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S&P 500 Starting to Flex its Muscles, DAX & FTSE Trying to Rally

S&P 500 Starting to Flex its Muscles, DAX & FTSE Trying to Rally

Talking Points:

  • S&P 500 price action turns bullish, rallies on U.S. jobs report
  • DAX trying to put together a rally, calendar light in coming week
  • FTSE remains in recovery mode, has big resistance ahead

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S&P 500

On Friday, the U.S. jobs report showed 313k jobs added to the U.S. economy during the month of February, beating the +205k consensus estimate for NFPs. The average hourly earnings figure (an inflation gauge) missed the 2.8% estimate with a print of 2.6%, which helped fuel a jump in pre-market futures. Next week holds a few ‘high’ impact data points via CPI on Tuesday, Retail Sales on Wednesday, then UofM Sentiment on Friday.

The market surged 1.74% on Friday, breaking out above the trend-line running of the high and closing near a recent peak at 2789. With the Nasdaq 100 trading at record highs, it looks like the other major indices will try and keep up and make a move on records of their own. A breakout above 2789 will further along this notion and build on the already higher low in place on March 2nd by putting in a higher high in the sequence since the Feb spike-low.

S&P 500: Daily

DAX

On Thursday, the DAX reacted positively to the ECB, rallying 200 points from high to low following the meeting with the help of a weakening euro. Looking ahead to next week, there are no ‘high’ impact events on the docket. For a list of all economic data with estimates and release dates/times, see the economic calendar.

The DAX is doing its best to recovery, but so far is still having the look of a counter-trend rally rather than a renewed rally. However, with the leading U.S. market pointed higher the DAX could start to follow along, with even more help if the euro trades sideways to down. Last week the market took out a steep trend-line off the record high, but given its angle it isn’t viewed as all that important; more work is still needed to turn the picture out-right bullish.

On further strength, the first notable level of resistance arrives at just over 12600, while support clocks in at just above 12k, then down below 11900. If the market sinks back to the low-end of support, the risk of another leg lower increases significantly. With risk appetite getting a bid, though, it seems unlikely the DAX will sell off to that extent; it’s more likely to be a laggard on the upside than anything at this time.

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DAX: Daily

FTSE

The economic calendar is bare for the most part next week in the U.K., but focus will continue to be on any ‘Brexit’ news which is released. General risk trends remain a factor at play here. Keep an eye on the U.S. markets for further indications as to which way global stocks as a whole may want to go. They look headed higher as noted with the U.S. markets earlier.

The FTSE, similar to the DAX, is bouncing but not yet looking all that convincing. The raly comes after a fake-out breakdown on March 2. The low at 7062 will be important to hold if the footsie is to keep from declining. Resistance arrives around the all-important 7300-level, a threshold which it needs to reclaim if it is to have a chance at making a meaningful run.

FTSE: Daily

---Written by Paul Robinson, Market Analyst

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DailyFX provides forex news and technical analysis on the trends that influence the global currency markets.

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