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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 3, 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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A Quiet Tape, A Loud Barrel

With U.S. stocks closed for Good Friday, it’s a good moment to focus on the market that refused to calm down this week: oil.

Equities managed to steady themselves after early fear, but crude ended the week sending a very different message. When the “headline tape” settles and the “barrel tape” keeps screaming, it usually means one thing: the real economic consequences haven’t been priced yet.

The most important signal isn’t just the level of oil near $110. It’s the shape of the oil curve.

Right now, the market is pricing “oil is scarce today” but “oil will be cheaper later.” In plain English: if you need barrels immediately, you pay up. If you can wait months, you get a much lower price. That gap is the market’s way of saying, “This is an emergency… but it might be temporary.”

That’s also why we can see Brent and WTI trade unusually close together, and even flip with U.S. crude trading above Brent. It’s not a textbook “global growth” message. It’s a “logistics and shipping lanes” message.

Here’s the risk: curves like this are essentially a bet that disruption ends before it becomes embedded. If the disruption drags on—weeks into months—then the back end of the curve tends to rise. That’s when inflation goes from “shock” to “problem.”

And that’s where the Fed’s posture matters. The tone from Fed officials has been classic “wait and see.” The logic is understandable: oil shocks begin as supply problems, and interest rates can’t pump oil or reopen shipping routes. But the danger is second-order effects—gasoline and diesel feeding into freight, food, and consumer psychology. Those effects don’t hit all at once; they seep in.

So while rate-hike chatter has faded fast after Powell’s recent comments, the trade-off is straightforward: if policymakers “look through” higher energy costs for too long, inflation gets room to re-accelerate—especially if the public starts to believe higher prices are simply the new normal.

Another underappreciated point: even with oil well above levels that make drilling attractive on paper, producers typically don’t (and often can’t) surge output instantly. They need sustained price signals and operational lead time. So the “relief valve” of rapid supply response is weaker than many assume in the heat of the moment.

What to watch next week (even more than stock headlines):

1.     The oil curve itself: Does the premium for “right now” start shrinking (a genuine calming), or does the high-price reality spread into later months (a lasting inflation impulse)?

2.     Gasoline’s real-world response: If pump prices accelerate quickly, consumer sentiment and spending can crack faster than economists expect.

3.     The Fed’s language: If officials keep signaling patience while energy stays elevated, markets may interpret it as tolerance—especially with inflation already touchy.

Good Friday may pause the stock ticker, but it doesn’t pause economic gravity. When crude ends the week elevated and the curve is distorted, it’s the market quietly warning: “This isn’t over just because the S&P stopped falling for an afternoon.”

                                                                                          


 

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