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Global Index Market Analysis | March 13, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100

March 13, 2026
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Global Index Market Analysis | March 13, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100
Est. Market Intelligence friday, march 13, 2026  ·  session report no. 2026–072 professional traders edition
Global Index Monitor
Technical Intelligence & Trade Strategy for Active Index Traders
Vol. IV · Issue 13 Dow Jones  ·  S&P 500  ·  FTSE 100 Analysis compiled 06:00 GMT
Global Index Market Verdict March 13 2026
⚑ HIGH ALERT: Iran-driven oil shock active — Brent crude above $100/bbl·Markets at 2026 YTD lows·UK GDP & US PCE due today·Volatility elevated
Friday, March 13, 2026 — Morning Intelligence Brief

Thursday’s session delivered one of the sharpest single-day losses of 2026 as geopolitical risk from the Middle East moved from an abstract tail risk into a market-defining structural force. Iran’s newly appointed Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei declared that the Strait of Hormuz — the world’s most critical oil transit chokepoint — should remain shut as a tool of pressure against Western rivals. His statements, broadcast live on Iranian state television, sent Brent crude above $100 per barrel for the first time since August 2022 and ignited a broad-based equity selloff. Friday opens with futures attempting a modest recovery, but every experienced trader on the floor understands the same uncomfortable truth: this is not over yet.

Dow Jones Industrial Average
46,677
▼ −739.42 pts  (−1.56%) Thu Close
Futures: +149 pts (+0.32%) pre-market Fri
S&P 500 Index
6,672
▼ −103.10 pts  (−1.52%) Thu Close
Futures: +0.25% pre-market Fri
FTSE 100 Index
10,293
▼ −61 pts  (−0.59%) Thu Close
Futures: Cautious; UK GDP data awaited
Brent Crude Oil
$100.46
▲ +$8.47  (+9.22%) First $100 close since Aug 2022
WTI at $95.73 (+9.72%)
VIX (Fear Index)
Elevated
Risk sentiment: Heightened concern
Energy shock + Fed uncertainty compounding
Key Forex
USD ↑
Safe-haven flows dominating
GBP/USD under pressure; JPY firmer
What Happened Thursday

All three major U.S. averages posted their worst closes of 2026. The Dow broke below the psychologically critical 47,000 level for the first time this year — a threshold that previously acted as strong support. The selling was broad-based: energy, banks, airlines, and consumer discretionary all came under pressure. Goldman Sachs dropped 4.47%, Boeing fell 4.29%, and 3M shed 3.91%, leading Dow decliners.

The FTSE 100 fared somewhat better on a percentage basis, cushioned by gains in energy names like BP and Shell which rose roughly 3% each on surging oil prices. However, banks took a hit — HSBC fell 6.1% after going ex-dividend alongside broker notes flagging its Middle East exposure. Barclays, Standard Chartered, Lloyds, and NatWest declined between 2–5%.

The Iran Variable — What Traders Need to Know

Mojtaba Khamenei, appointed Supreme Leader on March 9 following the death of Ali Khamenei, escalated his rhetoric materially in Thursday’s statement — threatening that all US military bases in the region “will be attacked” if not evacuated. The Strait of Hormuz handles approximately 20% of global oil trade. Even partial disruption represents a structural supply shock.

Morgan Stanley’s Chris Toomey warned that sustained Hormuz impairment beyond two to three months “becomes a real problem.” Wells Fargo’s worst-case model puts the S&P 500 at 6,000 if oil remains in triple digits — a 10% drawdown from current levels. JPMorgan’s trading desk has already flagged that risk. Conversely, Wells Fargo’s base case remains S&P 500 at 7,500 by year-end.

“You’ve got the AI buildout, you’ve got private credit… and this energy situation. I think the energy situation is the thing that we’re most concerned about. If we see sustained Hormuz impairment beyond two or three months, that becomes a real problem.”

— Chris Toomey, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley Private Wealth Management
High-Impact Events — Friday, March 13, 2026

The calendar today is consequential. UK January GDP prints at 07:00 GMT — a confirmed release date per the ONS — alongside the US PCE inflation index, the second estimate of Q4 US GDP, and the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index for March. Each of these has the potential to move index markets materially, particularly in the context of elevated geopolitical risk.

