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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* March 19,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
================
Hot
PPI, Frozen Fed, and a Market Starting to Crack
Wednesday
delivered a nasty combination for risk assets: inflation came in hotter than
expected, the Fed stayed on hold, and oil remained elevated as the Middle East
conflict continues to disrupt normal energy flows.
Start with
the inflation signal. February producer prices (PPI) jumped well above
expectations. That matters because PPI often shows what is coming down the
pipeline for consumer prices, and this print was "hot" even before
the recent oil spike fully works its way through the system. In other words,
inflation was already running warmer than comfortable, and the energy situation
threatens to add fuel to it.
Then came
the Fed. Policymakers held rates steady and did not sound eager to rescue
markets. The updated messaging looked less like "cuts are coming" and
more like "we can wait." Some traders are now openly questioning
whether there will be any cuts this year at all, and a tiny "tail
risk" of a hike has even crept into the conversation. That may sound
absurd, but it reflects a bigger point: the market is losing confidence that
inflation is contained.
The stock
market reaction was telling. The Dow sold off hard and closed below its 200-day
moving average for the first time since last summer. That is not just a chart
nerd detail. The 200-day is a line that a lot of systematic and risk-control
strategies watch. When major indexes lose it, the next few sessions often
decide whether it is a quick shakeout or the start of a more persistent
downtrend. The Nasdaq and S&P 500 also fell sharply, and the selling felt
broader than the usual "one stock did it" tape.
At the same
time, bond yields moved higher again. The 10-year pushed back up toward the
mid-4% area after having been below 4% not long ago, and the long bond is again
flirting with 5%. That is a reminder that investors are not treating this as a
clean "growth scare" where yields plunge. Instead, markets are trying
to price a messier scenario: growth slowing while inflation risk rises.
Gold and
silver did not like that setup. Gold slipped below the psychologically
important $5,000 level and silver retreated below the $80 area, breaking key
support that had been holding. Miners were hit even harder, which is exactly
what you see when markets de-risk: investors dump the higher-beta,
higher-volatility version of the trade first. The real message is not that
metals "failed" in a day. It is that rising real-world inflation risk
does not automatically mean metals go straight up if rates and the dollar are
also rising.
Oil,
meanwhile, refused to cooperate. Prices stayed near crisis levels even with
talk of strategic reserve releases. Reserves can cap panic in the short run,
but they do not solve the underlying issue if shipping lanes remain dangerous
and flows remain uncertain. Reports suggest some traffic is moving, but far
below normal. If this drags on for weeks, the market will start to price a
higher baseline for energy even without a $150 headline. And "near $100
oil" would be a huge change from last year’s pricing environment, with a
real impact on inflation expectations and consumer sentiment.
Layer on top
of that the fiscal backdrop: U.S. debt has now pushed past $39 trillion. That
matters more when yields are rising, because higher rates compound the
interest-cost problem. It also reduces policy flexibility at the worst time:
when the economy is weakening and markets are asking for support.
So the big
picture is getting clearer. Stocks are not just reacting to war headlines
anymore. They are reacting to a fundamental shift in the backdrop: inflation is
not behaving, the Fed is less willing to cut, oil is staying high, and the
labor market is already wobbling.
If something
is going to give, it will likely be one of three things:
1.
Oil comes down sharply because the conflict de-escalates and
shipping normalizes.
2.
The economy weakens enough that the Fed is forced to pivot
despite inflation risk.
3.
Financial conditions tighten on their own (via higher
yields, weaker stocks, wider credit spreads) and the market reprices risk the
hard way.
For now, the
most important clue is simple: when the Dow loses the 200-day, it is the market
telling you the trend has changed from effortless to fragile.
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