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Global Indexes Market Analysis — March 11, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100 | Capital Street FX

March 11, 2026
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Global Indexes Market Analysis — March 11, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100 | Capital Street FX
HIGH-IMPACT EVENT TODAY: US February CPI Release — 13:30 GMT · FOMC March 18–19 · US–Iran Conflict Active · Reduce position sizes · Await CPI confirmation before entry
DOW JONES 47,706.51 ▼ 0.07%| S&P 500 6,781.48 ▼ 0.21%| FTSE 100 10,412.24 ▲ +1.59%| WTI Crude $83.45 ▼ 11.8%| Brent $87.80 ▼ 11.2%| VIX ~22 ● Elevated| US 10Y ~4.12% ▼ slight| GBP/USD 1.3458 ▲ 0.2%| Nikkei +1.36%| Kospi +3.20%| DOW JONES 47,706.51 ▼ 0.07%| S&P 500 6,781.48 ▼ 0.21%| FTSE 100 10,412.24 ▲ +1.59%| WTI Crude $83.45 ▼ 11.8%| Brent $87.80 ▼ 11.2%| VIX ~22 ● Elevated| US 10Y ~4.12% ▼ slight| GBP/USD 1.3458 ▲ 0.2%|
Capital Street FX · Market Analysis Desk · Wednesday, March 11, 2026 · Issue #94 · 06:30 GMT

Global Indexes Market Analysis

March 11, 2026 · Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100 · CPI Day · Iran War Uncertainty · Global Market Volatility
DOW · S&P 500 · FTSE 100  |  Technical outlook and trade setups amid geopolitical and macro crosscurrents
Global Indexes Market Analysis March 11 2026 — Dow Jones S&P 500 FTSE 100
§ 01

Executive Overview — Where Do We Stand on Wednesday Morning?

Daily Intelligence Brief
Dow Jones (Prev. Close)
47,706
▼ 34.29 pts · −0.07% · Strong Sell
S&P 500 (Prev. Close)
6,781
▼ 14.25 pts · −0.21% · Strong Sell
FTSE 100 (Prev. Close)
10,412
▲ 162.72 pts · +1.59% · Strong Buy
Key Event Today
US CPI 13:30 GMT
Feb ’26 · Forecast +2.4–2.5% YoY
Dow Jones ^DJI
47,706
▼ −0.07% · Daily Strong Sell
RSI 44.76 · MACD −196.13
Below all major MAs · Bearish alignment
S&P 500 ^GSPC
6,781
▼ −0.21% · Daily Strong Sell
RSI ~45 · 200-DMA tested overnight
Trapped 6,749–6,856 band
FTSE 100 ^FTSE
10,412
▲ +1.59% · Daily Strong Buy
RSI 59.31 · 12/12 MAs: Buy
Above all MAs · Best long setup

A Two-Speed Market — FTSE Diverging from US Indexes

Markets enter Wednesday in a bipolar state. US indexes are caught in the crossfire between a cooling oil-shock narrative and the looming February CPI report — the single most important economic event of the day. Meanwhile, the FTSE 100 is outperforming its transatlantic peers with exceptional breadth, driven by a rebound in mining, banking and housebuilder stocks after oil’s sharp two-day retreat from the $119/barrel war spike.

The geopolitical backdrop — the US–Israel military campaign against Iran (Operation Epic Fury, launched February 28) — continues to shadow every asset class. While WTI crude tumbled from a Monday peak of nearly $120/barrel to settle around $83.45 on Tuesday, the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed. Markets have responded with selective resilience: tech chips surged (Nvidia +1.2%, Micron +3.5%, Intel +2.6%) while energy and financials lagged on the US side.

Global Session Snapshot
Nikkei 225+1.36% Asian Risk-On
ASX 200+0.35% Modest Gains
Hang Seng+0.43% Selective Buying
Kospi+3.20% Semi-Led Surge
WTI Crude$83.45 ▼ 11.8%
VIX~22 Elevated
US 10Y Yield~4.12% ▼ slight
GBP/USD1.3458 ▲ 0.2%
⭐ Today’s Defining Catalyst

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the February CPI report at 13:30 GMT (8:30 AM ET). Consensus expects headline inflation of +0.3% MoM / +2.4–2.5% YoY, and Core CPI of +0.3% MoM / +2.5% YoY. This data pre-dates the Iran conflict and will not yet capture the energy spike — but any deviation from consensus will move index futures sharply.

