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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 9, 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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When a Weak Jobs Report Meets $100+ Oil

Friday’s ugly jobs number didn’t get a full day in the spotlight before the weekend headlines took over. That’s understandable emotionally, but it matters financially because this combination is the nightmare mix for markets: a labor market that’s starting to crack at the same time energy prices are surging.

On Friday, U.S. nonfarm payrolls fell by 92,000 in February versus expectations for a gain, and the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.4%. In a “normal” cycle, that kind of downside surprise would revive the old playbook: softer growth brings lower yields, easier Fed policy, and risk assets eventually catch their footing. But the Middle East escalation has dropped a different weight onto the scale: a supply shock that can re-ignite inflation just as the economy loses momentum.

Over the weekend and into Monday, oil didn’t just “spike.” It lurched into a different regime. Brent surged to roughly $117 and U.S. crude to roughly $116, with markets reacting to the sudden collapse in tanker traffic and a broad shipping standstill around the Strait of Hormuz. The uncomfortable truth is simple: when a fifth of global oil and LNG flows through one choke point, you don’t need a long disruption to change behavior. You just need traders to believe the disruption could last. That belief alone forces repricing across everything: gasoline, freight, insurance, and ultimately consumer psychology.

This is where the story gets serious for Main Street. U.S. pump prices were already jumping, with the national average for regular gasoline at $3.32 as of Friday, while California was already near $5 on average. That’s not just a headline; it’s an instant tax on the consumer. People do not wait for CPI prints to adjust their mood. They adjust when they see the number on the pump sign. And when that happens in a slowing job market, “soft landing” narratives start to look like wishful thinking.

Markets also delivered an important tell: yields rose even as stocks were getting hit. The 10-year Treasury yield moved up to around 4.20% after having been below 3.93% just a week earlier. That is not a classic “growth scare” response. It’s the market saying: this looks inflationary enough that bonds can’t simply play safe haven. When yields rise into volatility, it tightens financial conditions automatically and makes the “Fed will save us” reflex less reliable.

And then there’s Iran’s leadership succession, which matters because markets are trying to handicap whether this ends quickly or drags. The appointment of a hardline successor does not scream “rapid compromise,” and the longer the conflict stays hot, the greater the chance that the oil shock migrates into broader prices. If that happens, the Fed gets boxed in: job losses argue for cuts, but oil-driven inflation argues for holding the line.

Gold and silver remain the emotional barometer here, but it’s worth noting something many investors forget: in the first phase of a true stress event, even “safe havens” can wobble as traders raise cash, meet margin calls, and de-risk across the board. Don’t confuse volatility with failure. Volatility is the message.

What to watch this week (the stuff that actually changes outcomes):

  • Any sign tanker traffic is normalizing (or not). Shipping is the transmission mechanism.
  • Whether crude stays above $100 long enough to filter into gasoline broadly (days matter, but weeks matter far more).
  • Fed messaging: not the tone, but whether they acknowledge the “two-front war” of weaker jobs and higher energy costs.
  • Credit conditions: if spreads widen while yields stay elevated, that’s when the game changes for equities.

Here’s the blunt version: if oil stays above $100 for more than a brief window, recession odds rise quickly even if stock investors try to ignore it. A weak labor market can be “papered over” with easier money. A supply shock cannot. And when you get both at the same time, something usually breaks—not because markets are irrational, but because they’re finally forced to price reality instead of hope.


 

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