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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 18, 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 Calm That Might Not Last

After the chaos of late January and the war-driven whiplash of early March, markets are trying to find something they can lean on. For now, that “something” is the belief that oil won’t spiral—and that the worst-case scenarios in the Strait will be avoided long enough for traders to refocus on the economy and the Fed.

But the price action underneath the surface is sending a more complicated message.

Gold and silver are holding—but not rallying cleanly

Gold is still battling around the $5,000 line, and silver is trying to keep its footing near $80. That sounds calm, but it isn’t. It’s the market’s version of a tug-of-war: buyers are defending levels, sellers are fading every rally, and neither side is yet strong enough to force a decisive breakout.

That is typical behavior after a violent move. The important part is that the metals have not collapsed back into their pre-breakout ranges. They’re behaving like markets that have been shocked and are now digesting the move—base-building, not surrendering.

The miners, however, tell a different story. They’ve been hit hard for weeks and are lagging the physical metals. That divergence matters because miners are the high-beta version of the trade. When investors get nervous, they often keep the “insurance” (gold) and sell the “risk asset” (miners). Miners also carry extra baggage: operating costs, financing risk, political risk, and now the obvious one—energy costs.

If oil stays elevated, miners can actually get squeezed even if the metals hold up, because production and transport costs rise along with diesel and power prices.

Oil is off the highs—but the underlying risk hasn’t disappeared

Oil backing away from the $100 level is giving stocks breathing room, but the market may be drawing too much comfort from the decline. The main reason prices have eased isn’t that the Strait has reopened cleanly or that the conflict has been resolved. It’s that reserve releases, headlines about “stabilization,” and the natural post-spike digestion have capped the tape.

The question is: how long can that cap hold if the war drags on?

Strategic reserve releases can buy time. They can smooth panic. They can calm futures markets. What they cannot do is permanently replace daily shipping flows through a chokepoint if tanker traffic remains uncertain. If the Strait situation turns into a stalemate—no definitive closure, but persistent danger—then the market may settle into a “higher for longer” oil regime even without the apocalyptic $150 headline.

And that’s the problem: “only $95–$105” oil would still represent a huge jump from last year’s pricing environment. It would be enough to:

  • pressure consumer sentiment,
  • lift shipping and freight costs,
  • and quietly reheat inflation measures in coming months.

The macro backdrop is already soft

This is the part markets keep trying to ignore: even before the conflict, the economy was showing signs of slippage. If job growth is weakening and consumers are already stressed, then “higher for longer oil” is not an inconvenience—it’s accelerant.

That’s where the Fed dilemma returns. Rate cuts are not imminent, but if the economy weakens further the pressure to ease will rise. At the same time, if inflation rises because energy stays elevated, easing becomes harder to defend. That’s a classic trap, and it tends to create more volatility, not less.

What to watch next

If you want to know whether this is a temporary pause or the start of another leg of instability, watch three things:

1.     Does oil keep fading despite no real improvement in shipping risk?
If it can’t, then the market is not pricing the real supply risk yet.

2.     Do gold and silver hold their floors when stocks wobble?
If metals stay firm during equity weakness, that’s a sign the “insurance bid” remains alive.

3.     Do miners stop underperforming?
If miners keep lagging badly, it suggests investors still don’t trust the durability of the rally—and they’re worried about costs, liquidity, and risk appetite.

For now, the market is trying to normalize the extraordinary. But normalization requires real improvement, not just a lull in headlines. If the Strait remains uncertain and the conflict stretches into weeks, oil may not need to explode to change the economic story. It only needs to stay elevated long enough for households and businesses to feel it.

And when that happens, markets will have to stop treating this as a temporary shock and start treating it as a new baseline.


 

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