§ 02

Market Drivers — Last 10 Hours

What Moved Markets Overnight & This Morning
ThemeWhat HappenedMarket ImpactOutlook
Iran War / Oil HIGH RISKWTI settled at $83.45 (▼12%) after White House clarified Navy had NOT escorted tankers through Hormuz; Trump signalled war “pretty much complete”Initial rally reversed; energy stocks led S&P lower; FTSE miners and banks surgedVolatile — any re-escalation can send oil back above $100
US CPI (Feb 2026)Scheduled 13:30 GMT. Forecasts: Headline +2.4–2.5% YoY, Core +2.5% YoY. Data pre-dates Iran conflict energy spikeMarket-neutral if in-line; hawkish surprise → sell-off; soft print → rallyFed expected to hold rates (97% probability) at March meeting
Chip StocksTSMC reported strong monthly sales; Nvidia +1.2%, Micron +3.5%, Intel +2.6% on Tuesday. SOX semiconductor index up ~4% MondayTech provided the only meaningful S&P buffer; Nasdaq marginally green (+0.01%)Selective opportunity; Nasdaq watch for follow-through above 22,800
FTSE Mining ReboundFresnillo +7.64%, Antofagasta +6.16%, Anglo American +6.14%. HSBC +3–5%, Barclays strong, Rolls-Royce +5%FTSE 100 closed +1.59%, ending a 3-day losing streakBullish bias maintained; watch Glencore earnings Wednesday
Jobs Data ContextFebruary NFP: −92,000 vs +55,000 expected; unemployment rose to 4.4%. Labour market clearly weakeningIncreased recession risk anxiety on S&P; Treasuries partly regained safe-haven roleBearish signal for US equities medium-term if oil stays elevated
Asia Risk-OnNikkei +1.36%, Kospi +3.2%, Hang Seng +0.43% in early Wednesday trade as geopolitical fears partially recededPositive tone for European open; FTSE futures pointing higherContingent on CPI print and any Iran developments
UK Retail SalesBRC reported +1.1% YoY for February — below 12-month average of 2.3%; food +2.9%, non-food −0.4%Marginal headwind for consumer stocks; BoE rate cut expectations supportedBoE meeting March 19: rate cut probability elevated
§ 03

Economic Calendar — High-Impact Events

March 11, 2026 · GMT Times · Six Key Regions

Only events rated High Impact from the six key regions. Times in GMT.

Time (GMT)CountryEventForecastPreviousImpactExpected Reaction
07:00🇬🇧 UKEmployment Change / Claimant Count+25K+22.3KHIGHWeakness supports BoE cut; negative for GBP / FTSE banks
07:00🇬🇧 UKAverage Earnings (3M/Yr)5.7% YoY5.9% YoYHIGHCooling wages key for BoE inflation watch; FTSE positive on soft data
⭐ 13:30🇺🇸 USACPI Headline YoY — Feb 20262.4–2.5%2.4% JanHIGH ★★★★ KEY EVENT. In-line = calm. Hot print → indexes −0.5% to −1%; soft print → +0.5% to +1.5% bounce
⭐ 13:30🇺🇸 USACore CPI YoY — Feb 20262.5%2.7% JanHIGH ★★★Continued deceleration supports market; sticky core = hawkish risk
13:30🇺🇸 USACPI MoM — Feb 2026+0.3%+0.2% JanHIGHSlight pickup driven by shelter; energy drop likely offsets tariff goods
All Day🇨🇳 ChinaCPI YoY+0.1%−0.1%MEDDeflation risk watch; mild positive if CPI turns positive
00:50 prev.🇯🇵 JapanPPI YoY (Feb)+4.0%+4.2%MEDSlight moderation; BoJ watch for rate hike signals remains
00:30 prev.🇦🇺 AustraliaWestpac Consumer Confidence (Mar)+1.0%−1.5%MEDRecovery signal; supports RBA pause; AUD positive
Mar 19🇪🇺 EurozoneECB Deposit Rate Decision2.50%2.75%HIGH25bp cut widely expected; EuroStoxx supported on cut
Mar 19🇬🇧 UKBoE Rate Decision4.50%4.50%HIGHHold expected after 5–4 Feb vote; dovish hold = FTSE-positive
🏦 Fed Watch

The Federal Reserve is overwhelmingly expected to hold rates at 3.50%–3.75% at its March meeting (3% cut probability). With February CPI data pre-dating the Iran oil spike, the Fed will wait for March and April data before reassessing. A Bank of America note warns that if high oil prices persist and job losses mount, the Fed may be forced into a premature cut — a stagflationary scenario markets have not fully priced.

