- Dow Jones price predictions will be dominated in the near term by Iran headlines, oil prices and inflation expectations.
The Dow is trading in a full risk-off environment, following the combined US-Israel military operations in Iran and the accompanying retaliation by Iran against its US military installations in neighboring countries. This is regarded as the biggest geopolitical risk premium event in decades. The Dow is currently trading at 48,812 as of writing on 4 March 2026. The index is actually in a rebound, as it has pulled off the lows of 3 March at 47619.
Two opposing forces are currently acting on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which is why price action has rebounded relatively strongly after the initial selloff that started the week.
The ongoing Middle East conflict and fears of renewed inflation from the spike in oil prices are exerting downward pressure on global stocks. The Dow fell 0.8% on 3 March, as investors sold broadly amid worries that higher oil prices would re-ignite inflation and force central banks to tighten further. Recall that the sentiment on the monetary policy pathway in the US, the UK, and several CEE countries was for more easing.
Potential for de-escalation and the US President’s announcement that the US military would clear the Strait of Hormuz for the resumption of normal shipping are helping to normalize market sentiment on the day. Reuters reports that the remnants of the Iranian regime are open to talks to end the conflict.
Dow Jones Price Prediction: The Week’s Catalysts
Three catalysts are likely to dictate the Dow’s price actions this week.
a) Iran headlines: worsening or cooling?
The headlines from Iran and the Middle East remain the main drivers of price action. There is chatter about possible covert contact between the remnants of the Iranian regime and the US government. This has provided some impetus for an upbeat day. However, this can only be sustained if the Strait of Hormuz is opened. De-escalation needs to gain more credibility to fuel additional recovery on the Dow. Otherwise, the risk-off/inflation trade scenario will continue to play out.
b) Oil prices and inflation expectations
Oil prices will remain a key factor in Dow Jones price predictions because of the link between higher prices and heightened globalized inflation expectations. Margin compression for listed companies, reduced consumption, and fewer Fed rate cuts are ongoing triggers for price action on listed companies and the Dow as a whole. This week, the Dow’s price movements have been inversely correlated with oil prices.
c) Economic resilience and fears of Fed tightening
Away from the US-Iran conflict, the Fed’s easing expectations for 2026 may not be realized if US data continues to point to economic resilience. This fact was recently referenced by New York Fed President John Williams, even as January’s payrolls beat market expectations.
Dow Jones Price Forecasts: Potential Scenarios
Base case: The bias for the base case is for price action to remain choppy, with a mild tilt towards downside moves unless the geopolitical risk premium cools further. The base case’s most likely pathway is for the Dow to trade in a volatile two-way range, hitting the upper and lower boundaries of the week while traders await further clarity. Any rallies will remain tentative as long as oil prices remain elevated and the geopolitical headlines remain as they are.
Bull case: The bull case will only materialize when there are clear signals of de-escalation, which will drive oil prices down. If this is the case, the Dow can see a sustained rebound. That’s why Wednesday’s market chatter about covert outreach from Iran to the US fueled the day’s upside.
Bear case: renewed escalation triggers the bear case, with higher oil prices driving inflation fears and tapering expectations of Fed easing. If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed and the geopolitical risk premium worsens, this would be a downside risk for the Dow Jones index, leading to a steeper selloff than seen earlier in the week.
Dow Jones Price Prediction: Technical Outlook
Wednesday’s uptick was rejected at the 48806 resistance, which coincided with the previous initial pivot point for Monday. This rejection also maintained the descending trendline.

The bulls must uncap these barriers for the Dow to stage an additional recovery. If this happens, the 49114-49218 zonal resistance becomes the next upside target, followed by the 49560 price barrier, which houses the prior highs of 23 February and 25 February.
On the flip side, the bears would need to overcome the zonal support at 48393-48236 for the Dow to see an additional decline. The next downside target in this scenario would be the 3 March low at 47620. However, failure to break the current range boundaries will see price trading in a two-way volatile path between the boundaries, heading into the end of the week.




