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Index Market Analysis – March 16, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100 | Daily Trade Intelligence

March 16, 2026
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Index Market Analysis – March 16, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100 | Daily Trade Intelligence

Index Market Analysis
Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100

Monday, March 16, 2026  ·  Report No. 2026–075  ·  European Open / US Pre-Market Edition  ·  ⚑ HIGH ALERT: FOMC (Mar 18) · BoE (Mar 19) · RBA (Mar 17) · BoJ (Mar 18–19)
Global Equity Market Analysis March 16 2026
TRIPLE MACRO SHOCK WEEK — REDUCE LEVERAGE, WIDEN STOPS. Iran’s Strait of Hormuz closure has pushed Brent above $100. FOMC meets March 17–18 with a dot-plot update and Powell press conference. Bank of England decides March 19. RBA decides today (March 17 AEST). Bank of Japan meets March 18–19. China today released February data beating all forecasts. All US indices sit at 2026 year-to-date lows after three consecutive weekly losses. VIX at 27.19 signals a structurally elevated volatility regime.

Global Market Snapshot

Closing prices as of Friday, March 13 / Sunday evening futures — compiled 06:00 GMT Monday March 16, 2026

Dow Jones
46,548
▼ −130 pts  (−0.28%)
3rd consecutive losing week · 2026 YTD low
S&P 500
6,632
▼ −0.61% WoW
Below 20, 50 & 100-day SMA · 200-day SMA at risk
FTSE 100
10,261
▼ −0.43% WoW
Relative outperformer · RSI 59 · Above all moving avgs
VIX
27.19
▲ ELEVATED
Highest since Autumn 2025 · Reduce position size
Brent Crude
$103.14
▲ +2.67%
First time above $100 since Aug 2022 · Hormuz closure
Nasdaq 100
~21,680
▼ −15% from Feb ATH
25,500 all-time high in February · Bear market territory

The week of March 9–13 was one of the most consequential in 2026. Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei — appointed March 9 following the death of Ali Khamenei — escalated rhetoric dramatically, declaring that the Strait of Hormuz would remain closed as a tool of economic pressure. That single statement sent Brent crude above $100 per barrel for the first time since August 2022 and triggered the sharpest single-day equity losses of the year.

All three major US averages are now negative for 2026 year-to-date. The Dow Jones broke below the psychological 47,000 level for the first time this year on Thursday March 12, while the S&P 500 shed 1.5% in that same session. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Friday the largest wave of US strikes against Iranian targets yet, cementing blockade fears and stoking what markets are now pricing as a prolonged stagflationary environment.

This morning’s China data offered a rare counterpoint of good news. Beijing released January–February industrial production (+6.3%), retail sales (+2.8%), and fixed-asset investment (+1.8%) — all beating Reuters consensus estimates. The strong data reflects a holiday-season consumption boost and AI-driven export demand. However, analysts at Nomura caution that the Iran war’s energy shock will widen the divide between China’s external and domestic demand through the rest of 2026.

The FTSE 100 stands out as the relative outperformer among the major developed-market indices, cushioned by energy heavyweights BP and Shell, which have each gained roughly 3% on surging oil. The index sits in a genuine longer-term uptrend — all major moving averages remain below price and the RSI reads a healthy 59 — making it the most defensible long trade in today’s landscape if support holds.

“What markets will trade on this week is not the Iran situation — that is priced — but the dot plot. If the FOMC median projection shifts from one 25bp cut to zero cuts in 2026, expect a sharp selloff across both equities and bonds. Avoid holding large unhedged positions into 18:00 GMT Wednesday.”

