Global Indices Surge as US-Iran Ceasefire Sparks Relief Rally: FTSE 100, S&P 500, Dow Jones | Capital Street FX Research Desk — April 8, 2026
Global Indices Surge as US-Iran Ceasefire Sparks Relief Rally — FTSE 100, S&P 500 & Dow Jones Technical Outlook
Daily Index Market Report covering FTSE 100 (UKX) · S&P 500 (SPX) · Dow Jones (DJI) — Fundamentals, News & Trade Setups for April 8, 2026
What You Need to Know Before You Trade Today
Global equity indices are surging on Wednesday morning after President Trump and Iran agreed to a two-week “double-sided ceasefire” just hours before his 8 p.m. Tuesday deadline to launch devastating strikes on Iranian infrastructure. The agreement — brokered through Pakistan — includes Iran’s commitment to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint through which 20% of the world’s oil and gas passes. Oil prices have cratered more than 15%, the VIX is collapsing, and futures markets have priced in the largest single-day relief rally in weeks. The FTSE 100 has surged 2.4% to 10,594, S&P 500 futures leapt 2.5%, and Dow Jones futures jumped over 1,100 points. Today’s report assesses whether these moves have structural follow-through, or whether traders should treat them as event-driven spikes requiring careful Fibonacci management.
- ▲ FTSE 100 (UKX) — Bullish: Surged +2.38% to 10,594.84, reclaiming the 0.236 Fib at 10,579.03 — airlines, banks & miners leading gains. Best technical setup of the three indices.
- ▲ S&P 500 (SPX) — Cautiously Bullish: Futures up 2.5% following Tuesday’s slim +0.08% close at 6,616.85 — recovering toward the critical 0.5 Fib at 6,659.75 on ceasefire relief.
- ▲ Dow Jones (DJI) — Recovering: Closed -0.18% at 46,584.46 on Tuesday; futures surging 1,100+ points. Testing the 0.236 Fib at 46,316.41 from below — confirmation required.
- ▼ Oil (Brent) — Sharply Lower: Brent crude fell more than 15% to below $94/barrel — energy stocks (BP, Shell) declining sharply, but non-energy sectors rallying strongly.
Price Snapshot — April 8, 2026
Live Trade Setups — April 8, 2026
Macro Fundamentals — Global Index Market April 8, 2026
The Iran Ceasefire — The Dominant Index Market Driver
Just minutes before President Trump’s 8 p.m. Tuesday deadline, Washington and Tehran agreed to a two-week “double-sided ceasefire.” Trump posted on Truth Social: “I agree to suspend the bombing and attack of Iran for a period of two weeks. This will be a double sided CEASEFIRE!” Iran confirmed it would allow safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz — the vital chokepoint through which approximately one-fifth of global oil and gas transits. The deal came after last-minute mediation by Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who had asked Trump to extend his deadline by two weeks and requested Iran to reopen Hormuz as a goodwill gesture. Both sides are claiming victory: Trump called it a “total and complete victory — 100 per cent,” while Iran’s Supreme National Security Council declared the US had suffered an “undeniable, historic and crushing defeat.”
The market reaction has been swift and broad-based. Asian markets surged overnight, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 jumping 5.45% and South Korea’s Kospi rising 7.7%. European markets opened sharply higher, with Germany’s DAX up over 4.6% and the STOXX 600 on course for its best session in a year. Oil prices cratered, with Brent crude falling more than 15% to below $94/barrel and WTI losing close to 20% — reversing weeks of war-driven gains. This oil price collapse is a significant fundamental shift: it reduces inflationary pressure from energy costs, potentially unlocking a faster path to central bank rate cuts, particularly from the Fed and Bank of England.
FOMC Minutes — The Secondary Catalyst (18:00 GMT Today)
The Federal Reserve will release minutes from its March FOMC meeting at 13:30 ET (18:30 GMT) today. With the ceasefire potentially easing oil-driven inflation, the minutes’ tone on the timing of rate cuts has taken on added significance. Markets will focus on two questions: how divided is the committee on the next cut timing, and how were members assessing energy price inflation before the ceasefire was announced? Minutes that reveal multiple members leaning toward cutting at the next meeting would accelerate the risk-on rally. Hawkish minutes — showing sustained concern about price pressures — could limit the upside, particularly for the more interest-rate-sensitive Dow Jones components.