🇺🇸 United States — HIGH IMPACT
Core PCE Price Index (Jan) HIGH Forecast: +0.3% MoM / ~3.1% YoY
Prev: +0.2% MoM / 3.0% YoY
PCE Price Index (Jan) HIGH Forecast: +0.3% MoM
Fed’s preferred inflation gauge
GDP Q4 2025 — 2nd Estimate HIGH Advance est. revised
Prior advance: ~2.2% annualised
JOLTS Job Openings (Jan) MED Labour market indicator
Labor conditions softening
UoM Consumer Sentiment (Mar, prelim) HIGH Forecast: Sharp decline expected
Feb final: 56.6
Personal Income & Spending (Jan) MED Spending gauge for Fed
Prior +0.5% MoM
🇬🇧 United Kingdom — HIGH IMPACT
GDP Monthly Estimate (Jan 2026) HIGH Forecast: +0.3% MoM
Prev: +0.1% MoM (Dec)
Industrial Production (Jan) MED Manufacturing sector gauge
BoE watching closely
Trade Balance (Jan) MED Prev deficit: £15.7bn (3-mo to Dec)
Trade disruption from Hormuz
BoE Rate Path Expectations INFO Rate at 3.75% · Mkt: 5bps for Mar
Oil shock postponing cuts to Apr/May
🇯🇵 Japan — MEDIUM IMPACT
GDP Q4 2025 — Final MED Final revision to Q4 data
BoJ impact on JPY
Household Spending (Jan) MED Domestic demand indicator
Nikkei sensitivity: moderate
BOJ Policy Outlook INFO Safe-haven JPY strengthening
Geopolitical flows into yen
🇪🇺 Eurozone — MEDIUM IMPACT
Eurozone Industrial Production (Jan) MED Manufacturing sector read
Energy costs rising for industry
Fitch Sovereign Review: Italy & Spain MED Credit rating assessment
Peripheral spread sensitivity
Moody’s Review: Germany & Greece MED DAX and EUR sensitivity
Post-defence spending review
🇨🇳 China — MEDIUM IMPACT
CPI (Feb) — already released MED Actual: modest rebound to ~0.4% YoY
Prev: 0.2% YoY — Lunar NY effects
PPI (Feb) — already released MED Forecast: −1.3% YoY (40th mth deflation)
Commodity price support partial
NPC Session Continues (to Mar 13) INFO 2026 GDP target: 4.5–5%
CPI target maintained at ~2%
🇦🇺 Australia — LOW IMPACT TODAY
Westpac Consumer Confidence (Mar) LOW Consumer mood tracker
RBA rate path sensitivity
NAB Business Confidence (Feb) LOW Business conditions read
AUD tracking oil & risk sentiment
RBA Commentary INFO Energy price pass-through risk
AUD: commodity currency under watch

Today’s US Core PCE reading carries outsized weight. If it prints at or above 3.1% YoY — with Brent crude sitting at $100 — the market will be forced to price out any prospect of a Federal Reserve rate cut in 2026. That is the single most bearish catalyst possible for equities right now.

— Macro synthesis, Global Index Monitor, March 13, 2026
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA  ·  YM  ·  DIA  ·  US30
46,677.85
▼ −739.42  (−1.56%)  Thu, Mar 12 Close
Pre-Mkt Fri: ~46,827 (+0.32%)
Dow Jones Daily Chart CSFX TradingView
DJIA · 1D · TVC · Fibonacci: 45,687–50,525 · Current 46,677 · 0.236 49,383 · 0.382 48,677 · 0.786 46,722
Trend Analysis

The Dow is in a confirmed short-term downtrend following its break below the 47,000 psychological level — a barrier that had held since the beginning of 2026. This is the first sub-47K close of the year and represents a significant technical deterioration. The medium-term trend structure, which had been bullish since late-2025, is now under material stress. The index has declined from a peak of approximately 50,000 in early February to sub-47,000 — a drawdown of over 6%.

On the longer monthly timeframe, the Dow retains its broader bull market structure only so long as it holds above the 45,000–46,000 region. A sustained break here would open the path toward Fibonacci extension support near the 44,500 zone.