Economic Calendar — High-Impact Events

USA · UK · Japan · Australia · Europe · China only — March 16–20, 2026

Date / Time (GMT) Country Event Previous Forecast Actual Market Impact Impact
Mon 16 Mar · 02:00 🇨🇳 China Industrial Production YoY (Jan–Feb) 5.2% 5.0% 6.3% ✓ Positive for global growth; limits commodities downside HIGH
Mon 16 Mar · 02:00 🇨🇳 China Retail Sales YoY (Jan–Feb) 0.9% 2.5% 2.8% ✓ Consumption recovery stronger than expected HIGH
Mon 16 Mar · 02:00 🇨🇳 China Fixed Asset Investment YoY (Jan–Feb) −3.8% −2.1% +1.8% ✓ Surprise expansion — beats by significant margin HIGH
Mon 16 Mar · 02:00 🇨🇳 China House Price Index (Feb) −3.1% YoY −3.2% −3.2% Property sector drag continues; mildly negative MED
Mon 16 Mar · 13:30 🇺🇸 USA Empire State Manufacturing (Mar) −9.7 −7.0 TBA First regional factory data of the month; war-proxy indicator HIGH
Tue 17 Mar · 04:30 🇦🇺 Australia RBA Interest Rate Decision 3.60% 3.85% (hike) TBA 50/50 debate; AUD volatility; global risk sentiment 🔴 CRITICAL
Tue 17 Mar · 07:00 🇬🇧 UK Average Earnings Index + Bonus (Jan) +5.9% ~5.5% TBA BoE wage-growth watch; inflationary if above forecast HIGH
Tue 17 Mar · 07:00 🇬🇧 UK Claimant Count Change (Feb) +11k +18k TBA UK unemployment 5.2% — rising trend supports BoE caution HIGH
Tue 17 Mar · 07:00 🇬🇧 UK Unemployment Rate (Jan) 5.2% 5.3% TBA Highest since 2021; labour market weakening ahead of BoE HIGH
Tue 17 Mar · 14:00 🇺🇸 USA NAHB Housing Market Index (Mar) 41 40 TBA Homebuilder sentiment; indirect rate-sensitivity gauge MED
Tue 17 Mar · 14:00 🇪🇺 Eurozone ZEW Economic Sentiment (Mar) −22.4 −28.0 TBA War discount deepening; DAX and FTSE adjacent HIGH
Wed 18 Mar · 18:00 🇺🇸 USA FOMC Interest Rate Decision + Dot Plot 4.50–4.75% Hold (4.50–4.75%) TBA Dot-plot shift is the key: 0 cuts vs 1–2 cuts will swing markets ±3% 🔴 CRITICAL
Wed 18 Mar · 18:30 🇺🇸 USA Powell Press Conference TBA “Geopolitical risks to inflation outlook” language parsed word by word 🔴 CRITICAL
Thu 18–19 Mar 🇯🇵 Japan BoJ Monetary Policy Meeting & Decision 0.50% Hold (0.50%) TBA PM Takaichi urged caution on hikes; JPY and Nikkei sensitive HIGH
Thu 19 Mar · 12:00 🇬🇧 UK Bank of England Rate Decision 4.50% Hold / possible 25bp cut TBA Rising unemployment vs oil inflation — a genuinely difficult call for Bailey 🔴 CRITICAL
Thu 19 Mar 🇪🇺 Eurozone CPI Final (Feb) 2.3% YoY 2.4% TBA ECB rate path calibration; EUR cross watch HIGH
Thu 20 Mar · 01:15 🇨🇳 China Loan Prime Rate — 1Y & 5Y (Mar) 3.10% / 3.60% Hold TBA PBoC stimulus signalling; relevant for commodity demand outlook HIGH
“The FOMC on Wednesday is the single most market-moving event of the week. If the dot plot migrates to zero cuts in 2026 — a genuine possibility given above-target US CPI (+0.3% in February) and stagflation optics — expect a sharp repricing across US equities. Conversely, if the median shifts to two cuts citing war-related growth risk, risk assets would likely bounce aggressively. Every word of Powell’s press conference will matter.”

Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI)

Detailed technical analysis, trend assessment, candlestick patterns and trade setup

Dow Jones Industrial Average
46,548
Last close Fri Mar 13  ·  −130 pts (−0.28%)  ·  Weekly: −0.55%  ·  2026 YTD: NEGATIVE
▼ Primary Trend: BEARISH
Timeframe: Daily / H4  ·  3rd consecutive weekly loss
Dow Jones Daily Chart CSFX TradingView
DJIA · 1D · TVC · Fibonacci: 45,687–50,525 · Current 46,558 · 0.236 49,383 · 0.382 48,677 · 0.786 46,722 · RSI 27.96