Sector Rotation — Winners and Losers from the Ceasefire
The sectoral impact of the ceasefire is decisive and immediate. Airlines, travel, banks, housebuilders, and industrials are the primary beneficiaries — International Airlines Group surged 5.7% on the FTSE 100, easyJet added 5%, and Barclays, Lloyds, and NatWest each gained over 5%. The logic is straightforward: lower oil prices reduce input costs for airlines; lower inflation improves consumer confidence for banks and discretionary spending; falling energy prices ease the squeeze on corporate margins broadly. However, energy stocks are the clear losers — BP fell 8.3% and Shell dropped 7.3% on the FTSE 100 as crude prices collapsed. Traders must account for this bifurcation when assessing index-level moves: the net gain in the FTSE 100 understates the magnitude of the underlying sector rotation.
Index-by-Index Technical & Fundamental Analysis
Fundamental View
The FTSE 100 is today’s standout index market performer. The UK’s blue-chip benchmark has surged 2.38% to 10,594.84, its highest level since early March, driven by an explosive rotation into airlines, banks, miners, and travel stocks. The FTSE 100’s heavy weighting toward financials, energy, travel, and industrials makes it uniquely sensitive to geopolitical risk-on catalysts — exactly the environment created by today’s Iran-US ceasefire.
The structural case for FTSE 100 outperformance is compelling. The UK maintains a relatively insulated position from direct US tariff exposure compared to continental Europe — the UK-US framework maintains a 10% reciprocal cap, providing certainty that European rivals lack. The Bank of England is holding rates at 4.5%, but the collapse in oil prices removes a key inflationary input that had been complicating the MPC’s rate-cut calculus. Traders now price just one BoE hike for the remainder of 2026, compared to two or three previously — a dovish re-pricing that supports UK equity valuations.
The primary risks are the ceasefire’s fragility and Berkeley Group’s sector-specific shock (down 9.7% after halting land purchases), which signals that the UK housing market is suffering tangible war damage that a two-week truce may not quickly reverse.
Technical Structure
The FTSE 100 daily chart has produced a decisive breakout candle. From Tuesday’s close at 10,348.79, the index surged to an intraday high of 10,655.92 and is currently trading at 10,594.84 — a 2.38% gain that has reclaimed the key 0.236 Fibonacci retracement level at 10,579.03. This is a technically significant development: the 0.236 Fib had been acting as resistance through late March and early April, and today’s close above it signals that the corrective phase from the February high at 10,938.09 may be complete.
The RSI is recovering sharply from oversold territory, with the fast RSI line (61.20) crossing back above the slow (44.32) — a bullish momentum signal. The next major Fibonacci resistance is the 0.382 level at 10,356.90, which the index has already surpassed, and then the critical 0.5 Fib at 10,177.36. The longer-term target for bulls is a retest of the Fib top at 10,938.09. On the downside, a return below the 0.236 Fib (10,579.03) would invalidate the breakout and expose the index to a retest of the 0.382 Fib at 10,356.90.
Key Fibonacci Levels: Fib top (0 level) at 10,938.09 is the bull target. Resistance at the 0.236 Fib (10,579.03) now flipping to support. Base (1 level) at 9,416.64 is the ultimate bear target if structure breaks.
FTSE 100 · DAILY CHART · Apr 8, 2026 · CSFX-RESEARCH via TradingView
The FTSE 100 has delivered the cleanest technical setup of the three indices today. The reclaim of the 0.236 Fibonacci level (10,579.03) on a strong breakout candle, combined with an RSI bullish cross and a clear fundamental catalyst, sets the stage for a continuation toward the Fib top at 10,938.09. The optimal strategy is to enter on any pullback to the reclaimed 0.236 Fib zone (10,420–10,579) with a stop below 10,200 and a target at the 0 Fib level (10,938). The 2.4:1 risk-reward makes this the best index trade of the day.
