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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 11, 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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Pricing Peace Before It Exists

Friday’s rally now looks like a market doing what it has done several times this year: buying the ending before the movie is over.

U.S. stocks finished last week on a strong note after a solid jobs report, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closing at fresh records and the Dow staying near its highs. That was the market’s way of saying the war could be contained, the economy could keep going, and whatever happened in the Gulf would not last long enough to matter. Over the weekend, that confidence ran into reality.

The latest U.S. peace proposal failed again, and by Sunday night oil had surged back near the $100 mark, with Brent moving above $103 at one point and U.S. crude back near $99–$100. That is not a market that believes the problem is solved. It is a market that is being forced to re-price the possibility that the Strait of Hormuz stays functionally impaired longer than investors want to admit.

This matters because Wall Street has already “priced in” the end of the war several times. Each time a pause, extension, or rumored framework appeared, stocks rallied, oil fell, and traders acted as if the hard part had passed. But markets are discovering that there is a big difference between a temporary diplomatic script and an actual durable settlement. Shipping lanes do not normalize because negotiators smile for cameras. Tankers move when crews, insurers, refiners, and governments believe the route is truly usable again.

That is why this week matters. If the Strait remains mostly shut and oil stays elevated, the market will have to deal with a much uglier possibility: the war may not need to intensify further to do real economic damage. It only needs to drag on.

The economy was already showing strain before this latest oil shock. Growth had cooled, consumer confidence was weak, and inflation was not fully back under control. Add sustained $100-ish oil and you have a very different setup from the one the market cheered on Friday. High oil does not just hit gas stations. It moves through shipping, freight, food, airline costs, and eventually the inflation numbers that the Fed is trying not to lose control of.

That is the uncomfortable point for this new week: if elevated oil proves persistent, the idea of easy rate cuts later in 2026 becomes much harder to justify. The market still wants to believe the Fed will be able to cushion any slowdown. But the more energy costs bleed into inflation, the less room policymakers have to help without risking a fresh credibility problem.

So Monday’s question is simple: how many times can investors keep pricing the same happy ending before they start asking whether there may not be one anytime soon?

The answer matters because if this latest “not yet” in the peace process turns into another week or two of disruption, the market is no longer trading a geopolitical headline. It is trading an economic condition.

And conditions are a lot harder to wish away than headlines.

                                      


 

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