📊 Key Technical Levels

Current Price46,548
Resistance 1 (Key)47,000
Resistance 2 (Strong)47,417
Support 1 (Immediate)46,200–46,350
Support 2 (Critical)45,800
200-Day SMA~46,843
50-Day SMA~47,650 (above price)
20-Day SMA~47,200 (above price)
Fibonacci 0.618~46,200
Fibonacci 0.786~45,500

📈 Oscillators & Momentum

RSI (14, Daily)~33 — Oversold, not recovering
MACD (12,26,9)Negative & widening histogram
MACD Signal LineBelow signal = Bearish
Stochastic (14,3,3)~22 — Oversold territory
Average True Range~420 pts (elevated)
Bollinger Band WidthExpanding — high vol regime
Volume TrendAbove average on down-days
Price vs 200-day SMABelow — bearish long-term

Trend Analysis

▼ Daily: BEARISH ▼ Weekly: BEARISH ▶ Monthly: NEUTRAL-BEARISH

The Dow Jones has undergone significant structural damage in the past three weeks. Having broken below the psychologically critical 47,000 level on March 12 — a threshold that had held as firm support for three months — the index is now trading in territory not seen since November 2025. The selling is not panic but distribution: volume is elevated on down-days and muted on any counter-trend bounces, a classic sign of institutional supply overhanging the market.

The confluence of all major moving averages sitting above price creates a “moving average ceiling” — rallies are likely to be sold into resistance at the 20-day SMA (~47,200) before any meaningful recovery can occur. The RSI at ~33 is in oversold territory, which mathematically increases the probability of a near-term technical bounce; however, in the current macro environment (war, stagflation, FOMC risk), oversold readings are not reversal signals — they are pause signals.

Candlestick Pattern Analysis

Three Black Crows (Mar 3–13) 🔴 High Conviction Bearish Engulfing (Fri Mar 13) Descending Channel — Lower Highs + Lower Lows Gap-Down Open (Mar 10) Oversold Doji (potential bounce signal)
PatternDate FormedTimeframeSignalReliabilityStatus
Three Black Crows March 3 – 13, 2026 Daily Strong continuation of downtrend; institutional selling confirmed Very High Active — bearish bias confirmed
Bearish Engulfing Friday Mar 13 Daily Reversed early morning recovery — seller control on rallies High Confirms resistance at 47,000
Descending Channel Feb 19 – present Daily / H4 Lower highs + lower lows — primary downtrend structure intact High Channel resistance: ~47,417
Oversold Doji / Pin Bar Possible near-term H4 May signal brief relief rally to 47,000 — NOT reversal signal Moderate Watch post-FOMC

⚡ Actionable Trade Setup — Dow Jones | Next 24–48 Hours

Bias
SELL ON RALLIES
Entry Zone (Short)
47,000 – 47,200
Stop Loss
47,600 (Hard Stop)
Target 1
46,000
Target 2
45,500
Risk:Reward
1:2.5 (T1) / 1:4 (T2)
FOMC Caution
Avoid new positions Wed 17:00–19:00 GMT
Position Size
−40–50% vs normal (VIX 27)
Setup Logic: Primary trade remains selling rallies that fail to reclaim 47,000. Oversold RSI creates bounce risk — not reversal risk. Await confirmation via bearish candlestick rejection at resistance before entry. Do not chase shorts below 46,200 ahead of FOMC. A dovish dot-plot surprise (2+ cuts) would invalidate short bias and trigger a fast 1,000-point relief rally — manage this risk via hard stops.

S&P 500 Index (SPX)

Detailed technical analysis, trend assessment, candlestick patterns and trade setup

Standard & Poor’s 500
6,632
Last close Sun Mar 15  ·  −0.61%  ·  Weekly: −1.6%  ·  From Feb ATH 7,002: −5.3%  ·  YTD: NEGATIVE
▼ Primary Trend: BEARISH
Evening Star top at ATH confirmed · 3-week losing streak
S&P 500 Daily Chart CSFX TradingView
S&P 500 · 1D · TVC · Fibonacci: 6,355–7,008 · Current 6,632 · 0.236 6,854 · 0.618 6,604 · 0.786 6,495 · RSI 33.15

