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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 July 13, 2026                             *

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*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

*                    web address: http://www.fiendbear.com                  *

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Fiend Commentary
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The Ceasefire Is Becoming a Trading Range

The war is back on, or at least back on enough that the word “ceasefire” is losing whatever meaning it still had.

Over the weekend, fighting resumed around the Strait of Hormuz, oil moved higher, stock futures weakened, metals fell, and Bitcoin slipped again. That sounds like a classic risk-off setup. But the market reaction is still strangely restrained. Oil is up, but not anywhere near the panic highs. Stocks are down, but not broken. Volatility is elevated from the dead zone, but not screaming. Wall Street still seems to believe this is a contained flare-up inside a messy process rather than the beginning of a full-scale return to the March-April crisis.

That may be the most important point: markets are not pricing peace anymore, but they are also not pricing disaster.

They are pricing a trading range.

The core problem is still the same one it has been for months: the U.S. and Iran do not appear to want the same thing from the Strait of Hormuz. The U.S. wants open navigation, no tolls, and no Iranian veto over global energy flows. Iran wants leverage. It may call that “security,” “inspection,” “sovereignty,” or “regional management,” but the practical effect is the same: the Strait becomes a bargaining chip.

That is why diplomacy keeps failing. The nuclear issue matters, but control of the Strait may be even more valuable to Iran than the nuclear program. A nuclear weapon is mostly a deterrent. The Strait is a reusable pressure point. It can raise oil prices, unsettle shipping, squeeze Western governments, and force negotiations every time Tehran wants something.

That is not an easy problem to solve with a memorandum.

Oil’s behavior is still the most curious part of the story. Brent has jumped back toward the upper-$70s and WTI into the mid-$70s, but that remains far below the $100+ panic levels from earlier in the war. Traders are clearly nervous, but they are not yet convinced the Strait is going into a sustained shutdown. The market seems to be saying: yes, this is dangerous, but unless oil gets back toward $90 or $100, it is not enough to derail the broader risk appetite.

There are two possible explanations for that calm.

The optimistic one is that the market believes supply routes, escorts, inventories, and diplomacy are enough to keep crude moving. The darker explanation is that global demand is weaker than advertised. If oil cannot sustain a major rally even with renewed U.S.-Iran fighting, then maybe the world economy is not as strong as the stock market thinks.

That second possibility should not be ignored.

Stocks are still holding up remarkably well. Futures are down, but the major averages remain near record territory after one of the strongest stretches of the year. Investors have been trained to buy every flare-up because each one has eventually been patched together before it became a true financial crisis. That conditioning is powerful. Every time a scary headline fails to produce a crash, confidence grows.

But confidence can turn into complacency.

The danger is that a long-running conflict does not need to produce one dramatic shock to matter. It can slowly alter the cost structure of the global economy: higher insurance, slower shipping, more military spending, tighter margins, and persistent uncertainty. Those costs may not show up in a single day’s oil price, but they can still accumulate.

Metals are struggling again because the market sees renewed fighting and immediately thinks “higher oil, higher inflation, higher Fed pressure.” That is the opposite of the easy-money metals story from earlier this year. Gold and silver may eventually benefit if the Fed gets trapped or the dollar weakens, but in the short run they remain vulnerable to rising yields, a stronger dollar, and rate-hike talk.

Bitcoin is sending a similar message. It is not acting like a safe haven. It is acting like a risk asset that needs liquidity and confidence. Trump can jawbone crypto higher for a few hours, but the broader structure remains weak. The crypto-treasury trade has already cracked, and Bitcoin’s inability to build sustained upside momentum is another warning that speculative appetite is not as healthy as the Dow or Nasdaq might suggest.

So Monday begins with a market caught between two ideas:

First, the war is clearly not resolved.

Second, the market still believes the war will remain manageable.

That belief has been profitable all year. But the more the ceasefire fails, the more investors are depending on the assumption that nothing will spiral. That is not analysis. That is faith.

If oil stays below $80, stocks may keep shrugging. If oil pushes back toward $90 or higher, inflation and Fed fears will return quickly. And if the Strait becomes a permanent contest rather than a temporary dispute, then the market may eventually have to stop treating each flare-up as a headline and start treating it as a condition.

For now, Wall Street is still betting that the conflict is tradable.

The question is whether it is also becoming permanent.


 

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