Key Technical Levels
LevelPriceTypeSignificance
Resistance 147,417ResistancePrior Wed close / overhead supply zone
Resistance 248,100Strong ResKey Orbex-identified supply area
Resistance 348,700–48,800Major ResFeb consolidation range top
Current46,677Close2026 YTD low close
Support 146,000–46,200SupportJan 2026 support zone
Support 245,000Strong SupPsychological level + trend line
Support 344,500Major SupFibonacci extension / 2025 base area
Technical Indicators
RSI (14-day)~34–38 (Approaching Oversold)Caution
MACDNegative divergence wideningBearish
20-day SMA~48,200 (Price below)Bearish
50-day SMA~47,800 (Price below)Bearish
200-day SMA~45,500 (Distant support)Positive LT
VolumeAbove average (sell volume)Bearish
ADX>25 (Trend strengthening)Bear Trend
Bollinger BandsPrice at lower bandOversold Risk
Stochastic (14,3,3)Below 20 (Oversold territory)Watch
Candlestick Patterns (Recent)

Thursday’s daily candle formed a long bearish marubozu — a large red body with minimal wicks — confirming decisive seller control throughout the session. This pattern, appearing after a sequence of lower highs and lower lows, reinforces the bearish thesis. The pattern is made more significant by the fact that it closed at session lows without a meaningful wick below, suggesting no strong buyer support emerged even at these levels.

The prior week’s pattern sequence shows: a bearish engulfing on March 9–10, confirming the reversal from the 47,700 area, followed by a gap-down open on Thursday consistent with aggressive institutional distribution.

📋 Trade Setup — Dow Jones (Active Traders Only · Manage Risk)
Scenario A — Bearish Continuation (Primary)
Bias
SHORT
Entry Zone
47,000–47,417
Stop Loss
47,800
Target 1
46,000
Target 2
45,000
Trigger
Rejection at 47,417
Risk/Reward
~1:2.5
Probability
Elevated (geopolitical)

Rationale: Oil at $100+ with sticky PCE data will drive rate-cut expectations lower, pressuring equities further. Sell into any Friday bounce toward 47,000–47,400 resistance zone. Avoid holding short into volatile news prints (PCE, UoM).

Scenario B — Bounce / Mean Reversion (Conditional)
Bias
LONG (Tactual)
Entry Zone
46,000–46,200
Stop Loss
45,600
Target
47,000–47,400
Trigger
Dovish PCE + Hormuz news
Condition
RSI below 30 + hammer candle
Risk/Reward
~1:2
Timeframe
Intraday / 1-2 day

Rationale: RSI approaching oversold territory + market at 2026 lows creates potential for a relief rally. Only valid if PCE comes in soft AND geopolitical headlines ease. Use tight stops. Do not hold over the weekend.

S&P 500 Index (SPX)
S&P 500 Index
SPX  ·  ES  ·  SPY  ·  US500
6,672.62
▼ −103.10  (−1.52%)  Thu, Mar 12 Close
Pre-Mkt Fri: ~6,689 (+0.25%)
S&P 500 Daily Chart CSFX TradingView
S&P 500 · 1D · SPCFD · Fibonacci: 6,518–7,005 · Current 6,672 · 0.618 6,704 · 0.786 6,622 · RSI 35.44
Trend Analysis

The S&P 500 has entered a confirmed short-to-medium term downtrend, having broken below its 20-period SMA at 6,856 and now testing critical support at the 6,650–6,750 zone. This region was previously identified as the line in the sand between a corrective pullback and a deeper structural deterioration.

Investing.com’s daily technical signal reads Strong Sell, with moving averages from MA5 to MA200 showing 10 sell signals vs. only 2 buy signals. The index has posted its lowest close of 2026, down from the February peak of approximately 7,100. Wells Fargo economists have placed a worst-case target of 6,000 in the event of sustained triple-digit oil prices — a level that now seems less hypothetical and more actionable for risk managers.