§ 04

Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) — Short-Term Downtrend

Index Deep Dive #1
Dow Jones Industrial Average ^DJI · USD · CSFX
Daily: Strong Sell Weekly: Sell Monthly: Strong Buy 10 Sell / 2 Buy MAs
47,706.51
▼ −34.29 pts · −0.07% · Tue 10 Mar
52wk: 37,645 – 50,517 · RSI 44.76
Dow Jones Daily Chart Fibonacci Retracements CSFX TradingView
DowJones · 1D · CSFX · Fibonacci: $45,633–$50,517 · Current $47,627 · 0.618 Level $47,499 · 0.382 Level $48,651 · 0.236 Level $49,364
RSI (14-Day)
44.76 — Sell Zone
MACD Daily
−196.13 · Bearish
5-Day MA
48,437 (above — bearish)
50-Day MA
49,013 (above — bearish)
200-Day MA
49,346 (above — bearish)
MA Signals
10 Sell · 2 Buy
📉 Trend Analysis

The Dow is in a clear short-to-medium term downtrend. All three major moving averages — the 5-day (48,437), 50-day (49,013) and 200-day (49,346) — are sitting above the current price in a textbook bearish price-MA alignment. The index is down roughly 4.5% from its February highs and has relinquished all 2026 gains. The monthly chart still holds a bullish structure — confirming this is a cyclical pullback within a larger bull trend, with upside targets at 51,250, then 53,000 if recovery takes hold. For now, the path of least resistance is lower or sideways.

Candlestick Patterns Identified
Bearish Engulfing (Mar 7) Doji / Indecision (Mar 9) Long Upper Wick — Rejection (Mar 10) Inside Bar Consolidation Death Cross Risk (5-day below 50-day)

Tuesday’s session produced a long upper-wick candle — the Dow rallied intraday on Trump’s Iran comments before fading to close flat. Long upper wicks in a downtrend are classically bearish: sellers stepped in aggressively on the intraday pop. The prior week saw a bearish engulfing on the weekly chart confirming the break of near-term bullish structure.

LevelPriceType
R450,517ATH / Fib Base (0)
R349,50050-Day MA
R248,800–49,0135-Day MA / Key resistance
R148,4375-Day MA (immediate)
Spot47,627Current
S147,400–47,500Near Support
S247,000Psychological Floor
S346,5002026 Swing Low
S446,000Wells Fargo / JPM Tail Risk
🎯 Trade Setup — Dow Jones (Today’s Session)

Scenario A: Short Setup (Primary Bias)

Entry Zone48,200–48,400 (rally fade)
Stop Loss48,750
Target 147,400
Target 247,000
Risk:Reward~1:1.5
TriggerCPI ≥2.6% YoY or failure at 48,437

Scenario B: Long Bounce (Conditional)

Entry Zone47,400–47,550 (dip buy)
Stop Loss47,100
Target 148,200
Target 248,700
Risk:Reward~1:1.7
TriggerCPI ≤2.3% YoY AND oil below $85

⚠ Do NOT enter trades within 15 minutes either side of 13:30 GMT. Bias: Bearish/Neutral. Watch CPI release — hot print strengthens short case.

Sentiment Overview
RSI Bearish Pressure44.76 — Sell Zone
MA Alignment10 Sell / 2 Buy
Geopolitical Risk PremiumElevated — Iran uncertainty
§ 05

S&P 500 (SPX) — At a Technical Crossroads

Index Deep Dive #2
S&P 500 Index ^GSPC · USD · CSFX
Daily: Strong Sell Weekly: Neutral Monthly: Strong Buy 200-DMA tested overnight
6,781.48
▼ −14.25 pts · −0.21% · Tue 10 Mar
200-DMA: 6,586 · 20-DMA: 6,856 · Bollinger: 6,749–6,960
S&P 500 US500 Daily Chart Fibonacci Retracements CSFX TradingView
US500 · 1D · CSFX · Fibonacci: $6,503–$7,010 · Current $6,776 · 0.236 Level $6,890 · 0.382 Level $6,816 · 0.618 Level $6,697 · 0.786 Level $6,611
RSI (14-Day)
~45 — Neutral/Sell
MACD Daily
Negative · Bearish Momentum
20-Day SMA
6,856 (resistance)
200-Day MA
6,586 (tested overnight)
Lower Bollinger
6,749 (key support)
Upper Bollinger
~6,960 (ceiling)
📉 Trend Analysis

The S&P 500 is at a technical crossroads. The index has broken the floor of its medium-term rising trend channel — the first meaningful technical deterioration since the start of the bull run. The daily chart shows lower highs and lower lows since the February peak, with each intraday recovery attempt getting sold into. The index is now trapped between the 6,749 Bollinger Band support and the 6,856 20-day SMA resistance.

