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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 2, 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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April Whiplash: When $100 Oil Stops Being a Headline and Starts Being a Problem

April began with the kind of “risk-on” energy that markets love: relief rallies, higher index levels, and the familiar sense that whatever the next headline might be, it would be survivable. Then came President Trump’s national address, and the market heard the part it didn’t want to hear: this war is not wrapping up neatly, not on a calendar, and not with an obvious off-ramp.

The immediate tell was oil. Crude briefly dipped below $100 on hopes that the conflict might end in “two to three weeks.” But after the speech reinforced continued military action, oil snapped back sharply and pushed to fresh recent highs (Brent around the $107 area; WTI around $105). That move wasn’t subtle. It was the market re-pricing duration risk: not “a spike,” but a new baseline that could linger.

And once oil behaves like that, everything else starts acting different.

1.     The market’s real fear isn’t war. It’s war plus inflation.

Equities can often look through geopolitical turmoil if investors believe it will be short-lived and if central banks can cushion the economy. The problem is that this is happening while inflation is already simmering and while rate cuts are not a free option.

Oil at $100 is not just “higher gas prices.” It feeds into:

  • Shipping and logistics costs (which eventually show up in retail prices)
  • Airline and transport margins (which bleed into jobs and capex decisions)
  • Food costs (fertilizers, packaging, transport, refrigeration)
  • Consumer psychology (people feel inflation at the pump faster than they feel it in a spreadsheet)

The longer oil stays elevated, the more it stops being “noise” and starts becoming “policy.” That is where markets get uncomfortable, because a central bank that is boxed in can’t rescue every selloff.

2.     The dollar up, bonds down is not a comforting combo.

In a classic panic, the dollar rises and bonds rally (yields fall). What we’re seeing looks different: the dollar catches a bid, but bond prices soften (yields firm). That’s a subtle but important message.

It suggests investors are doing two things at once:

  • Seeking safety in the currency
  • Demanding a higher return to hold longer-duration bonds because inflation risk is creeping back into the conversation

That “no hiding place” feel is when portfolios get forced into hard choices: if stocks are vulnerable and bonds don’t provide the cushion, volatility tends to spread.

3.     The Strait is the metronome, not the speeches.

The market can digest almost any headline if the flow of oil is credible. But if the Strait is not reliably open, you don’t have a normal energy market. You have an energy market with a choke point, a rising insurance premium, and traders who will pay up for certainty.

Even talk of strategic reserves is not a cure. Strategic reserves are a bridge, not a new supply chain. They can cap the price temporarily, but they don’t rebuild damaged infrastructure, restore normal shipping patterns, or eliminate risk premiums if tankers and routes remain threatened.

This is why “$100 oil” has a different feel this time: it’s not just demand-driven strength. It’s a constraint story, and constraint stories are the ones that break things if they persist.

4.     Why $120 oil is not a crazy scenario.

When markets jump from “maybe it ends soon” to “it could drag,” the next step is not linear. Risk premiums can move in chunks.

A path to $120 doesn’t require apocalypse. It only requires:

  • A few more incidents that convince shippers and insurers to price the route as “unreliable”
  • A continued lack of clarity on enforcement and protection of shipping lanes
  • More evidence that disruptions are spilling into refined products (diesel, jet fuel), not just crude

Once refined products tighten, the pain shows up faster in the real economy and the political pressure rises.

5.     What could actually break if this lasts.

If oil stays above $100 long enough, the vulnerable points are not where the headlines are. They’re in the plumbing:

  • Consumer spending: confidence can crack quickly when essentials rise again
  • Credit stress: higher costs and higher rates is poison for marginal borrowers
  • Corporate margins: input cost pressure meets weakening demand
  • Policy credibility: if inflation heats up and growth slows, the “clean” policy choices disappear

Markets have been trained to buy dips because something always “saves the day.” But there are moments when the saviors start contradicting each other. A strong dollar can hurt global liquidity. Higher yields can tighten financial conditions. Higher oil can rekindle inflation. Those forces don’t harmonize.

6.     The practical takeaway for the week ahead.

This isn’t a call for doom. It’s a reminder of what the market is really trading right now:

  • Not “war” in the abstract
  • But the duration of disruption
  • And whether oil at $100 becomes a floor instead of a spike

If traders come to believe the Strait risk is stabilizing, stocks can recover quickly. If they conclude the disruption is becoming structural, then the market will start pricing something it has avoided for a long time: the possibility that the next downturn isn’t solved by easier policy, because inflation is still in the room.

That’s the pin everything is balancing on.

                                                                                          


 

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