| Level | Price | Type | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fib 0 (Top) | 10,938.09 | Resistance | February high — primary bull target |
| Fib 0.236 | 10,579.03 | Now Support | Key breakout level — reclaimed today |
| Current Price | 10,594.84 | — | Today’s level — above 0.236 Fib |
| Fib 0.382 | 10,356.90 | Support | Secondary support — Tuesday’s close zone |
| Fib 0.5 | 10,177.36 | Support | Mid-range support — below recent lows |
| Fib 0.618 | 9,997.83 | Major Support | Psychological 10,000 zone — critical floor |
| Fib 1 (Base) | 9,416.64 | Major Support | Fibonacci base — ultimate downside if structure breaks |
The FTSE 100 has reclaimed the 0.236 Fibonacci level (10,579.03) with a decisive 2.38% breakout candle on the back of the Iran ceasefire. The setup targets the Fib top at 10,938.09 — a 518-point profit target against a 220-point stop (R/R 2.4:1). Entry on a pullback to the reclaimed 0.236 Fib zone (10,420) keeps the entry inside support. Invalidation below 10,200 (below the 0.382 Fib) signals the breakout has failed. The RSI bullish cross, sector rotation into airlines and banks, and BoE rate re-pricing all provide fundamental confirmation of the technical signal.
Fundamental View
The S&P 500 eked out a slim +0.08% gain on Tuesday as markets held their breath ahead of Trump’s 8 p.m. deadline. The index closed at 6,616.85 — still above the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement at 6,577.82, a technically important hold. With futures now up 2.5% pre-market on the ceasefire announcement, the S&P 500 is poised to open substantially higher on Wednesday, targeting the 0.5 Fib at 6,659.75 and potentially the 0.618 Fib at 6,741.67.
The fundamental backdrop for US equities is complex. On the positive side, the ceasefire removes the immediate catastrophic tail risk of a full-scale Middle East war escalation, which had been the primary driver of risk-off flows since late February. The collapse in oil prices reduces inflationary pressure, which had been constraining the Fed’s ability to cut rates. UBS lowered its S&P 500 year-end target ahead of the ceasefire — any upward revision from major banks as peace talks advance would provide additional tailwind. Durable goods orders fell 1.4% for February (worse than the -0.5% forecast), signalling that business investment was already being hit by war uncertainty — a number that could revise higher if peace talks progress.
The critical caveat is that Tuesday’s slim gain — achieved at the session lows, with the index recovering only in the final hour — illustrates how thin the risk appetite was even before the ceasefire. The S&P 500 needs a convincing daily close above the 0.5 Fib (6,659.75) to confirm that the bear structure from the 7,006.87 high has been broken.
Technical Structure
The S&P 500 daily chart shows a critical battleground near the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement at 6,577.82. The index closed at 6,616.85 on Tuesday — above the 0.382 Fib, but only barely, having dipped to an intraday low of 6,534.55 during the session. This intraday violation and recovery of the 0.382 Fib is a meaningful signal: it shows that buyers are defending this level, but not with overwhelming conviction.
The fast RSI (48.50) has recovered from deeply oversold levels but remains below 50, while the slow RSI (38.13) has not yet crossed above — confirming that the index is in recovery mode but not yet in a confirmed uptrend. The descending channel from the January 7,006.87 high remains technically intact: a daily close above the 0.5 Fib (6,659.75) is the minimum requirement to declare a genuine reversal. Above there, the 0.618 Fib at 6,741.67 is the next meaningful resistance. The 0.236 Fib at 6,476.46 is the critical downside level — a break below it would signal that today’s ceasefire rally has failed and the bear structure is resuming.
Key Fibonacci Levels: Resistance at 6,659.75 (0.5 Fib), 6,741.67 (0.618 Fib), 6,858 (0.786 Fib). Support at 6,577.82 (0.382 Fib), 6,476.46 (0.236 Fib), 6,312.62 (Fib base).