The S&P 500 tested its 200-day moving average at 6,586 in Sunday night futures before bouncing sharply Monday — that level is now the critical long-term bull-market defence line. A weekly close below 6,586 would be significant deterioration. JPMorgan warns of a 10% correction (~6,100) if oil rises sustainably above $100/barrel. Yet the index is only down ~1.2% since the war began — a sign of underlying resilience.

Candlestick Patterns Identified
Shooting Star / Rejection (Mar 9 intraday) Spinning Top — Indecision (Mar 10) Failed Breakout Above 6,856 Hammer at 6,586 (200-DMA test) ✓ Narrow-Range Doji (Tue Close)

Tuesday’s candle was essentially a spinning top / narrow Doji representing complete indecision. This pattern after a sharp decline often signals a pause before continuation lower. The bullish case needs a convincing close above 6,856. The hammer at the 200-DMA test is the most significant bullish signal on the chart — it held what had to hold.

LevelPriceType
R47,010ATH / Fib Base (0)
R36,960–7,000Upper Bollinger / Mid Resistance
R26,890Fib 0.236
R16,85620-Day SMA (must reclaim)
Spot6,776Current
S16,749Lower Bollinger Band (floor)
S26,700Psychological Round
S36,586200-Day MA (critical defence)
S46,100–6,000JPM / Wells Fargo Bear Case
🎯 Trade Setup — S&P 500 (Today’s Session)

Scenario A: Short — Resistance Fade

Entry Zone6,840–6,860 (at R1 zone)
Stop Loss6,920
Target 16,749
Target 26,650
Risk:Reward~1:1.2
TriggerRally to R1 (6,856) weak volume OR hot CPI

Scenario B: Long — Support Bounce

Entry Zone6,749–6,780 (Bollinger floor)
Stop Loss6,690
Target 16,856
Target 26,960
Risk:Reward~1:2.2
TriggerSoft CPI (≤2.2%) AND oil continuing lower

⚠ Bias: Cautiously Bearish / Wait-and-See. CPI is the determining factor. Experienced traders consider fade-the-rally setups if the index spikes above 6,856 without follow-through volume.

S&P 500 Sector Rotation
SectorTue PerformanceOutlookKey Drivers
Technology+0.3% (green)BuyChip recovery: Nvidia, Micron, Intel
Energy−1.5%SellOil price retreat weighing
FinancialsDeclinedSellLower yields, credit concerns
Healthcare / StaplesTop 5 sectorDefensive BuyDefensive rotation on war risk
Info Tech (SOX)+4% MondayBuyTSMC data, AI demand
§ 06

FTSE 100 (UKX) — The Standout Bullish Index in the Developed World

Index Deep Dive #3 · Best Long Setup
FTSE 100 Index ^FTSE · GBP · CSFX
Daily: Strong Buy Weekly: Strong Buy Monthly: Strong Buy 12/12 MAs: All Buy
10,412.24
▲ +162.72 pts · +1.59% · Tue 10 Mar
52wk: 7,544 – 10,934 (ATH) · RSI 59.31
FTSE 100 Daily Chart Fibonacci Retracements CSFX TradingView
FTSE · 1D · CSFX · Fibonacci: 9,414–10,932 · Current 10,320 · 0.236 Level 10,574 · 0.382 Level 10,352 · 0.5 Level 10,173 · 0.618 Level 9,994
RSI (14-Day)
59.31 — Buy Territory
MACD Daily
+14.01 — Bullish
5-Day MA
10,224 (price above ✓)
50-Day MA
10,177 (price above ✓)
200-Day MA
9,987 (price above ✓)
MA Signals
12 Buy / 0 Sell 🟢
✅ Trend Analysis — Standout Bullish Index

The FTSE 100 is the standout bullish index in the developed world right now. All 12 moving average signals are registering Buy or Strong Buy. The index trades above all major moving averages — 5-day (10,224), 50-day (10,177) and 200-day (9,987) — in classic bullish alignment. RSI at 59.31 is firmly in the buy zone without yet being overbought (would need to exceed 70).