Key Technical Levels
LevelPriceTypeSignificance
Major Resistance6,856Strong Res20-day SMA — must reclaim for bull case
Resistance 16,775–6,800ResistanceMar 11 close / prior week support turned resistance
Current Close6,672Close2026 YTD low — key decision zone
Support 16,650–6,700Key SupportBulls must hold this zone or trend fails
Support 26,500Strong Sup50-week EMA — major long-term support
Bear Target6,000Worst CaseWells Fargo oil-shock scenario
Bull Base Case7,500YE TargetWells Fargo base forecast for end-2026
Technical Indicators
RSI (14-day)~32–36 (Near Oversold)Caution
MACDBearish crossover confirmedStrong Sell
20-day SMA~6,856 (Price well below)Bearish
50-day SMA~6,750 (Price testing)Bearish
200-day SMA~6,200–6,300 (Distant)LT Support
Moving Averages (All)10 Sell / 2 Buy signalsStrong Sell
Pivot Point (Fib)~6,730Neutral zone
ATR (Volatility)Elevated — high daily rangeRisk High
StochasticBelow 20 — oversold regimeWatch Bounce
Candlestick Patterns (Recent)

Thursday printed a large bearish engulfing candle on the daily chart — the second consecutive session with a body that fully eclipsed the prior candle’s range. This two-candle sequence is one of the most reliable reversal/continuation signals in technical analysis and, in the context of a pre-existing downtrend, strongly favours continued selling pressure.

Of note: the S&P also printed a three-black-crows pattern across the March 10–12 sequence (three consecutive bearish sessions with progressively lower closes), which is a high-probability continuation pattern in bear phases. This warrants extreme caution for long-side traders in the near term.

Downside Risk Level (24h)HIGH — Geopolitical + Inflation Combo
📋 Trade Setup — S&P 500 (Active Traders Only · Manage Risk)
Scenario A — Bearish (Primary) — Sell the Bounce
Bias
SHORT
Entry Zone
6,750–6,856
Stop Loss
6,920
Target 1
6,500
Target 2
6,300
Trigger
Bounce fails at 6,750–6,856
Risk/Reward
~1:2.5 to 1:3
Probability
High given indicators

Core rationale: All major MAs are pointing downward. PCE above 3.1% would remove Fed cut prospects. Brent at $100+ creates stagflationary risk. Sell any relief rally that fails to reclaim the 20-day SMA at 6,856.

Scenario B — Dip Buy (Conditional — High Risk)
Bias
LONG (Scalp)
Entry Zone
6,600–6,650
Stop Loss
6,540
Target
6,750–6,800
Trigger
RSI <30 + bullish wick
Condition
Soft PCE + Hormuz easing
Risk/Reward
~1:1.5 to 1:2
Note
DO NOT hold over weekend

Oversold bounce potential exists only if conditions align. This is a tactual, time-limited setup — not a structural long. Weekend geopolitical risk remains extreme.

FTSE 100 Index (UKX)
FTSE 100 Index
UKX  ·  UK100  ·  Z  ·  ISF
10,293
▼ −61 pts  (−0.59%)  Thu, Mar 12 Close
52-Wk Range: 7,544.80 – 10,934.90
FTSE 100 Daily Chart CSFX TradingView
FTSE 100 · 1D · FTSE · Fibonacci: 9,419–10,937 · Current 10,257 · 0.236 10,579 · 0.382 10,357 · 0.5 10,178

The FTSE 100 is a split personality index right now. Its heavy energy weighting makes it partially insulated from the oil shock that’s crushing US equities — BP and Shell are both up on the week. But its banks, airlines, and housebuilders are taking a beating. Net-net, it’s underperforming its own year-to-date trend but massively outperforming Wall Street in relative terms.

— Global Index Monitor Desk Analysis, March 13, 2026
Trend Analysis

The FTSE 100 is in a short-term downtrend after pulling back from its 2026 high of 10,934.90 set on February 27. Despite Thursday’s decline, the daily and weekly signals on Investing.com remain Strong Buy — a reflection of the index’s long-term structural strength. The 5-day MA is at 10,224, the 50-day at 10,177, and the 200-day at 9,987, all below current price, reinforcing that the longer-term trend remains constructive.

TradingView analysts are divided: one school sees the FTSE in a bearish continuation below the key 10,320 level; another sees the current move as a higher-low setup within the broader uptrend. The key battleground is the 10,180–10,250 support zone. A hold there maintains the bull structure; a break below opens 9,987 (200-day SMA).