S&P 500 · DAILY CHART · Apr 8, 2026 · CSFX-RESEARCH via TradingView
The S&P 500 is at a pivotal technical juncture. The hold of the 0.382 Fib (6,577.82) on Tuesday, combined with the pre-market futures surge of 2.5% on the ceasefire, sets up the critical test: can the index close above the 0.5 Fib at 6,659.75 on a daily basis? If yes, the bear channel from January is broken and the next target is 6,741.67 (0.618 Fib). If the index fails to close above 6,659.75 and rolls back below 6,577.82, the ceasefire rally is a dead-cat bounce and bears retain control. The entry strategy is to buy on any pullback to the 0.382 Fib zone (6,590–6,600) with a stop at 6,510 and a target at 6,742.
| Level | Price | Type | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fib 1 (Top) | 7,006.87 | Resistance | January high — bull campaign origin |
| Fib 0.786 | 6,858.33 | Resistance | Deep retracement resistance |
| Fib 0.618 | 6,741.67 | Resistance | Key recovery target — secondary goal |
| Fib 0.5 | 6,659.75 | Resistance | Bull confirmation level — must close above |
| Current Price | 6,616.85 | — | Tuesday close — above 0.382 Fib |
| Fib 0.382 | 6,577.82 | Support | Key support — Tuesday’s defence zone |
| Fib 0.236 | 6,476.46 | Support | Secondary support — bear accelerator if broken |
| Fib 0 (Base) | 6,312.62 | Major Support | Fibonacci base — ultimate downside |
The S&P 500 defended the 0.382 Fib (6,577.82) on Tuesday with a recovery in the final hour of trading, and pre-market futures are surging 2.5% on the ceasefire. Entry at 6,590 (just above the 0.382 Fib) with a stop at 6,510 (below the 0.236 Fib) and a target at the 0.618 Fib (6,742) provides a 1.9:1 risk-reward. The key confirmation signal is a daily cash close above the 0.5 Fib at 6,659.75 — traders should watch this level at the New York close as the definitive decision point. FOMC minutes at 13:30 ET are the session’s remaining swing catalyst.
Fundamental View
The Dow Jones was the weakest of the three major US indices on Tuesday, shedding 85.42 points (-0.18%) to close at 46,584.46 as the broad equity market trod water ahead of Trump’s Iran deadline. The index has been under sustained pressure since its January peak at 50,509.37, with the Fibonacci retracement structure revealing a clear distribution from the highs. Tuesday’s session saw the index dip to an intraday low of 46,214.77 before recovering, indicating persistent selling pressure even as the rest of the market was cautiously optimistic.
The Dow’s underperformance relative to the S&P 500 and FTSE 100 reflects its composition: the 30-component blue-chip index has heavy exposure to industrial and financial names that were more acutely impacted by war-related supply chain disruptions. With Dow futures jumping 1,100+ points pre-market on the ceasefire, the index is set for a sharp gap open — but the technical structure requires confirmation above the 0.236 Fib at 46,316.41 and ideally a close above 47,000 before aggressively buying. The RSI fast line (46.43) and slow line (36.59) have not yet crossed — confirmation of the momentum shift is still pending.
Key upcoming catalysts include the FOMC minutes this afternoon and Friday’s US CPI print — both of which will shape the Fed’s rate path outlook and disproportionately affect Dow components in financial and rate-sensitive sectors.
Technical Structure
The Dow Jones daily chart shows the index in a well-defined Fibonacci retracement structure from the January high at 50,509.37 to a base at 45,021.20. The current price of 46,584.46 sits between the 0.236 Fib (46,316.41) and the 0.382 Fib (47,117.68) — a no-man’s-land zone that requires a directional resolution. Tuesday’s trading saw the index briefly test below the 0.236 Fib (low of 46,214.77) before recovering — a technically important bounce that preserves the bullish case.
For bulls, the roadmap is clear: a close above the 0.382 Fib at 47,117.68 would be the first meaningful technical confirmation of a recovery. Above there, the 0.5 Fib at 47,765.29 and 0.618 Fib at 48,412.89 are the next targets. The EMAs (50 at 48,096.56 and 200 at 48,067.21) are converging and currently price is well below both — clearing the EMA cluster is a longer-term requirement for a full bull reversal. The RSI (fast: 46.43, slow: 36.59) has not confirmed a bullish cross yet, making this the least technically confirmed of the three setups.
