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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 24, 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 Pause Is Not a Peace

Monday’s rally was built on a simple idea: maybe the worst of the oil shock was behind us.

Oil collapsed more than 10% after President Trump announced a five‑day pause on further strikes against Iranian energy targets and hinted at “productive” conversations. Stocks surged in relief, and even battered areas like miners finally caught a bid. It felt like the market exhaled.

By Tuesday morning, that exhale is already turning into a cough.

Overnight, oil is climbing again — Brent back above ~$103 and WTI near ~$92 — because the real problem was never “panic pricing.” The real problem is that the situation in the Gulf still doesn’t have a clear, enforceable resolution. Iran has publicly denied the idea of meaningful talks, the Strait remains a question mark, and the market is being forced to admit something it doesn’t like: the five‑day pause may only be a delay, not a turning point.

That’s why futures are soft again. The market is realizing it has been trading headlines, not outcomes.

The market’s new fear isn’t oil at $150 — it’s oil staying “high enough” for long enough

Investors don’t need crude to explode to break the economy’s rhythm. They only need it to stay elevated long enough to seep into everything:

  • gasoline and diesel costs
  • trucking and shipping expenses
  • airline and travel demand
  • consumer sentiment (already fragile)
  • business margins

Even oil that stabilizes “only” near $100 is a major jump from last year’s comfort zone. And importantly, it comes on top of an economy that was already showing fatigue before this conflict escalated.

Rate cuts and “low inflation” optimism is fading fast

This is the key shift happening underneath the daily volatility.

When oil jumps and stays jumpy, inflation risk creeps back into the conversation — and that pushes out the moment when the Fed can safely cut. Even if jobs weaken, even if growth slows, policymakers get boxed in if energy-driven inflation keeps threatening the next CPI/PCE prints.

So the market’s posture is changing from:

“Cuts will save us later this year”
to
“Cuts might not come when we need them.”

That’s why gold, which usually thrives in chaos, is struggling to regain traction on a sustained basis. In the short run, gold can get squeezed by a firmer dollar and rising yields. In other words: even the “insurance trade” isn’t immune when the market is forced to reprice rates and liquidity.

Why the action feels so unstable

We’re watching a market that still wants to believe in a clean narrative — but can’t find one.

  • A five-day pause is not a peace plan.
  • Strategic reserves can smooth prices, but they can’t guarantee safe shipping lanes.
  • Optimistic rhetoric can spark rallies, but it can’t repair damaged infrastructure overnight.

If the situation doesn’t move toward a real resolution soon, investors may do the most rational thing possible: step aside. When outcomes are unknowable, cash becomes its own kind of position.

The takeaway for Tuesday is straightforward: this tape is not being driven by fundamentals alone — it’s being driven by how quickly (or slowly) the world moves from “paused escalation” to “actual de-escalation.” Until that happens, any relief rally can be undone just as fast as it was created.

 


 

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