Index Market Analysis | March 26, 2026 | Dow Jones · S&P 500 · FTSE 100 | CSFX Research
Index Market Analysis
March 26, 2026
Iran Rejects US Peace Plan · Brent Rebounds to $105 · US Jobless Claims Due · Three Major Index Trade Setups
Global Market Snapshot — March 26, 2026
Live closes and key cross-asset context for the 24-hour trading window
| Index | Yesterday Close | Today (Live) | Change | YTD | 52W High | Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dow Jones (DJI) | 46,124 | 46,429 | +305 (+0.66%) | −8.3% | 50,616 | Cautious Recovery |
| S&P 500 (SPX) | 6,556 | 6,591.90 | +35.53 (+0.54%) | −5.8% | 7,003 | 0.618 Fib Test |
| FTSE 100 (UKX) | 10,107 | 9,971.93 | −134.91 (−1.33%) | −8.8% | 10,931 | Sub-10K Risk |
| Nasdaq 100 (NDX) | 21,762 | ~21,930 | +0.77% | −7.1% | 22,807 | AI Recovery |
Macro Context — The Iran War & Market Drivers
What is actually moving global indices this week and what to monitor next
The US-Iran war, which commenced on 1 March 2026 with joint US-Israeli airstrikes targeting Iranian military infrastructure, remains the dominant force across all three major indices covered in this report. Since conflict began, the S&P 500 has lost roughly 6%, WTI crude surged from $72 to a peak of $112 before partially retreating, and the VIX fear gauge doubled from 13 to approximately 25. Markets are now trading in a binary regime: ceasefire optimism generates sharp rallies (Wednesday’s +0.5–0.7%), while renewed hostility headlines produce immediate reversals.
Wednesday’s session saw all three indices rally on reports that the US delivered a 15-point peace proposal to Tehran via Pakistani intermediaries. That optimism evaporated Thursday morning as Iran’s foreign minister categorically stated the country had “no intention of negotiating for now” and Brent crude surged back above $104. Deutsche Bank has flagged that Trump’s five-day deadline for postponing strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure expires in roughly 48 hours — making this a critical 24-hour window for headline risk.
Three secondary forces are amplifying volatility. The Federal Reserve’s hawkish stance — removing multiple 2026 rate cuts from its guidance — has structurally repriced equities lower from January’s highs. Technology stocks, while recovering Wednesday (+1.3% sector), remain under pressure from AI disruption concerns and elevated energy costs. And the FTSE 100 faces a unique domestic vulnerability: UK 10-year Gilt yields hit 5% recently (a level last seen during the 2008 financial crisis), the OECD has slashed UK growth forecasts, and manufacturing cost inflation is at its sharpest since Black Wednesday 1992.
Economic Calendar — High-Impact Events Next 24 Hours
USA · UK · Europe · Japan · Australia · China — events due March 26–27, 2026
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI)
Daily timeframe · Fibonacci analysis · Candlestick patterns · Trade setup
Dow Jones Industrial Average
O 46,314 · H 46,718 · L 46,196 · C 46,429
Trend Analysis: The Dow Jones remains in a confirmed intermediate downtrend from its all-time high of 50,616 (set in late 2025). Price is trading below all major exponential moving averages — the 21, 50, and 200-day EMAs have all rolled over and are now angled downward in bearish configuration. The 200-day EMA sits near 48,200, representing a substantial 3.8% overhead. Until that level is reclaimed on a weekly close, the structural bias remains bearish.
Fibonacci Structure: Using the full swing from the 1.0 base at 45,425 to the 0 peak at 50,616, Wednesday’s close at 46,429 sits just below the 0.786 Fibonacci level at 46,530. This is the last meaningful Fibonacci resistance before a potential rally toward the 0.618 level at 47,408. The index has bounced from the area of the 1.0 retracement base — a structurally significant hold. However, the RSI at 38.24 and StochRSI at 32.49 show that momentum recovery is nascent, not confirmed.
Candlestick Patterns (Daily):
Wednesday printed a strong bullish engulfing candle after the ceasefire headlines, closing near the session high at 46,429. Thursday’s early price action is forming an inside day — a consolidation candle with lower high and higher low relative to Wednesday. At Fibonacci resistance, an inside day is a classic “coiling” pattern before a directional break. The direction of Thursday’s close determines the short-term trajectory.
Primary Trade Setup — Fibonacci Resistance Rejection (Bearish Bias)
Entry Trigger: Daily close below 46,200 (inside day breakdown) confirms rejection of the 0.786 Fib at 46,530.
Target 1: 45,800 (short-term pivot). Target 2: 45,425 (Fib 1.0 support — swing low).
