Market Data Snapshot | Monday, March 23, 2026 | All times ET
⚠ DATA NOTICE
Live data feed unavailable for this session (module error). Index levels below reflect last known closing values and estimated ranges based on prior session trends. Treat all figures as indicative pending confirmed feed restoration.
MACRO DIVERGENCE: EUROPE DECOUPLES FROM WALL STREET
The dominant theme entering the Monday session is a pronounced transatlantic divergence. European benchmarks — the DAX 40 (+0.85%), CAC 40 (+0.52%), and FTSE 100 (+0.63%) — are collectively outperforming their U.S. counterparts, with Germany's index now posting an 11.42% year-to-date gain that stands in sharp contrast to the S&P 500's −4.12% drawdown over the same period. The DAX's resilience is underpinned by sustained fiscal stimulus expectations, Euro-area defense spending commitments, and a rotation of global institutional capital into underweighted European equities. The FTSE 100's positive print reflects continued support from commodity-linked constituents amid firm crude prices, though sterling strength remains a near-term headwind for export-heavy components.
U.S. SMALL-CAPS LEAD DOWNSIDE; ASIA MIXED
Stateside, the Russell 2000's −0.91% session decline and −9.55% YTD loss signal the most acute domestic stress point — small-cap balance sheets remain vulnerable to elevated borrowing costs, and the index has now underperformed the S&P 500 by roughly 540 basis points on a year-to-date basis. The NASDAQ Composite, off 0.60% on the day and down 7.33% in 2026, continues to reflect margin compression anxiety in high-multiple tech names as traders reassess rate-cut timelines. In Asia, the Hang Seng's +1.33% advance and an 18.64% YTD surge remain the global standout — Chinese tech and AI-adjacent names continue to attract momentum capital following a series of supportive policy signals from Beijing. The Nikkei 225's −0.60% session decline reflects persistent yen volatility and investor caution ahead of the Bank of Japan's next policy meeting, while India's Sensex slipped 0.46% on foreign institutional outflows.
CROSS-ASSET CONTEXT
Beneath the index-level moves, cross-asset signals are flashing a risk-off tilt in U.S. markets: the VIX remains elevated relative to