Key Technical Levels
LevelPriceTypeSignificance
ATH / 2026 High10,934Major ResFeb 27 all-time high
Resistance 110,475–10,500ResistanceRecent consolidation ceiling
Resistance 210,320Key LevelCurrent bear camp supply zone (TradingView)
Current Close10,293CloseBelow 10,320 — bears in control ST
Support 110,180–10,250SupportKey demand zone / TradingView long entry area
5-day MA10,224MADynamic support
50-day MA10,177MAMedium-term support
200-day MA9,987MALong-term floor — major support
Fib Pivot10,221PivotFibonacci pivot point
Technical Indicators
RSI (14-day)59.3 (Neutral-Bullish)Buy
MACD+14.01 (Positive)Buy
5-day SMA10,224 (Price just below)Buy
50-day SMA10,177 (Price above)Buy
200-day SMA9,987 (Price well above)Buy
Moving Averages (All)12 Buy / 0 SellStrong Buy
Weekly SignalStrong BuyStrong Buy
Monthly SignalStrong BuyStrong Buy
Hourly SignalBuyBuy
Volatility (ATR)Moderate — energy sector splitMonitor
Candlestick Patterns (Recent)

Thursday’s session formed a bearish spinning top candle — a small-bodied candle with wicks on both sides, reflecting indecision at a pivotal zone. This is a potentially meaningful pattern at the 10,290–10,320 support-resistance junction. A bearish spinning top at resistance typically signals an impending further move lower, particularly if Friday opens weak.

However, if Friday prints a bullish hammer or morning star pattern at the 10,180–10,250 support zone, this would represent a compelling long entry confirmation consistent with the longer-term Strong Buy signals across all major MAs. The UK GDP data at 07:00 GMT will be the catalyst that determines which of these setups materialises.

FTSE-Specific Fundamental Drivers Today
TAILWIND

BP (+3%) and Shell (+2.6%) outperforming — energy names benefit from $100 oil. BAE Systems +3.1% on defence spending tailwinds. Energy & utilities sector acting as defensive anchor.

HEADWIND

HSBC −6.1% (ex-div + ME exposure), Barclays/StanChart −2–5%. Airlines (EasyJet, IAG) down on fuel costs + travel disruption. Housebuilders weak on rate hike fears.

CATALYST

UK Jan GDP at 07:00 GMT — forecast +0.3% MoM. Strong print could lift FTSE; disappointment below +0.1% would weigh heavily. BoE rate path reassessment post-data critical.

📋 Trade Setup — FTSE 100 (Active Traders Only · Manage Risk)
Scenario A — Bullish Bounce (Primary — Long-Term Bias)
Bias
LONG
Entry Zone
10,180–10,250
Stop Loss
10,100
Target 1
10,475–10,500
Target 2
10,640–10,700
Trigger
GDP +0.3% + hammer candle
Risk/Reward
~1:2.5 to 1:3.5
Probability
Moderate-High (LT bull)

Rationale: All major MA signals are Strong Buy. RSI at 59 shows no overbought risk. GDP beat would confirm UK recovery narrative. Energy exposure provides natural hedge vs. US indices. TradingView analyst scenario aligns.

Scenario B — Bearish Continuation (If 10,180 Breaks)
Bias
SHORT
Entry Zone
10,305 rejection
Stop Loss
10,460
Target
10,180
Extended Target
10,000–9,987
Trigger
GDP miss + bank selling
Risk/Reward
~1:1.8
Stop is 10,460

Based on TradingView H1 pullback resistance analysis: price rejected at 10,305.81. A weak GDP print below +0.1% would validate this setup. Extended target near 10,000 aligns with 200-day SMA.