The structural bull case is supported by an Elliott Wave impulse wave (3) structure from mid-January lows — historically the strongest and most sustained wave type. The FTSE hit its first-ever close above 10,000 on January 5, 2026, then reached a fresh ATH of 10,934 in February. Tuesday’s +1.59% session ended a three-day losing streak, with Elliott Wave analysts at TradingView and IG targeting the wave completion at 11,000.

Candlestick Patterns Identified
Strong Bullish Marubozu — Tuesday Bullish Engulfing — Reversal Signal Three Inside Down → Reversed Higher Low at 10,235 Established Institutional Buying Pressure Confirmed

Tuesday produced a near-Marubozu — a strong bullish candle (range 10,235–10,447) with high close and minimal upper wick, confirming buyers were in full control. This is a strong reversal signal after three consecutive red sessions. The FTSE is the highest-conviction long setup of the three indexes analysed.

LevelPriceType
R411,000Elliott Wave Target
R310,800–10,935ATH Zone
R210,550–10,600Key Resistance Band
R110,447Tuesday High
Spot10,320Current
S110,250–10,300Immediate Support
S210,17750-Day MA (dip-buy zone)
S310,000Psychological Round
S49,987200-Day MA (major floor)
🎯 Trade Setup — FTSE 100 · Best R:R of the Three (Preferred)

Scenario A: Long — Primary Bias (Preferred)

Entry Zone10,300–10,370 (dip buy)
Stop Loss10,200
Target 110,550
Target 210,800
Risk:Reward~1:2.0 (excellent)
TriggerBuy-the-dip; 50-DMA at 10,177 strong support

Scenario B: Short (Counter-Trend Only)

Entry Zone10,500–10,550 (resistance fade)
Stop Loss10,650
Target 110,350
Target 210,200
Risk:Reward~1:1.5
TriggerCounter-trend only at major resistance. Tight stops.

✅ FTSE is the highest-conviction directional trade of the session. Watch UK employment (07:00 GMT), US CPI (13:30 GMT), and Glencore earnings (pre-market) as key volatility windows.

FTSE 100 Key Sectors — Today’s Watch
Sector / StockTue MoveToday’s CatalystSignal
Mining (Fresnillo, Antofagasta)+6–7.6%Glencore earnings, gold pricesStrong Buy
Banking (HSBC, Barclays, Lloyds)+2–5%UK employment data; BoE rate pathBuy
Housebuilders (Persimmon)+5–10%Full-year results beat; completion guidanceBuy
Industrials (Rolls-Royce)+5%Defence demand, after 3-day sell-offAccumulate
Energy (Shell, BP)−1–2%Oil retreat; Hormuz uncertainty remainsNeutral / Hold
Overall Bullish Signal12/12 MAs — Buy
RSI Strength59.31 / 100
Institutional Buying PressureVery High
§ 07

Side-by-Side Comparison

Index Snapshot — Technical Summary at a Glance
MetricDow Jones (^DJI)S&P 500 (^GSPC)FTSE 100 (^FTSE)
Previous Close47,706.516,781.4810,412.24
Change (Tue)▼ 0.07%▼ 0.21%▲ 1.59%
Daily SignalStrong SellStrong SellStrong Buy
RSI (14-day)44.76~4559.31
MACD−196.13 (Sell)Negative (Sell)+14.01 (Buy)
Price vs 5-Day MABelow (Bear)Below (Bear)Above (Bull)
Price vs 50-Day MABelow (Bear)Below (Bear)Above (Bull)
Price vs 200-Day MABelow (Bear)Above (Neutral)Above (Bull)
Key Support47,0006,74910,177
Key Resistance49,0136,85610,550
Primary CandlestickLong upper wick (Bear)Doji / Spinning TopNear-Marubozu (Bull)
Trend Bias (Short-term)BearishBearishBullish
Preferred Trade TodayShort on ralliesWait CPI / short R1Buy dips 10,300–10,370
Elliott Wave PositionCorrective WaveCorrective WaveImpulse Wave 3 (Bullish)
Downside Risk (Bear Case)46,000 (JPM tail risk)6,000–6,100 (JPM)9,987 (200-DMA floor)
§ 08