📊 Key Technical Levels

Current Price6,632
All-Time High (Jan)7,002
Resistance 16,750 (Immediate)
Resistance 2 (Strong)6,856
Support 1 (Immediate)6,580–6,600
Support 2 (Bear Flag Target)6,520–6,550
200-Day SMA (CRITICAL)~6,620 — Testing NOW
100-Day SMA~6,835 (broken)
50-Day SMA~6,910 (above price)
Fibonacci 0.5 Retrace~6,550

📈 Oscillators & Momentum

RSI (14, Daily)~30 — Deeply oversold
MACDBearish crossover — expanding
ADX (14)>30 — Strong trend confirmed
Put/Call RatioElevated — fear dominant
Breadth (A/D Line)Deteriorating — broad selloff
200-day SMA TestCRITICAL — if broken = end of bull run
Bear Flag (H4)Broken downward — target 6,520
Volume (Selling)Above avg on down sessions

Trend Analysis

▼ Daily: BEARISH ▼ Weekly: BEARISH ▼ Monthly: TURNING BEARISH

The S&P 500’s technical narrative is one of the clearest topping and distribution stories of this cycle. The January all-time high at 7,002 was formed with a textbook Evening Star pattern — a large bullish candle followed by an indecision doji at the peak, then a large bearish engulfing close. This three-candle reversal at the all-time high carries the highest conviction topping signal in candlestick methodology.

The most critical level on the board right now is the 200-day Simple Moving Average at approximately 6,620. The index is currently trading within 15 points of this level. A decisive daily close below the 200-day SMA — particularly on elevated volume — would signal the end of the post-2022 secular bull trend and open a path toward the 6,350–6,400 zone. Every technician on Wall Street is watching this level.

Candlestick Pattern Analysis

Evening Star at ATH (7,002) — Jan 2026 🔴 Highest Conviction Five-Candle Descending Sequence (Mar 3–7) Bearish Marubozu — 100-day SMA breakdown (Mar 5) Bear Flag Broken Downward (H4) Potential Doji / Hammer near 200-day SMA
PatternDate / LevelTimeframeImplicationConfidence
Evening Star Jan 2026 · 7,002 ATH Daily Classic major top formation; initiated 5.3% decline to date Very High
Bearish Marubozu March 5 · 6,835 Daily Decisive break of 100-day SMA; 100% bearish range day High
Bear Flag (H4) Mar 7–12 · broken H4 Measured target: 6,520–6,550; flag breakout = continuation High
200-day SMA Test Mar 16 · ~6,620 Daily Macro inflection point: HOLD = technical bounce; BREAK = new bear market 🔴 CRITICAL WATCH

⚡ Actionable Trade Setup — S&P 500 | Next 24–48 Hours

Bias
BEARISH — SELL RALLIES
Short Entry Zone
6,720 – 6,760 (resistance)
Stop Loss (Short)
6,870 (Hard Stop)
Target 1
6,520–6,550
Target 2
6,350–6,400
Risk:Reward
1:2.2 (T1) / 1:3.5 (T2)
200-day SMA Break
Accelerates Short — add on close below 6,600
FOMC Hedge
Hold no large position into Wed 18:00 GMT
Scenario A (Hawkish FOMC — 0 cuts dot plot): S&P breaks 200-day SMA decisively → test of 6,350 within days.
Scenario B (Dovish FOMC — 2 cuts dot plot): Relief rally to 6,750–6,856 resistance zone — a shorting opportunity, not a trend reversal.
Scenario C (In-line hold + neutral language): Sideways chop 6,580–6,720 — scalpers’ market; swing traders stand aside.