Cross-Index Signal Matrix — March 13, 2026
Index Close (Thu) ST Trend MT Trend RSI MA Signal Candlestick Key Pattern Primary Bias
Dow Jones (DJIA) 46,677.85 Bearish Bearish ~34–38 Strong Sell Bearish Marubozu 3-Black Crows + Break 47K SHORT (bounce)
S&P 500 (SPX) 6,672.62 Bearish Bearish ~32–36 Strong Sell Bearish Engulfing 3-Black Crows + Below 20MA SHORT (bounce)
FTSE 100 (UKX) 10,293 Cautious Bullish 59.3 Strong Buy Spinning Top (Indecision) Testing 10,250 support zone LONG (support)
Index Bull Entry Bull Target Bull Stop Bear Entry Bear Target Bear Stop Best Setup Today
Dow Jones 46,000–46,200 47,000–47,400 45,600 47,000–47,417 46,000 → 45,000 47,800 Sell Rally to 47,000–47,417
S&P 500 6,600–6,650 6,750–6,800 6,540 6,750–6,856 6,500 → 6,300 6,920 Sell Rally to 6,750–6,856
FTSE 100 10,180–10,250 10,475 → 10,640 10,100 10,305 rejection 10,180 → 9,987 10,460 Buy at 10,180–10,250 support
The Bigger Picture: What’s Driving Markets Right Now
Iran-Hormuz Crisis — Market Impact Matrix
ScenarioOil PriceS&P 500 ImpactProbability
Hormuz reopens (30 days)$75–80+5–8% relief25%
Prolonged closure (60–90d)$110–130−8–12%45%
Escalation / US strike$130–150−12–18%20%
Diplomatic resolution$60–70+10–15%10%

The IEA’s emergency release of 400 million barrels — the largest coordinated reserve deployment in history — failed to dent Brent’s climb above $100. This tells experienced traders something important: the market’s concern is not about immediate supply but about structural uncertainty. As long as Khamenei’s statements remain hawkish, the risk premium on oil will stay elevated.

Federal Reserve — Policy Path Recalibration

The oil shock has effectively ended near-term prospects for Federal Reserve rate cuts. Prior to the Iran crisis, markets were pricing approximately 50 basis points of cuts for 2026. Following Thursday’s developments and the PPI data earlier in the week showing above-forecast wholesale price growth, traders have collapsed their cut expectations to near-zero for any meeting before May 2026 — with some desks now pricing zero cuts for the full year if oil sustains triple digits.

President Trump publicly called on Powell to cut rates “IMMEDIATELY” in a Truth Social post Thursday — adding political pressure to an already tense policy environment. This divergence between the Executive’s desire for cheap money and the Fed’s inflation mandate will continue to create market volatility.

US February NFP Context

The February jobs report, released earlier this week, showed the economy lost 92,000 jobs — well below the forecast of +59,000 and a dramatic reversal from January’s +126,000. Two-month net revisions totalled −69,000. This softening labour market, combined with sticky inflation from energy, creates a classic stagflationary risk environment — the most difficult macro backdrop for equity investors.