Stop Loss: Daily close above 47,000 — negates the rejection thesis and opens path to 47,408.
Alternative Bull Setup: A confirmed close above 47,000 on strong volume with RSI breaking above 45 would validate a recovery toward 47,408 (0.618 Fib). Position size conservatively — VIX at 25 demands at minimum a 30% size reduction versus normal market conditions.
| Scenario | Trigger | Target | Stop | Probability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bear — Fib Rejection | Close < 46,200 | 45,800 → 45,425 | 47,000 | 55% |
| Bull — Breakout Recovery | Close > 47,000 | 47,408 → 47,950 | 46,100 | 30% |
| Neutral — Range Consolidation | Close 46,200–47,000 | Hold range | — | 15% |
S&P 500 Index (SPX)
Daily timeframe · 0.618 Fibonacci battleground · Candlestick patterns · Trade setup
S&P 500 Index
O 6,598 · H 6,633 · L 6,568 · C 6,591
Trend Analysis: The S&P 500 is in a well-defined intermediate downtrend, down approximately 5.8% year-to-date and 6% from where the Iran conflict began. Price is trading below its 50-day and 200-day moving averages, both of which are now sloping downward. The 200-day MA sits near 6,720, representing a critical overhead that must be reclaimed to shift the structural narrative to bullish. The weekly chart shows a series of lower highs from the 7,003 all-time high, confirming directional pressure.
Fibonacci Structure: Using the measured swing from 6,359 (1.0 base) to 7,003 (0 peak), current price at 6,591 sits in the critical zone between the 0.618 retracement at 6,605 and the 0.786 level at 6,497. The 0.618 Fibonacci at 6,605 is drawn as a dashed red reference line on the chart — a level that has acted as both support and now resistance. Wednesday’s close at 6,591 is 14 points below this threshold. The inability to close above 6,605 on a day of genuine ceasefire optimism is a technically significant failure.
Candlestick Patterns (Daily):
Wednesday’s daily candle was a clean bullish engulfing, opening near Monday’s close and closing near session highs — a genuine reversal signal after five consecutive bearish days. The critical issue is that this engulfing candle failed to close above the 0.618 Fibonacci at 6,605. In Fibonacci analysis, a bullish engulfing that stops precisely at a key retracement level is often a bull trap. Thursday’s opening candle below this level — combined with oil’s surge on renewed Iran headlines — increases the probability of a shooting star or hanging man formation that would negate Wednesday’s recovery.
Primary Trade Setup — 0.618 Fibonacci Rejection (Bearish)
Entry Trigger: Daily close below 6,540 confirms rejection of the 0.618 Fib resistance. The 6,568 intraday low from Wednesday provides the reference.
Target 1: 6,497 (0.786 Fib support). Target 2: 6,400 (psychological and structural support zone).
Stop Loss: Daily close above 6,650 — a genuine breakout above 0.618 Fib would change the short-term setup to neutral/bullish.
Alternative Bull Setup: A clean daily close above 6,650 with RSI breaking above 45 opens the door to 6,757 (0.382 Fib) — the next meaningful recovery target. This would require a ceasefire headline or dramatically positive jobless claims data to achieve today.
| Scenario | Trigger | Target | Stop | Probability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bear — Fib Rejection | Close < 6,540 | 6,497 → 6,400 | 6,650 | 52% |
| Bull — Fib Breakout | Close > 6,650 | 6,757 → 6,835 | 6,540 | 28% |
| Neutral — Consolidation | Close 6,540–6,650 | Indecisive | — | 20% |
FTSE 100 Index (UKX)
Daily timeframe · Sub-10,000 risk · Candlestick patterns · Trade setup
FTSE 100 Index
O 10,106 · H 10,106 · L 9,970 · C 9,971
Trend Analysis: Of the three major indices in this report, the FTSE 100 carries the most immediate technical risk. Having fallen from its all-time high of 10,931 (February 2026) by over 11% since the Iran war began, the UK index is now trading below all key exponential moving averages. The 50-day EMA at approximately 10,354 and the 200-day EMA near 10,298 have both rolled over sharply, forming a classic bearish EMA stack. The index broke below the psychological 10,000 level during the worst of the March selling before recovering — and today’s −1.33% session has pushed it back toward that critical threshold at 9,971.
Fibonacci Structure: Using the swing from 9,424 (Fib 1.0 base, the prior major low) to 10,931 (Fib 0 peak, all-time high), the 0.618 retracement sits exactly at 10,000.19. This level has become the defining technical battleground of 2026 for the FTSE. Wednesday’s recovery brought the index back above 10,100. Thursday’s session has erased those gains and pushed price back below 10,000. A daily close below 9,970 would confirm a second rejection of the 0.618 Fib, opening the path toward the 0.786 level at approximately 9,800 and ultimately the 1.0 base at 9,424 in a worst-case breakdown.