FTSE 100 Index (UKX)

Detailed technical analysis, trend assessment, candlestick patterns and trade setup

FTSE 100 · London Stock Exchange
10,261
Last close Sun Mar 15  ·  −0.43% WoW  ·  YTD: Relative outperformer vs US indices
▶ Primary Trend: CORRECTIVE WITHIN UPTREND
RSI 59 · All major MAs below price · Energy sector tailwind
FTSE 100 Daily Chart CSFX TradingView
FTSE 100 · 1D · FTSE · Fibonacci: 9,425–10,938 · Current 10,265 · 0.236 10,581 · 0.382 10,360 · 0.5 10,181 · RSI 41.89

📊 Key Technical Levels

Current Price10,261
2026 High~10,800+
Resistance 110,350–10,413
Resistance 210,500–10,550
Support 1 (Key)10,180–10,250 (CRITICAL HOLD)
Support 210,050–10,100
200-Day SMABelow price — Bullish
50-Day SMABelow price — Bullish
Fibonacci 0.5~10,178 (confluence with support)

📈 Oscillators & Momentum

RSI (14, Daily)59 — Healthy mid-range (neutral-bull)
MACDPositive — above zero line
Moving Average SignalsALL MAs signalling Buy
StochasticModerating from highs — neutral
ATR (Daily)~90–110 pts (moderate vol)
Energy SectorBP +3%, Shell +3% on oil spike
Banking SectorHSBC −6.1%; Barclays −2–5%
Trend StructureHigher highs and lows intact

Trend Analysis

▲ Daily: BULLISH (corrective phase) ▲ Weekly: BULLISH ▲ Monthly: BULLISH

The FTSE 100 tells a fundamentally different story from its US counterparts. While the Dow and S&P are experiencing structural distribution and trend breakdown, the FTSE remains in a genuine medium-term uptrend — correcting from a recent high rather than reversing from one. All major moving averages sit below price with buy signals, the RSI at 59 reflects healthy momentum without being overbought, and the MACD is comfortably positive.

The oil shock has been a double-edged sword for the FTSE. The index’s significant weighting in BP and Shell (each +~3% on the Brent spike) has provided a natural cushion absent from US tech-heavy benchmarks. However, the banking sector — HSBC, Barclays, Standard Chartered, Lloyds — has suffered materially, driven by Middle East exposure concerns and an HSBC ex-dividend effect. The net result is an index that is down modestly but structurally intact. The 10,180–10,250 support zone is the line in the sand — a confirmed hold there with a bullish candlestick would be one of the best long setups available in today’s global market.

Candlestick Pattern Analysis

Bullish Trend Structure — Higher Highs & Higher Lows Corrective Pullback (Normal in uptrend) Potential Hammer / Bullish Engulfing at 10,180 support Inside Bar Formation — Consolidation near support Bearish Gap on HSBC ex-div (contained)
ScenarioTriggerPrice ActionTargetProbability
Bullish (Base Case) 10,180–10,250 support holds + bullish candle Bounce from support; energy stocks continue to lead 10,413 → 10,550 55%
Neutral / Range FOMC uncertainty keeps risk off Chop between 10,180 and 10,413 10,300 midpoint 30%
Bearish (Risk-Off) Hawkish FOMC + 200-day SMA break on SPX Break of 10,180 support → 10,050 10,050–10,100 15%

⚡ Actionable Trade Setup — FTSE 100 | Next 24–48 Hours

Bias
BUY AT SUPPORT
Long Entry Zone
10,180 – 10,250
Stop Loss (Long)
10,080 (below 10,100 support)
Target 1
10,413
Target 2
10,550
Risk:Reward
1:2.3 (T1) / 1:3.8 (T2)
BoE Caution
No new longs into Thu 12:00 GMT
Confirmation
Bullish engulfing or hammer at support
Setup Logic: The FTSE 100 long at the 10,180–10,250 Fibonacci 0.5 / support confluence represents the highest R:R long setup in the G7 index universe right now. The structural bull case is intact — all MAs bullish, RSI healthy. Entry is conditional on a confirmed bullish daily close above 10,250. Do NOT enter blindly. Wait for price to touch support and show a confirmed rejection candle (hammer, engulfing, pin bar) before committing size. Await BoE outcome Thursday before scaling in.

