Index Market Analysis – March 2, 2026 | Operation Epic Fury & Market Shockwaves
Monday, March 2, 2026
Today’s session opens into one of the most significant macro shocks of 2026. Over the weekend, the United States and Israel launched “Operation Epic Fury” — a coordinated wave of airstrikes against Iran that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and effectively triggered a de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most critical oil chokepoint handling roughly 20% of daily global supply. Equity futures across all major markets are sharply lower, oil has surged, gold is rallying hard, and the VIX is poised to spike at the open.
This is not a routine risk-off Monday. The geopolitical shock is compounding an already fragile equity backdrop — the S&P 500 had already finished February in the red, weighed down by AI-disruption fears, hotter-than-expected PPI inflation, and significant layoffs in the tech sector. Active traders should approach today’s session with heightened discipline: larger spreads, amplified volatility, and decisive news-flow will define intraday direction.
“In the event of prolonged Hormuz closure and an oil shock to $100+ per barrel, we forecast 6,000 on the S&P 500 as the worst-case scenario. Our base forecast still calls for 7,500 by year-end — but today tests conviction.”
— Wells Fargo Equity Strategy, March 2, 2026| Driver | What Happened | Impact | Directional Bias |
|---|---|---|---|
| US-Israel Strikes on Iran | Operation Epic Fury launched late Saturday. Supreme Leader Khamenei killed. Iran retaliating with missile strikes on US bases across the Gulf — UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Jordan, Iraq. AWS UAE data centre struck by “objects,” causing service disruption. | CRITICAL | HEAVILY BEARISH EQUITIES |
| Strait of Hormuz De Facto Closure | Commercial shipping has largely halted; insurers refusing coverage. ~20% of global oil supply at risk. Brent crude opened Monday up 9–13%, briefly topping $80/bbl (highest since Jan 2025). Analysts at Barclays, UBS, Kpler warn of $85–120/bbl scenarios if closure persists. | CRITICAL | STAGFLATIONARY RISK |
| OPEC+ Production Boost | OPEC+ announced +206,000 bpd production increase for April (more than expected). Partially offsets supply concern but analysts note much of Gulf spare capacity cannot reach markets if Hormuz remains closed. Saudi East-West and UAE Fujairah pipelines offer only partial relief. | MODERATE | PARTIAL OFFSET |
| February PPI Shock | US Producer Price Index rose +0.5% in January vs. +0.3% expected, suggesting companies are passing tariff costs to consumers. Fed rate cut path complicated further. VIX had already rebounded above 20 last Friday. | HIGH | BEARISH / FED HAWKISH |
| AI / Software Sector Disruption | S&P 500 closed February in the red as AI-disruption fears intensified. Block laid off 4,000+ employees (nearly half workforce). CoreWeave guidance disappointed (–18.6%). Nvidia extended slide –4.1% last Friday on growing AI adoption skepticism. | HIGH | TECH SECTOR BEARISH |
| Foreign Equity Outperformance | MSCI World ex-US index has gained ~8% in 2026 vs. flat S&P 500. Weaker USD and cheaper valuations attracting overseas rotation. FTSE 100 has benefited from defence, mining, and energy stocks. | MODERATE | UK/EUROPE RELATIVE STRENGTH |
| Gold Safe-Haven Surge | Gold futures jumped +3.3% as investors piled into safe havens. Gold builds on best annual performance since 1979. Typical flight-to-quality pattern in early geopolitical shocks. | MODERATE | GOLD BULLISH |
With markets already on edge from the Iran crisis, today’s data releases carry amplified significance. Any data that worsens the inflation or growth picture could accelerate the selloff, while a surprisingly soft ISM reading might give the Fed cover to stay on hold and offer equities a brief respite.