Risk Matrix — What Could Move Markets in the Next 24 Hours

Scenario Analysis
CPI Hot Surprise (≥2.7% YoY)
Probability: 25% · Impact: High
DOW and S&P 500: ▼ −1% to −2%. Re-ignites stagflation fears. Fed rate cut expectations pushed further out. FTSE partly insulated via FX translation.
CPI Cool Surprise (≤2.2% YoY)
Probability: 20% · Impact: High
DOW, S&P 500, FTSE: ▲ +0.5% to +1.5%. Short-cover rally. Rate cut expectations for June/July improve. Risk-on tone into FOMC next week.
CPI In-Line (2.4–2.5% YoY)
Probability: 55% · Impact: Medium
All indexes: Sideways / mild positive. No major repricing. Market focus shifts back to Iran geopolitics and FOMC next week.
Iran Re-escalation / Hormuz Closure
Probability: 30% · Impact: High
All indexes oil-linked: ▼ −2% to −5% on US. FTSE mixed — energy stocks gain but broader economy suffers. Oil spikes above $100/barrel.
Iran Ceasefire Confirmed
Probability: 15% · Impact: High
All indexes: ▲ +2% to +4% gap up. Risk-on surge. Oil crashes. FTSE energy stocks sell off but broader index rallies strongly on sentiment.
UK Employment Weakness
Probability: 40% · Impact: Medium
FTSE 100 (positive via BoE cut expectations): ▲ mild positive. GBP softens further (~75–80% of FTSE revenues in foreign currencies = earnings boost).
Oil Rebound Above $95/barrel
Probability: 25% · Impact: High
S&P 500, Dow: ▼ −1.5% to −3%. Consumer spending fears re-emerge. Fed in impossible position: inflation risk + jobs losses simultaneously.
Glencore Earnings Miss
Probability: 25% · Impact: Medium
FTSE 100 Mining Sector: ▼ −1% mining drag. Fresnillo, Antofagasta sympathy move lower. Does not affect US indexes significantly.
§ 09

Frequently Asked Questions

Experienced Traders Edition
The FTSE 100 has a different sectoral composition to US indexes. It is heavily weighted toward globally-exposed commodity companies (mining, oil majors, precious metals) and international financials. Crucially, when oil fell sharply on Tuesday, the FTSE’s mining and banking stocks surged — a sector that has little exposure to the US domestic demand story weighing on Dow and S&P constituents. The index also benefits from sterling weakness: with ~75–80% of FTSE revenues generated in foreign currencies, a softer pound translates directly into higher reported earnings. Additionally, the FTSE trades at a significant P/E discount to the S&P 500, making it attractive to global value-oriented investors rotating out of expensive US tech.
February’s CPI is significant but not definitive. Economists stress that this data was collected before the Iran conflict’s oil spike — which means it won’t capture the energy price surge that markets are most worried about. If CPI comes in at or below 2.4% YoY, it signals that the disinflation trend remains intact pre-conflict. A hot print (2.7%+) would reignite stagflation fears: rising prices + weakening jobs (February NFP came in at −92,000). The Fed is essentially locked in a “wait and see” mode regardless — a March rate cut is only a 3% probability. What matters for markets is whether the data moves the needle on June and July cut expectations.
Both perspectives have merit. The 200-day MA (6,586) is the most widely watched long-term trend indicator. The fact that the S&P 500 bounced off it in Sunday night futures trading and did NOT close below it is a technically bullish sign. Historically, the first touch of the 200-DMA during a bull market is often a buying opportunity. However, context matters enormously: the current geopolitical environment (oil shock, weakening jobs, Middle East conflict) creates fundamental headwinds that could force a genuine 200-DMA break if conditions worsen. Experienced traders should watch for a weekly close below 6,586 as the “all bets off” signal.
For the Dow Jones: 47,000 (psychological support) and 48,437 (5-day MA resistance) — the index needs to reclaim the 5-day MA to shift short-term sentiment. For the S&P 500: 6,749 (lower Bollinger Band — current floor) and 6,856 (20-day SMA — the ceiling that must be reclaimed for bullish continuation). For the FTSE 100: 10,177 (50-day MA key support) and 10,550–10,600 (resistance). A break above 10,600 on good volume targets the all-time high zone of 10,800–10,935.
Professional traders generally fall into two camps: (1) avoid trading the immediate 15-minute CPI window due to extreme volatility, spread widening and false moves; or (2) prepare specific scenarios in advance and execute only if the move follows a clear pattern. For less experienced active traders, the safer approach is to wait for the initial reaction to settle — usually 30–60 minutes post-release — and then trade the “re-test” of key levels with defined risk. The CPI setup today is particularly complex because the data pre-dates the Iran conflict, meaning markets may quickly look past the CPI number to focus on the geopolitical picture.
JPMorgan has explicitly warned of a 10% correction to approximately 6,100 if oil prices rise sustainably above $100/barrel due to a prolonged Hormuz closure. Wells Fargo has mapped an even more extreme scenario: sustained oil at $100+ could push the S&P to 6,000 (a ~13% decline from pre-conflict levels). RFCP Porcelli at J. Rowe Price warned that oil at $130+ would likely cause back-to-back contractions in US personal consumption — a recession signal. Traders should be aware that the current market is in a “relief rally from war footing” phase, which can reverse very quickly on any new geopolitical headline.
The FTSE’s heavy weighting in energy (Shell, BP) and defence stocks initially made it partially insulated from the conflict’s negative impact. However, a prolonged conflict with sustained high oil prices creates headwinds for consumer-facing UK businesses — the Office for Budget Responsibility estimates the conflict could add 1% to UK inflation by year-end. The Bank of England faces a more complex policy environment. For FTSE-focused traders, the key variable is the Strait of Hormuz: if it reopens (reducing oil prices), mining, banking and housebuilder stocks benefit most. If closure continues, energy stocks gain but the broader economy suffers and consumer stocks decline.
§ 10