Macro Context & Sentiment Intelligence

The geopolitical, monetary and economic forces shaping index direction

ThemeDetailMarket ImpactDurationSignal
Iran — Hormuz Closure Brent >$100; ~20% of world oil transit blocked; US Strikes escalating (Kharg Island hit Mar 14) Stagflation risk; reduces Fed cut probability; energy sector bull; airline/industrial bear Weeks–months Bearish Equities
FOMC (Mar 17–18) Hold expected; dot-plot update is the key — 0 cuts vs 1–2 cuts; Powell language on inflation ±3% potential swing on dot-plot; binary event; avoid large unhedged positions into Wednesday 1 week 🔴 CRITICAL
US CPI Feb (+0.3%) In line with estimates; core inflation sticky; stubbornly above Fed 2% target Limits Fed dovish pivot; supports higher-for-longer narrative Persistent Hawkish
US NFP Feb (−92,000) First payroll contraction since 2020; shock miss; stagflation concern amplified Paradox: weak growth + sticky inflation = policy paralysis; worst of both worlds for equities Ongoing Stagflation Risk
China Data (Today) IP +6.3% (beat); Retail +2.8% (beat); FAI +1.8% (beat vs −2.1% forecast) Positive for global growth; limits commodity demand collapse; supportive of FTSE mining sector Short-term positive Mildly Positive
UK Labour Market Unemployment 5.2% (highest since 2021); payrolled employees falling; wage growth moderating BoE has justification for a cut Mar 19 despite oil inflation; GBP sensitive Ongoing BoE Dove Signal
RBA (Mar 17) 50/50 debate; 25bp hike to 3.85% vs hold; inflation + oil vs global uncertainty AUD volatility; broader EM risk-sentiment proxy 1 day High Uncertainty
BoJ (Mar 18–19) Hold at 0.50% expected; PM Takaichi urged caution; war uncertainty delays further hikes JPY safe-haven bid; Nikkei under pressure if hike surprises 1–2 days Hold Expected
VIX at 27.19 Structurally elevated; implies daily S&P moves of ±1.7%; options pricing expensive Reduce position size 40–50%; widen stops; avoid weekly options expiry traps Regime-level Risk-Off Regime
Sector Divergence Energy: best sector 2026 YTD; Tech/AI: worst; Airlines/Consumer Disc: heavy pressure Rotation from growth to value; defensives + energy outperform; avoid leveraged tech longs Ongoing Rotation Risk

Risk Matrix — Next 24 Hours

Scenario-based risk assessment for experienced index traders

ScenarioTriggerDJI ImpactS&P 500 ImpactFTSE 100 ImpactProbability
🟡 Iran De-Escalation Signal Ceasefire talks or Hormuz partial reopening +800 to +1,200 pts +3% to +5% Energy sector pullback; index +1–2% 15%
🔴 FOMC Hawkish Shock (0 cuts) Dot-plot removes all 2026 cuts; Powell inflation focus −1,000 to −1,500 pts Break 200-day SMA; −3% to −5% −2% to −3%; 10,050 at risk 30%
🟢 FOMC Dovish Surprise (2 cuts) Dot-plot shifts to 2 cuts citing war growth risk +1,000 pts relief bounce +2.5% to +4%; tests 6,750–6,856 +2% to +3%; tests 10,413 20%
⚪ FOMC In-Line (1 cut, neutral) Hold + cautious language on inflation ±200 pts; chop Sideways 6,580–6,720 Sideways 10,180–10,350 35%
🔴 SPX 200-day SMA Break Decisive daily close below ~6,620 Dow accelerates to 45,500 Opens path to 6,350; signal: new bear market Sympathetic selloff; 10,050–10,100 Embedded in hawkish scenario

