Stock market dilemma

Written by Maxime Parra
Published on March 5, 2026

Products featured on our site may be from partners who compensate us. For more details, see our editorial policies.

Should we fear a prolonged conflict or celebrate strong economic data? Morally, both. From a trading perspective, it’s more complicated…

A denial from an Islamic Republic official on state television was all it took to shatter hopes for a quick conflict resolution. Those hopes had been fueled yesterday by rumors of renewed contact between Iranian and American intelligence services.

Oil prices tell the story. The commodity is up 2% to $83 per barrel, serving as a barometer for the situation. Unfortunately, conflict resolution isn’t on the agenda yet.

On the US economic front, the news is more encouraging. The ISM services index came in better than expected at 56.1 versus 53.5 expected. Initial jobless claims also beat forecasts at 213k versus 215k expected.

Newsletter
A market veteran shares his experience so you can learn to trade without getting burned.


    Unsubscribe in one click. No spam.
    Disclaimer

    Trading carries significant risks, including the potential loss of your initial capital or more. Most traders lose money, and trading is not a guaranteed path to wealth. Products like FOREX and CFDs are complex and involve leverage, which can magnify gains and losses. CFD trading is banned in many countries, including the United States.

    The retrospective

    Buyers got trapped at the open by a false breakout above yesterday’s high [1]. They handed control to short sellers, whose offensive toward the daily pivot point was well underway before being interrupted by the ISM index release [2].

    Short covering and new buying interest then sparked a rebound above yesterday’s high. But multiple attempts failed to reach the major target of 49,000 points [3].

    My trading plan for today

    This content is not investment advice. This trading plan is shared purely for educational purposes to give you insight into how one trading veteran prepares and thinks through the market.

    Despite the recent bounce, the underlying trend remains bearish.

    Unable to reach their 49,000-point target yesterday despite high optimism, buyers are now trapped. The path is clear for a move back south.

    My scenarios for today’s session:

    MARKET CONDITIONS
    Side in controlSellers
    Side under pressureBuyers
    Bull trap48915
    Bear trap
    Buyers’ target49000 (seuil symbolique)
    Sellers’ target47267 (Support 2 mensuel)
    Buyers’ killzone47682
    Sellers’ killzone
    Dominant emotionHope
    Emotion score8/10
    • If market above VWAP: mean reversion strategy (scalping)
    • If market below VWAP: trend following strategy (targeting 47,682 points)

    Good trades!

    Share
    author
    Maxime Parra
    Founder & Retail Trader

    Maxime holds two master’s degrees from the SKEMA Business School and FFBC. As founder and editor-in-chief of NewTrading.fr, he writes daily about financial trading.