Trader FAQ — March 13, 2026 Session
Is now a good time to buy the dip in US indices like the Dow and S&P 500?
Only with extreme caution and strict risk management. While the RSI on both the Dow and S&P 500 is approaching oversold territory, which creates a mechanical bounce potential, the macro backdrop remains deeply hostile. With oil at $100, core PCE tracking above 3%, and the Fed unable to cut rates without risking further inflation, there is no fundamental catalyst to support a sustained rally. Any dip-buying should be treated as a short-term intraday or 1–2 day tactical trade with tight stops, not a structural long position. Do not hold over the weekend given geopolitical tail risks.
Why is the FTSE 100 holding up better than US markets despite the same global shock?
The FTSE 100’s composition gives it a natural hedge against the current oil shock. Approximately 13–15% of the index by market cap is in energy names — BP and Shell are among the largest constituents and both surged roughly 3% on Thursday as oil spiked. This acts as an internal offset to the selling in banks and consumer names. Additionally, the UK economy’s energy mix and the pound’s weakness relative to the dollar provides some export competitiveness. That said, FTSE is not immune — its banks face Middle East exposure, airlines are hit by fuel costs, and if the BoE is forced to delay cuts due to energy-driven inflation, rate-sensitive sectors will continue to suffer.
What does today’s UK GDP number mean for FTSE traders?
The January GDP monthly estimate, due at 07:00 GMT from the ONS, is the single most important domestic catalyst for FTSE 100 direction today. The consensus forecast is +0.3% month-on-month — which would confirm that the UK economy broke out of the malaise seen in H2 2025 and entered 2026 with building momentum. A result of +0.3% or better would be meaningfully bullish for the FTSE, potentially pushing it back toward 10,475–10,500. A result below +0.1% — particularly in the context of rising energy costs and potential BoE rate recalibration — would apply fresh pressure and open the 10,000 level on the downside. Check pre-market price action closely after the 07:00 release before committing to either direction.
How should I interpret today’s US PCE inflation data for index trading?
The January Core PCE reading — the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge — is due today and forecasts range between 3.1–3.2% YoY and +0.3–0.4% month-on-month. Any reading at or above the high end of that range (3.2% YoY, 0.4% MoM) should be treated as bearish for equities, as it would eliminate any remaining argument for a 2026 rate cut. Conversely, a print below 3.0% YoY would be materially bullish and could spark a significant relief rally in both the Dow and S&P. The reaction window post-release (first 15–30 minutes) will be highly volatile — avoid trading immediately into the print unless you are an experienced news trader with very tight stops.
What are the most important resistance levels to watch on the S&P 500 for today’s session?
The primary resistance hierarchy for the S&P 500 today is: 6,700 (round number and immediate overhead), 6,750 (prior week’s support turned resistance), and 6,856 (the 20-day simple moving average — the key line that must be reclaimed for the bear trend to be invalidated). Any Friday bounce that fails to close above 6,750 should be treated as a continuation of the downtrend and a potential short entry opportunity. A close above 6,856 on above-average volume would change the picture materially and would warrant reassessment of the bearish thesis.
What is the three-black-crows pattern and why does it matter for the current market?
The three-black-crows pattern occurs when three consecutive bearish candlesticks form with each candle’s body opening within the prior candle’s body and closing at or near its low. It is one of the most reliable bearish continuation signals in candlestick analysis, particularly when it appears after a period of upward momentum or at a resistance level. In the current S&P 500 and Dow Jones context, the pattern across March 10–12 confirms that sellers are systematically in control and that each attempt to recover intraday is being met with fresh distribution. Historically, this pattern has a high probability of continuation when supported by bearish MACD and declining volume on rallies — both of which are present now.
Should I be shorting the market or staying in cash this weekend?
For most active traders, going into the weekend with open positions — long or short — carries asymmetric risk given the geopolitical situation. A single headline from the Middle East over Saturday or Sunday could gap markets 2–3% in either direction. If you are short, consider taking partial profit before Friday’s close and tightening stops on any remaining position. If you are long, the same logic applies — reduce exposure ahead of a weekend when Iran-related developments remain genuinely unpredictable. Cash is a valid position and often the most disciplined one in environments of this kind. Fresh setups will present themselves on Monday once the weekend’s news flow becomes clearer.
The Verdict — March 13, 2026

Friday, March 13, 2026 is a day that will test the discipline of every active index trader. The market stands at a fork in the road — one path leads to an oversold bounce as PCE data softens and Hormuz tensions ease; the other leads to an accelerating downtrend as inflation stays sticky, the Fed stays hawkish, and geopolitical risk compounds across the weekend.

For US indices, the dominant technical bias is bearish. Both the Dow Jones and S&P 500 have posted their lowest closes of 2026, sit below their 20- and 50-day SMAs, and carry bearish candlestick confirmation in the form of three-black-crows and bearish engulfing patterns. The primary trade remains selling into any bounce that fails to reclaim key resistance — 47,000–47,417 on the Dow and 6,750–6,856 on the S&P. Oversold technicals create bounce risk but not reversal risk under current macro conditions.

For the FTSE 100, the situation is markedly different. The longer-term technical picture remains genuinely bullish — all major moving averages are below price and signalling Buy, RSI is a healthy 59, and MACD is positive. The index is correcting within a broader uptrend rather than breaking down. The 10,180–10,250 support zone is the key level: a hold there, confirmed by a bullish candlestick post-GDP data, offers one of the most attractive long setups in today’s global market landscape.

Above all else, manage your risk. In environments shaped by $100 oil, a geopolitical crisis, sticky inflation, and a Fed unable to provide its usual equity backstop, position sizing and stop discipline separate professional traders from those who give back months of gains in a single session. Today is a day for conviction in your levels — and humility about what you cannot predict.

📉 DJIA Below 47K 📉 SPX 3-Black-Crows 📈 FTSE Long at 10,180 ⚡ UK GDP 07:00 GMT ⚡ US Core PCE Today 🛢 Brent $100+ 🇮🇷 Iran Hormuz Watch 📊 UoM Sentiment Weekend Gap Risk — Reduce Exposure