Frequently Asked Questions

Expert answers to the questions every active index trader is asking today

What is the most important event for index markets this week?
Without question, it is the FOMC decision and dot-plot update on Wednesday March 18 at 18:00 GMT, followed by Jerome Powell’s press conference at 18:30 GMT. The Fed is expected to hold rates at 4.50–4.75%, but what markets will react to is the updated quarterly dot-plot projection. If the median Federal Reserve official’s projection shifts from one 25bp cut to zero cuts in 2026 — reflecting stagflation concerns from the Iran oil shock — expect a sharp repricing in US equities, potentially breaking the S&P 500’s critical 200-day moving average. Conversely, a shift to two projected cuts would likely trigger a sharp relief rally of 2–4%. Powell’s language around “geopolitical risks to the inflation outlook” will be parsed word by word. Do not hold large, unhedged directional positions into the decision.
Is the S&P 500 entering a bear market?
The S&P 500 is at a critical technical juncture. From its January 2026 all-time high of 7,002, the index has declined approximately 5.3% — which is a correction, not yet a bear market (defined as a 20%+ decline). However, what makes this moment genuinely dangerous is the proximity to the 200-day Simple Moving Average at approximately 6,620. A decisive close below this level — particularly on high volume — would historically signal the end of the bull market cycle that began in late 2022. The S&P has already broken its 20-day, 50-day, and 100-day SMAs. The 200-day is the last line. If it breaks, technicians widely regard 6,350–6,400 as the next meaningful support.
Why is the FTSE 100 holding up better than US indices?
Three structural reasons: (1) Energy weighting — BP and Shell together represent a meaningful portion of the FTSE 100’s market cap. With Brent crude above $100, those stocks are surging, acting as a natural hedge for the index. (2) Valuation — the FTSE 100 trades at a lower price-to-earnings multiple than the S&P 500 or Nasdaq, with less AI premium embedded, making it less vulnerable to the valuation-compression that is punishing US tech. (3) Currency — a weaker pound (which tends to fall during global risk-off periods) actually boosts FTSE 100 earnings since most constituent companies earn revenues internationally in USD. The FTSE’s RSI of 59 and all-moving-averages-below-price configuration reflect a genuinely bullish structural backdrop — it is correcting, not reversing.
What does VIX at 27 mean for my trading position size?
A VIX of 27 represents a structurally elevated volatility regime. The VIX is a 30-day implied volatility measure for the S&P 500; at 27, it implies the market is pricing approximately ±1.7% daily moves in the S&P 500. In practical terms for index traders: (1) Reduce all position sizes by 40–50% relative to your normal sizing. (2) Widen stop-losses to accommodate intraday swings of 1–2% that may not be directionally meaningful. (3) Avoid buying weekly or short-dated options because the elevated premium will erode your P&L even if directionally correct. (4) Binary events (FOMC, BoE, BoJ) can cause gap moves of 2–3% in minutes — never hold maximum-size positions into these. In short: VIX 27 rewards patience, punishes overtrading, and destroys leveraged positional traders who do not adjust size.
What is a Three Black Crows pattern and why does it matter for the Dow?
Three Black Crows is a high-conviction bearish candlestick continuation pattern. It consists of three consecutive large bearish (red/black) candles, each opening within the body of the previous candle and closing at a new low. The pattern signals coordinated, sustained institutional selling over multiple sessions — not random volatility. On the Dow Jones chart, this pattern formed across March 3–13, 2026, with three consecutive sessions posting lower closes in a sustained breakdown. In the context of the current macro environment — war-driven oil shock, stagflation fears, and technical breakdown below the 47,000 support level — Three Black Crows carries maximum conviction. It means the big money is leaving, and bounces are selling opportunities until the macro picture changes.
How does China’s better-than-expected data today affect index markets?
China’s January–February data released this morning (Industrial Production +6.3% vs 5.0% expected; Retail Sales +2.8% vs 2.5% expected; Fixed Asset Investment +1.8% vs −2.1% expected) is genuinely positive for global growth expectations. In the short term, it supports commodity demand — which is modestly positive for the FTSE 100’s mining sector (Rio Tinto, BHP) and limits downside in industrial metals. For US indices, the positive read is more limited: the US equity market’s problems (FOMC uncertainty, war risk, tech valuation) are not solved by Chinese consumption data. The Nomura caveat is important — they note that the divide between China’s strong external demand (AI-driven exports) and weak domestic demand (property crisis) will widen in 2026. So today’s beat is real but does not alter the primary bearish case for US equities.
What is the best trade setup right now across the three indices?
In the current environment, the best individual setup is a long FTSE 100 at the 10,180–10,250 support zone, conditional on a confirmed bullish daily candle (hammer, engulfing or pin bar) at that level. The risk/reward is approximately 1:2.3 to the first target of 10,413. The structural bull case for the FTSE (RSI 59, all MAs below price, energy tailwind) is intact, and the proximity to strong Fibonacci/horizontal support makes the stop-loss tight and well-defined. For US indices, the correct bias is to sell into failed rallies at resistance (47,000–47,200 Dow; 6,720–6,760 S&P) but to avoid building large shorts ahead of FOMC, which carries binary risk. In all cases, reduce position sizes by 40–50% given VIX at 27.
How will the Bank of England decision on March 19 affect the FTSE 100?
The Bank of England’s March 19 decision is a genuinely difficult call for Governor Andrew Bailey and the Monetary Policy Committee. On one side: UK unemployment has risen to 5.2% (highest since 2021), GDP growth was just 0.1% in Q4 2025, and real wage growth is cooling — all of which argue for a rate cut to support the economy. On the other side: Brent crude above $100 is adding new inflationary pressure, and services inflation remains sticky. The market is broadly pricing a hold with a dovish statement, or a 25bp cut. For the FTSE 100: (1) A rate cut or dovish hold would be broadly positive — cheaper borrowing boosts rate-sensitive sectors (REITs, utilities, small caps). (2) A hawkish hold citing oil inflation would be mildly negative — but would strengthen the pound, which has a mixed effect on the FTSE’s multinational revenues. The risk is if Bailey signals inflation concern overrides growth concern — that would pressure UK domestic stocks more than the FTSE 100 as a whole.

