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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 27, 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 Market Is Trading the Happy Ending Before It Exists

Friday’s rally looked like conviction, but it may really be a very large wager on a future that hasn’t arrived yet. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both closed at fresh records, powered again by tech and chips, while the Dow lagged and still couldn’t reclaim the 50,000 milestone. In fact, the Dow slipped on the week even as the broader “AI trade” kept sprinting. Nvidia pushed back above the $5 trillion mark, underscoring how much of the market’s mood is still riding on a small circle of giant names.

That is what makes the current tape feel so strange. The war is not resolved, oil is still elevated, and the dollar is not behaving like a currency that has earned universal trust. Yet stocks keep acting as if the all-clear has already been sounded. Wall Street seems to be saying: whatever the conflict did to energy and shipping, it will be short-lived enough not to matter by the time 2027 earnings arrive. Oil around the mid-$90s may be lower than the panic highs, but it is still a long way from “normal,” especially if peace talks remain fragile and Hormuz traffic remains impaired.

So what is the market seeing? The cleanest explanation is not a hidden hand so much as a well-trained one. Years of “buy the dip,” passive inflows, AI euphoria, and the belief that central banks eventually soften have created a reflex: when headlines get scary, investors look for the point where the bad news becomes survivable and then rush back in. Reuters noted nearly $23 billion of net inflows into U.S. stocks after the early-April ceasefire phase, which tells you the mood hasn’t just stabilized — money has been actively re-entering.

That said, the rally also carries an uneasy split-screen quality. Gold didn’t collapse. Oil didn’t normalize. The dollar stayed soft enough to suggest some investors still distrust the long-term policy mix. That’s why this doesn’t feel like “confidence” in the old-fashioned sense. It feels more like performance-chasing in equities and quiet hedging everywhere else. If the war ends cleanly and the Strait fully reopens, yes, that could absolutely feed one more leg higher in stocks. But if the market is already pricing that happy ending before it exists, then the surprise risk is no longer “what if things improve?” It is “what if they don’t improve fast enough?”

The more interesting question is whether this rally is really about growth at all. Consumer sentiment remains weak, the dollar remains shaky, and longer-term rates are still elevated enough to keep real-world borrowing costs uncomfortable. If stocks keep marching higher while those signals stay unresolved, then the market is effectively voting that liquidity and positioning matter more than macro coherence. That can work for a long time. It usually doesn’t work forever.

                                                                                          


 

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