| Time (ET) | Country | Event | Previous | Forecast | Impact | Trader Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09:45 | 🇺🇸 USA | S&P Global Manufacturing PMI (Feb Final) | 52.4 | 51.2 | HIGH | Contraction risk if tariff-driven cost pass-through accelerates |
| 10:00 | 🇺🇸 USA | ISM Manufacturing PMI (Feb) | 52.6 | ~52.0 | HIGH | Key market mover. Below 50 = contraction. Watch New Orders & Prices Paid sub-components closely alongside oil shock |
| 10:00 | 🇺🇸 USA | ISM Manufacturing New Orders Index | 57.1 | – | HIGH | Leading indicator for future production. Highly watched given recession chatter |
| 11:30 | 🇺🇸 USA | 3-Month & 6-Month Bill Auction | 3.59% / 3.525% | – | MEDIUM | Watch bid-to-cover ratio for demand signals amid geopolitical flight to quality |
| TBA | 🇬🇧 UK | UK Manufacturing PMI (Feb Final) — S&P Global | ~48.2 | ~48.5 | HIGH | FTSE 100 sensitive — UK manufacturing still in contraction. Energy cost spike from Hormuz disruption could worsen outlook |
| TBA | 🇯🇵 Japan | Jibun Bank Manufacturing PMI (Feb Final) | ~48.7 | ~49.0 | MEDIUM | Japan imports virtually all its oil — Hormuz disruption is acute risk. BoJ will be watching energy inflation closely |
| TBA | 🇦🇺 Australia | RBA Interest Rate Decision (expected hold at 4.10%) | 4.10% | 4.10% HOLD | HIGH | RBA first cut was Feb 2026. Market watching for Mar guidance. Energy shock adds upside inflation risk — may push back next cut expectations |
| TBA | 🇪🇺 Europe | Eurozone Manufacturing PMI (Feb Final) | ~46.6 | ~47.0 | HIGH | DAX expected –1.5%, CAC –1.4% at open. European energy dependency makes Hormuz crisis acutely impactful. ECB rate path sensitive to oil spike |
| TBA | 🇨🇳 China | Caixin Manufacturing PMI (Feb) | 50.3 | ~50.2 | MEDIUM | China imports ~1.6M bbl/day from Iran. Major supply disruption risk. Will need to bid aggressively for alternative crude supplies |
The most critical release today remains the ISM Manufacturing PMI at 10:00 AM ET. Markets are primed for volatility: a reading below 50 (contraction) landing on the same day as the Iran shock could amplify the selloff considerably. Conversely, a resilient reading above 53 might anchor the narrative toward “US economy can absorb the shock,” providing temporary relief. Watch the Prices Paid sub-index especially — that component will signal whether the energy spike is already filtering into input costs.
The DJIA remains technically above its SMA50 and SMA200, both pointing upward and acting as dynamic support — a bullish long-term structure. However, the short-to-medium term picture has deteriorated meaningfully. The index broke decisively below 49,500 on Friday, registering a high-volume bearish candle, and futures are signalling an open near 48,130 — dangerously close to the SMA50 which sits approximately in the 47,800–48,200 region.
The RSI sits around 55 — technically neutral, but the trajectory is bearish. MACD remains in positive territory but histogram bars are declining, signalling weakening bullish momentum. The Dow has spent most of 2026 oscillating between 48,900 and 50,500, forming a rising wedge that is now being tested from above. A confirmed close below 48,700 would technically break this structure and open room towards 47,500–47,000.
Daily (Friday close): A large-bodied Bearish Marubozu formed on elevated volume — open near highs, close near lows. This is a decisive rejection candle, not a mere pullback. In the context of the prior week’s failed attempt to reclaim 50,000 (ATH at ~50,513 on Feb 10), this creates a Double Top warning structure, with the neckline around 48,700–48,900.
Weekly: The weekly candle for the last week of February is a Bearish Engulfing on the daily chart context. Combined with the Iran shock gap expected at Monday’s open, we are watching for a gap-and-go breakdown pattern or a potential Dead Cat Bounce intraday if short-covering kicks in.