Conclusion & Outlook

A clear-eyed assessment of where we are and how to navigate what comes next

The Week in One Paragraph

Monday March 16, 2026 opens with three concurrent macro shocks converging on global equity markets: the Iran–US war has locked Brent crude above $100 per barrel, the FOMC meets Tuesday–Wednesday with a dot-plot that could remove all projected 2026 rate cuts, and the Bank of England decides Thursday on whether to cut into a stagflationary storm. All major US indices are at 2026 year-to-date lows after three consecutive losing weeks. The VIX at 27 signals that the low-volatility era for equities is definitively over.

For active index traders, the honest framework is this: the dominant trade on US indices (Dow Jones and S&P 500) is to sell into failed rallies at defined resistance levels — 47,000–47,200 on the Dow and 6,720–6,760 on the S&P — until the macro picture changes materially. Oversold RSI readings create bounce risk, not reversal risk. The S&P 500’s 200-day SMA at ~6,620 is the most important level on any global chart right now; a convincing break below it would mark a regime change. The FTSE 100 offers the highest-quality long setup in the G7 universe — correcting within a structural uptrend, with energy tailwinds, healthy technicals, and a well-defined support zone at 10,180–10,250.

The good news for bulls is that China’s strong data this morning confirms the global economy has not rolled over. The bad news is that Iran’s oil shock is a stagflationary force that no central bank has a clean answer for. In that environment, patience, reduced position size, and a respect for binary event risk are not conservative choices — they are the professional ones.

DJI: SELL RALLIES → 47,000–47,200 SPX: CRITICAL 200-day SMA WATCH FTSE: BUY SUPPORT → 10,180–10,250 VIX 27: −40–50% POSITION SIZE FOMC Mar 18: BINARY RISK BoE Mar 19: GBP VOLATILITY Brent $103: Stagflation Pressure China Data: Beats — Mildly Positive
Risk Disclosure & Disclaimer: This report is produced for informational and educational purposes for experienced traders. It does not constitute financial advice, investment recommendations, or a solicitation to buy or sell any financial instrument. All index trading involves significant risk of loss, and leveraged products can result in losses exceeding your initial investment. Past technical patterns are not guarantees of future performance. The analysis provided reflects publicly available market data compiled at the time of publication (06:00 GMT, March 16, 2026) and market conditions can change rapidly, particularly around high-impact economic events. Always conduct your own due diligence and consult a qualified financial adviser before making trading decisions.
Market Intelligence Desk  ·  Daily Index Analysis  ·  Report No. 2026–075  ·  Published Monday 16 March 2026, 06:00 GMT  ·  Vol. IV · Issue 15
Covering: Dow Jones Industrial Average · S&P 500 Index · FTSE 100 · VIX · Brent Crude · Economic Calendar · FOMC · BoE · RBA · BoJ · China NBS

© 2026 Market Intelligence Desk. All rights reserved. For informational purposes only. Not financial advice.