-time high at 7,007.01 down to the war panic low at 6,319.99. The 0.382 Fibonacci is the minimum standard retracement in classical technical analysis — markets that hold at this level have typically completed their corrective phase, while markets that break below it signal a deeper structural correction is underway. Today’s close of 6,582.69 is essentially sitting directly on this level to within 0.04% — an almost perfect Fibonacci test. The market’s ability to hold this precise level determines whether the S&P 500 index market is forming a base or simply pausing before the next leg lower toward 6,482 (0.236 Fib) and ultimately the war low at 6,320.
03
What does the Dow Jones shooting star upper wick at 46,754 signal for the index market?
Today’s Dow Jones intraday high of 46,754 — which was rejected back down to a close of 46,504 — created an upper wick on the daily candle that is a classic shooting star formation when it occurs at a defined resistance level. In this case, 46,754 was within the 0.236 Fibonacci resistance zone at 46,336–46,750, making the rejection technically significant. The shooting star pattern signals that buyers briefly took control during the session (the long upper wick) but sellers ultimately dominated at the close — a bearish reversal signal when it forms at resistance. For the index market, this means that any initial strength tomorrow should be treated with suspicion: the Dow’s overhead EMA cluster at 47,800–48,200 remains a formidable cap that will require a major fundamental catalyst (ceasefire) to break.
04
How should I manage my index market positions ahead of the April 6 Hormuz deadline?
April 6 falls on a Sunday — meaning the index market will open with a gap on Sunday night/Monday morning reflecting whatever happens over the weekend. Risk protocol for all three index positions: (1) For FTSE 100 long positions: take 50% profit before Friday’s London close at 16:30 GMT, locking in gains from the Fibonacci defence. Leave the remaining 50% for upside if ceasefire confirms. (2) For Dow Jones short positions: reduce to 40% of size before the weekend. A ceasefire announcement would gap the Dow 3–5% higher — potentially 1,400–2,300 points — in a single move that would devastate unprotected short positions. (3) For S&P 500 positions in either direction: the binary nature of the Hormuz outcome makes full-size positions inadvisable through the weekend. Scale down to 30% position size with wider stops to survive both outcomes. (4) Keep cash reserves to re-enter at better levels on Monday morning once the Hormuz binary has resolved.
05
What should I watch for in the US session with NFP releasing at 08:30 ET and how will it affect the index market?
March Non-Farm Payrolls at 08:30 ET (12:30 GMT) is the most important scheduled event for the index market today. The asymmetric reaction framework: A STRONG NFP (above +100K): Dollar strengthens, rate-cut expectations reduce, equities see a mixed reaction — growth stocks rally briefly on “economy is holding up” narrative, but the stronger dollar hurts FTSE 100 multinationals and tech multiples stay compressed. The S&P 500 could spike to 6,650 before fading back to the 0.382 Fib. A WEAK NFP (below +30K): Initial equity market selloff on recession fears, then a potential sharp recovery as rate-cut expectations revive aggressively. The S&P 500 could dip to 6,480 then rally back to 6,580. The FTSE 100 would likely outperform in both scenarios — ceasefire-driven energy tailwinds are more powerful than any single US data point for UK equities today. Never enter new index market positions in the 5 minutes before the NFP release.
06
How does Capital Street FX’s 900% bonus specifically help with today’s three-index market trade setup?
Today’s optimal index market strategy involves three simultaneous positions: FTSE 100 long (10,340 entry), Dow Jones short (46,750 entry), and S&P 500 positional trade (direction confirmed post-NFP). Each position requires substantial margin — particularly the Dow Jones short given its 760-point ATR requiring a 650-point stop to survive today’s volatility. Capital Street FX’s 900% tradable bonus effectively multiplies your available margin by up to 10x, allowing you to allocate appropriate position sizes to all three index market setups without over-leveraging any individual trade. This is critical in a high-volatility environment where undersizing positions to manage margin leaves you unable to benefit from the full move, and where correct position sizing is the difference between a 2.4:1 R/R outcome and an unnecessary stop-out before the trade reaches its target.

Session Bias Summary & Outlook — April 3, 2026

April 3, 2026 has confirmed a critical inflection point for the global index market. The Dow Jones (−0.13%), S&P 500 (+0.11%), and FTSE 100 (+0.69%) are telling three distinct stories within a single geopolitical event framework. Iran’s Oman-brokered Hormuz shipping protocol has injected the first credible ceasefire signal in five weeks of conflict, triggering short-covering across all three indices — but the recovery is tentative, uneven, and highly dependent on today’s NFP print and the binary April 6 Hormuz deadline. The FTSE 100 has defended its 0.382 Fibonacci support at 10,356 convincingly; the S&P 500 sits precariously on its own 0.382 Fib at 6,582; the Dow Jones has barely sustained its weakest retracement level and printed a shooting-star rejection today.

The structural macro theme for the global index market this week is unambiguous: this is a geopolitically-driven, war-premium-dependent equity environment where conventional valuation frameworks have been temporarily suspended. The Fed’s decision to hold rates through all of 2026 has removed the monetary policy backstop that previously cushioned equity corrections. Oil above $100 is simultaneously supporting energy-heavy FTSE 100 while systematically damaging consumer-facing US index components. The conventional “buy the dip” framework that served equity traders well from 2023 through early 2026 has been replaced by a new regime: sell the bounce in US indices, buy the dip selectively in energy-sector-heavy indices like the FTSE 100.

Today’s remaining key catalysts: US Non-Farm Payrolls at 12:30 GMT — the single most important data event for all three index markets today, with a forecast of +60K jobs after February’s devastating −92K. ISM Services PMI at 18:00 GMT — a below-50 reading would signal services sector contraction, amplifying recession concerns and creating conflicting index market signals. Ongoing Hormuz shipping protocol monitoring — any escalation of Trump’s rhetoric or Iranian counter-movement will immediately override all data-driven index market positioning.

Looking 3–5 trading days ahead: The FTSE 100 offers the strongest risk-adjusted recovery trade, targeting 10,577 (0.236 Fib) within 3 sessions on ceasefire confirmation. The S&P 500’s 0.382 Fib verdict will be delivered by NFP today — a close above 6,663 (0.5 Fib) on any day this week shifts the bias to neutral-bullish; below 6,482 reinstates the full bearish structure targeting 6,320. The Dow Jones remains the most vulnerable major index: four consecutive closes below the EMA20 cluster at 48,100 confirms a structural bear trend with the 45,041 war low as the primary target over the next 10–15 trading sessions.

S&P 500 · SPX
Neutral ◆
DOW JONES · DJI
Bearish ▼
FTSE 100 · UKX
Bullish ▲
VIX
Elevated ◆
US EQUITIES
Cautious ▼
UK EQUITIES
Recovering ▲