| Indicator | Reading | Signal | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| RSI (14) | ~55 | NEUTRAL | Room to fall further before oversold; not offering contrarian long signal yet |
| MACD | +ve, declining | WEAKENING | Histogram bars contracting; bearish momentum building |
| SMA 50 | ~47,800–48,200 | SUPPORT | Futures testing this zone; critical hold level for bullish case |
| SMA 200 | ~45,000–46,000 | MAJOR SUPPORT | Long-term bull market line; break would signal regime change |
| ADX | Moderate | TRENDING | Trend strengthening to downside intraday |
| Volume (Fri) | Elevated | BEARISH | High volume on down candle confirms institutional distribution |
The S&P 500 concluded February in negative territory — a significant psychological defeat after the index had spent most of January flirting with the psychologically important 7,000 level (ATH: 7,002.28 on Jan 28). The daily technical signal from Investing.com now reads SELL, with 8 of 12 moving average signals bearish. TradingView’s overall technical rating is also SELL. This aligns with a price structure that has rejected twice near 7,000 and now risks forming a more significant distributional top.
The Investtech medium-term analysis shows the S&P approaching resistance at 7,000 with the RSI showing a falling trend — an early signal of possible trend reversal downward. Cycle analysis from IO Fund highlights a composite of major cycles (60, 52, 49, 45 year etc.) converging to signal elevated volatility probability in Q2/Q3, with only 3 of 8 major cycles suggesting the year finishes higher. Wells Fargo’s base case remains 7,500 year-end, but today’s geopolitical shock is testing that base case hard.
Daily (Friday): A Bearish Engulfing candle on elevated volume closed below the 20-day MA (approximately 6,910–6,940 region). The prior week’s bounce (Wednesday’s gain to 6,946) was cleanly reversed — a classic “Failure Swing” pattern where bulls were unable to hold reclaimed territory.
Weekly (Feb close): A Shooting Star / Inverted Hammer on the weekly chart — the index tagged 7,000+ intraday during the last full week of February but closed the month with a significant red candle. This is textbook supply zone rejection. The expected gap lower Monday morning reinforces this narrative with a potential bearish gap continuation.
| Indicator | Reading | Signal | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| RSI (14) | ~43–47 (falling) | WEAKENING | Falling RSI trend ahead of possible price trend reversal. Not yet oversold |
| MACD | Negative crossover | SELL | Daily MACD crossed bearish — momentum clearly shifted |
| MA5 / MA10 | Both turning down | SELL | Short-term MAs in downward slope; 8 of 12 MAs bearish per Investing.com |
| MA50 | ~6,600–6,650 | WATCH | Next major dynamic support if current levels break |
| MA200 | ~6,150–6,200 | MAJOR SUPPORT | Long-term bull structure intact above this level |
| VIX Context | Was 19.86 Fri; est 24–28 today | FEAR ELEVATED | VIX above 25 historically associated with market bottom formation — but not a signal to buy yet |
The FTSE 100 has been a 2026 standout. After surging above 10,000 for the first time in history in January 2026, the index has consolidated near 10,800–11,000, establishing a new structural support plateau. All major moving averages are aligned bullishly — the 5-DMA (10,224), 50-DMA (10,177), and 200-DMA (9,987) form a classic bullish stack with the price well above all of them. Investing.com’s technical signal reads STRONG BUY — 12 buy signals, 0 sell signals across all MAs.
The FTSE 100’s composition is uniquely positioned in this environment: heavy weighting toward energy (BP, Shell), mining (Rio Tinto, Glencore, Anglo American), and defence (BAE Systems, Rolls-Royce, Babcock) means sectors that traditionally benefit from oil shocks and geopolitical tensions are over-represented. This creates a potential relative outperformance buffer vs US indices.
Daily (Friday): The FTSE closed up +0.59% Friday — outperforming US indices which fell. This relative strength formed a Bullish Hammer / Doji pattern at the upper end of the recent range, suggesting dip buyers remain present near 10,800+.