Candlestick Patterns (Daily):
Thursday’s daily candle is forming a bearish engulfing structure — opening at 10,106 (Wednesday’s close) and declining to intraday lows near 9,970. This is a textbook bearish engulfing at Fibonacci resistance, confirming the failure to hold 10,000. The high at today’s open (10,106) now creates a lower high relative to the prior two-day recovery sequence, reinforcing the bearish structure. RSI at 40.92 and StochRSI at 38.37 suggest the index still has downside room before reaching classic oversold levels. The wave analysis from actionforex.com identifies a potential reversal zone near the 9,670 support if the 10,000 zone fails definitively.
Primary Trade Setup — Sub-10,000 Breakdown (Bearish)
Entry Trigger: Daily close below 9,970 confirms the bearish engulfing rejection of 0.618 Fib (10,000.19).
Target 1: 9,800 (0.786 Fib retracement zone). Target 2: 9,670 (wave structure support identified by wave analysis). Extended Bear Target: 9,424 (Fib 1.0 base) if geopolitical escalation resumes.
Stop Loss: Daily close above 10,200 — a recovery above this level would signal genuine demand returning and targets 10,355 (0.382 Fib).
Key Risk Factor: The FTSE 100’s yield has climbed to 3.2% as prices have fallen, attracting long-term value buyers. Any genuine ceasefire announcement could trigger a short-squeeze rally of 3–5% (300–500 points) in a single session — always the tail risk in this geopolitical environment.
| Scenario | Trigger | Target | Stop | Probability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bear — Sub-10K Breakdown | Close < 9,970 | 9,800 → 9,670 | 10,200 | 60% |
| Bull — Ceasefire Squeeze | Close > 10,200 | 10,355 → 10,575 | 9,900 | 25% |
| Neutral — Consolidation | Close 9,970–10,100 | Range-bound | — | 15% |
Comparative Index Summary — March 26, 2026
Side-by-side technical readings across all three indices
| Indicator | DJI (46,429) | SPX (6,591) | FTSE (9,971) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daily Trend | Bearish | Bearish | Bearish |
| RSI (14) | 38.24 | 39.23 | 40.92 |
| StochRSI | 32.49 | 37.93 | 38.37 |
| Key Fib Level | 0.786 at 46,530 | 0.618 at 6,605 | 0.618 at 10,000 |
| Price vs. Fib Level | −100 pts (Below) | −13 pts (Below) | −28 pts (Below) |
| Candlestick Signal | Inside Day (Coiling) | Failed Engulf Risk | Bearish Engulfing |
| Primary 24H Bias | Cautiously Bearish | Cautiously Bearish | Clearly Bearish |
| Bull Catalyst Needed | Close above 47,000 | Close above 6,650 | Close above 10,200 |
| Bear Trigger | Close below 46,200 | Close below 6,540 | Close below 9,970 |
| YTD Performance | −8.3% | −5.8% | −8.8% |
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to the questions active traders are asking about current market conditions
Conclusion & 24-Hour Outlook
Today’s session encapsulates the binary nature of markets in the Iran war era. Wednesday’s ceasefire-fueled recovery — which looked technically constructive across all three indices — has been fully or partially reversed by Thursday’s reality: Iran categorically rejecting US peace terms, Brent crude back above $104, and Trump’s military moratorium expiring within hours. The Fibonacci structure across DJI, SPX, and FTSE 100 tells a consistent story: all three indices are trading below critical Fibonacci resistance levels after a one-to-two day recovery that lacked the volume, conviction, and follow-through needed to confirm a genuine reversal.
The week’s defining event remains tomorrow’s US Jobless Claims print alongside any Iran/geopolitical developments. Markets have shown they can move 2–3% in a single session on a single headline — which demands disciplined position sizing, defined stop losses, and the patience to let levels confirm rather than anticipating breakouts. The three trades in this report are structured around that discipline: clear entry triggers, specific targets, and defined invalidation levels. Trade the confirmation, not the hope.
For FTSE traders specifically: the index is the most vulnerable of the three, now trading back below the psychologically and technically critical 10,000 level. A daily close below 9,970 today would mark the third violation of this level in three weeks — a pattern that historically precedes an acceleration lower toward 9,670 and potentially 9,424. The FTSE 100’s yield of 3.2% is increasingly attractive for long-term investors, but active traders must respect the momentum evidence on the daily chart until the structure changes.