Key Fibonacci Levels: Resistance at 47,117.68 (0.382 Fib), 47,765.29 (0.5 Fib), 48,412.89 (0.618 Fib). Support at 46,316.41 (0.236 Fib), 45,021.20 (Fib base).
DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE · DAILY CHART · Apr 8, 2026 · CSFX-RESEARCH via TradingView
The Dow Jones is the weakest technical setup of the three indices today. While the pre-market futures surge of 1,100+ points on the ceasefire is significant, the daily chart still shows the index below its 50 and 200 EMAs, with an RSI that has not confirmed a bullish cross. The intraday hold of the 0.236 Fib (46,316.41) on Tuesday is encouraging but insufficient alone. The optimal approach is patience: wait for a confirmed daily close above the 0.382 Fib (47,117.68) — which would represent the first meaningful Fibonacci level reclaim in several weeks — before adding to long positions. Entry on a pullback to 46,400 provides an attractive risk-reward if the 0.382 Fib ultimately yields.
| Level | Price | Type | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fib 1 (Top) | 50,509.37 | Resistance | January high — campaign origin |
| Fib 0.786 | 49,304.00 | Resistance | Deep retracement — EMA cluster zone |
| Fib 0.618 | 48,412.89 | Resistance | EMA convergence — major recovery target |
| Fib 0.5 | 47,765.29 | Resistance | Midpoint — intermediate bull target |
| Fib 0.382 | 47,117.68 | Resistance | Key breakout level — minimum bull confirmation |
| Current Price | 46,584.46 | — | Tuesday close — between 0.236 and 0.382 Fib |
| Fib 0.236 | 46,316.41 | Support | Key support — Tuesday intraday hold |
| Fib 0 (Base) | 45,021.20 | Major Support | Fibonacci base — ultimate bear target |
The Dow Jones defended the 0.236 Fib (46,316.41) on an intraday basis Tuesday, and pre-market futures are surging 1,100+ points. Entry at 46,400 (just above the 0.236 Fib) with a stop at 45,800 (below the Fib base zone) and a target at the 0.5 Fib (47,765) gives a 2.3:1 risk-reward. However, this is the lowest-conviction setup of the three — the RSI has not confirmed a bullish cross, and the index is still below both major EMAs. Traders with lower risk tolerance should wait for a confirmed close above the 0.382 Fib (47,117.68) before entering, sacrificing some upside in exchange for a higher-probability signal.
Traders’ Questions — April 8, 2026
Today’s Index Market Conclusion — April 8, 2026
The global index market has undergone its most significant single-day shift in weeks. The US-Iran two-week ceasefire — agreed just minutes before Trump’s deadline — has unleashed a powerful relief rally across all major indices. The FTSE 100 is the standout performer, surging 2.38% to 10,594.84 and reclaiming the critical 0.236 Fibonacci level with a strong breakout candle supported by RSI confirmation and massive sector rotation into airlines, banks, and travel. S&P 500 futures are up 2.5% and Dow Jones futures have surged over 1,100 points pre-market, setting up a major gap open for the US session.
The FTSE 100 is today’s top setup — the technical structure is the most confirmed, the fundamental backdrop is the most compelling (sector rotation + BoE rate re-pricing), and the Fibonacci entry zone (pullback to 10,420) against the Fib top target (10,938) offers a 2.4:1 risk-reward. The S&P 500 provides a solid secondary opportunity targeting the 0.618 Fib (6,742), contingent on a daily close above the 0.5 Fib at 6,659.75. The Dow Jones requires the most patience — confirm the 0.382 Fib break (47,117) before full commitment.
The critical caveat for all three setups: the two-week ceasefire is a framework, not a resolution. Both sides claim victory, talks begin Friday in Pakistan, and the Lebanon dimension remains unresolved. Any deterioration in negotiations within the two-week window would immediately reverse today’s rally. Maintain defined stops at the Fibonacci levels specified, watch the FOMC minutes at 13:30 ET for the secondary catalyst, and stay alert to ceasefire headline risk through the Asian session.