Weekly structure: A solid Inside Bar week, consolidating near all-time highs. The weekly candlestick shows healthy price acceptance above 10,700. The key question today is whether the Iran shock overrides FTSE’s structural support or whether energy/defence stock gains offset the global risk-off pressure. Watch for a potential Bearish Gap Open followed by energy stock-led recovery — a pattern unique to the FTSE’s sector mix.
| Indicator | Reading | Signal | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| RSI (14) | ~67 (FX Leaders) / 74+ (prev. | NEAR OVERBOUGHT | Approaching 70 threshold; pullback risk elevated but trend still intact |
| MACD | +14.01 (positive) | BUY | MACD positive and above signal line — bullish momentum confirmed |
| ADX | ~45.51 | STRONG TREND | ADX above 40 confirms strong directional trend (uptrend) |
| All MAs (5–200) | Price above all | STRONG BUY | 12/12 moving averages bullish per Investing.com — extraordinary alignment |
| Weekly / Monthly signal | Strong Buy | STRONG BUY | All timeframes aligned bullish — rare multi-timeframe confluence |
| Fibonacci Pivot | 10,221–10,374 | SUPPORT ZONE | Fibonacci pivot cluster provides strong floor on pullbacks |
| Index | Friday Close | Trend (Daily) | RSI | Key Support | Key Resistance | Signal | Today’s Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dow Jones | 48,977 | Bearish reversal forming | ~55 | 47,800–48,200 | 48,977 / 49,500 | SELL | BEARISH ↓ |
| S&P 500 | 6,878 | Downtrend developing | ~43–47 | 6,600–6,650 | 6,878 / 6,950 | SELL | BEARISH ↓↓ |
| FTSE 100 | 10,910 | Uptrend intact; short-term caution | ~67 | 10,145–10,177 | 10,972 | STRONG BUY | NEUTRAL–BULLISH ↔↑ |
| Scenario | Probability | Brent Crude | S&P 500 Impact | FTSE 100 Impact | Key Catalyst |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base Case: Short Shock, Quick Recovery | 40% | $80–88 then retreat to $70–78 | –3% to –5% this week | –1% to –2% | Ceasefire / shipping resumes within 5 days |
| Elevated Case: Prolonged Disruption (2–4 weeks) | 35% | $88–100/bbl | –8% to –12% from Friday close | –3% to –5%; energy buffers losses | Hormuz stays effectively closed >2 weeks |
| Tail Risk: Full Oil Shock ($100+) | 15% | $100–120/bbl | –13% to –18% (to ~6,000) | –8% to –12% | Iran infrastructure destroyed; Iraqi supply collapse; regional war |
| Bull Case: Rapid De-escalation | 10% | $68–73/bbl (retreat) | Recover to 6,950–7,000 within 5 days | Rally to 11,000+ | Ceasefire within 24–48 hours; OPEC SPR release; Iran capitulation |
“All told, we presume a shorter-term impact, but can’t rule out a more protracted friction to equities. We also need to bucket this new volatility event alongside a growing list of concerns.”
— Citi Equity Strategists, March 2, 2026Today’s Bottom Line for Active Traders
March 2, 2026 opens as one of the highest-volatility sessions of the year. The US-Israel strikes on Iran have triggered a genuine macro shock — not a routine risk-off day. Brent crude is up nearly 10%, equity futures are sharply lower across all major indices, the VIX is poised to spike, and the Strait of Hormuz — handling one-fifth of global oil supply — has effectively halted commercial traffic for the first time since the Iran-Iraq War era.
For experienced traders, this environment demands respect, reduced position sizing, and a clear scenario framework. The three key questions that will define direction in the next 24 hours are: (1) How does the Strait of Hormuz situation evolve — does shipping resume or does the closure deepen? (2) Does the ISM PMI at 10:00 AM ET show economic resilience or crack under pre-existing tariff and inflation pressure? (3) Does Iran’s retaliation escalate toward Gulf energy infrastructure, or does it peak at current levels?
Bearish structure forming. Watch 47,800–48,200 (SMA50) as critical support. Short on bounces to 48,900–49,100 is the primary setup. Reduce longs significantly.
Daily signal SELL. RSI falling. Gap lower at open expected. Priority level: 6,650–6,700 (50-DMA). Worst case: 6,000 if oil shock persists. Short the bounce is the thesis.
Relative outperformer. Structural trend firmly bullish — all MAs aligned. Energy/defence weighting a natural hedge. Buy dips to 10,700–10,800 for recovery play to 10,972+.
Today is not a day to be a hero. Reduce size. Widen stops. Set price alerts. Keep powder dry for cleaner setups post-open volatility. Define your maximum loss before the session.