Conclusion & The Verdict

March 11, 2026 — Key Takeaways for Active Index Traders

Trading Intelligently in a Two-Speed Market

Wednesday, March 11, 2026 presents active index traders with one of the cleanest bifurcated setups of the year. The FTSE 100 sits in a confirmed uptrend with all 12 moving average signals pointing buy — it is the most technically sound long opportunity across the three major indexes we track. The Dow Jones and S&P 500, by contrast, are navigating a short-to-medium term downtrend with bearish MA alignment and elevated geopolitical uncertainty keeping a lid on any recovery attempt.

The February CPI report at 13:30 GMT is the day’s defining catalyst. A print in line with expectations (2.4–2.5% YoY headline, 2.5% core) is the “do nothing” outcome for the Fed and should produce limited immediate market movement. A hot surprise risks a 1–2% sell-off in US indexes; a cool surprise could trigger a short-cover bounce toward S&P resistance at 6,856. Either way, the structural picture doesn’t change dramatically from a single data point.

The Iran war backdrop remains the dominant macro variable. Markets are in a fragile “war-is-ending” relief phase — but the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, oil can spike on any headline, and the February jobs report (−92,000) signals that the US economy was already softening before the conflict began. Trade with defined risk, respect your stop losses, and treat every intraday move with disciplined scepticism until the geopolitical picture becomes clearer.

Bullish Watch List — FTSE Long / US Bounce

  • CPI ≤ 2.2% YoY (cool print)
  • Dow reclaims 5-day MA (48,437)
  • S&P 500 daily close above 6,856
  • FTSE holds 10,177 (50-day MA) on dips
  • Iran ceasefire confirmed / Hormuz reopens
  • Oil sustains below $85/barrel
  • UK employment soft → BoE cut expectations rise

Bearish Risk Triggers — Monitor Closely

  • CPI ≥ 2.7% YoY (hot surprise)
  • S&P 500 weekly close below 6,586 (200-DMA)
  • Dow loses 47,000 psychological support
  • Iran conflict re-escalates — oil back above $95
  • FOMC hawkish surprise March 18–19
  • Glencore earnings miss (FTSE mining drag)
  • DXY breakout — dollar strength weighs on risk

📅 Next Report: March 12, 2026 · 06:30 GMT — Post-CPI reaction analysis, updated setups for all three indexes, FOMC preview edition.

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Risk Disclosure & Editorial Policy: This report is produced for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice, investment recommendations or a solicitation to buy or sell any financial instrument. All analysis is based on publicly available data from Investing.com, TradingView, Reuters, Bloomberg and CNBC as of March 10–11, 2026. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading index CFDs, futures and related instruments involves significant risk of loss and may not be suitable for all investors. Technical analysis does not guarantee outcomes. The authors do not hold positions in any of the instruments discussed at the time of publication. Always conduct your own due diligence and consult a regulated financial adviser before making trading or investment decisions.