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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 7, 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 of Suspended Consequences

Wednesday’s rally looked less like confidence and more like conviction without consequences.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit fresh record highs again, oil stayed in the low-to-mid $90s, gold and silver pushed higher, the dollar weakened, and long bond yields remained uncomfortably close to the 5% line. Put differently, Wall Street is now behaving as if war, inflation, high energy costs, and policy uncertainty are not headwinds at all — just scenery on the way to higher prices.

It is hard to avoid the conclusion that the market has decided to buy the “after” before the “during” is over.

The bullish case is easy to describe. Traders see a conflict that will eventually be frozen into a deal, shipping that will eventually normalize, oil that will eventually drift lower, and a Fed that will eventually find its way back to easing. Add in strong tech earnings and it becomes easier to justify paying up for the same winners again. Reuters noted that more than 80% of reporting S&P 500 companies have beaten expectations, which has given investors a very convenient reason to look past the war and focus on margins, chips, and growth.

But the macro picture underneath is much less comfortable. Oil may be down from the panic highs, but it is still far too high to call “normal.” The dollar’s weakness says confidence in the policy mix is not exactly robust. And the long bond’s refusal to calm down says the market is still demanding compensation for inflation and deficit risk, even as stocks celebrate.

That is the contradiction: a stock market acting as if the all-clear has already sounded while the bond market, the dollar, and the commodity complex all keep hinting that something unresolved remains very much in the system.

This is where the “new Fed era” idea becomes important. Officially, there is no near-term signal for aggressive easing. The Fed has not opened the door to a quick series of cuts, and oil-driven inflation makes that difficult to justify cleanly. Yet the market seems increasingly willing to act as if the next phase of policy will be easier, more tolerant, and more willing to support asset prices if growth weakens. Maybe that belief is tied to Warsh. Maybe it is tied to the balance sheet no longer shrinking in any meaningful way. Maybe it is simply the learned reflex of the last decade: every problem eventually becomes a liquidity story.

That belief can be self-reinforcing for a while. It also makes the market vulnerable to one very simple question: what if inflation doesn’t cooperate?

Because “transitory” is the easiest word in finance — right up until the next few months prove it wrong.

If oil stays elevated, if freight and insurance costs stay sticky, and if the next inflation reports start to reflect it, then this rally may look less like foresight and more like wishful thinking. The market is acting as if a little inflation, a little war, and a little uncertainty are all manageable at once. Maybe they are. But that’s a very different proposition from saying they are bullish.

The easiest way to frame Wednesday is this: Wall Street is pricing a world where the pain is temporary and the support is permanent. That has been a profitable assumption. It may even stay profitable for a while longer.

But if the next inflation prints rise and the war remains unresolved, then the market may discover that what it called “temporary” was actually just delayed.

                                      


 

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