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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 10, 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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Markets Buy the Hope, Hedge the Doubt

Thursday felt quieter on the surface: stocks drifted higher, the ceasefire headlines held together for another day, and the market acted as if the worst-case scenario had been neatly packed away.

But the real tell is that oil refused to behave like a crisis that’s over.

Yes, crude sold off hard after the two-week ceasefire was announced. Yet even after that kind of “relief” move, oil is still hovering around $100. That’s not a normal post-crisis level. That’s the market saying: we may have a pause in fighting, but we don’t have a return to normal.

And the reason is obvious: the Strait of Hormuz remains the actual negotiating table.

If traffic is still restricted, rerouted, delayed, or effectively controlled, then the risk premium doesn’t vanish—it just changes shape. A ceasefire headline can land in minutes. Restoring confidence in shipping lanes takes longer, because insurers, shipowners, and crews don’t move on optimism alone.

So the market is doing what it always does in a suspenseful moment: buy the hope, hedge the doubt.
That’s why you can see stocks rising even while oil stays elevated.

The macro problem Wall Street is trying not to price yet

The uncomfortable part is that persistent $100 oil doesn’t need to “skyrocket” to hurt. It just needs to linger.

  • It seeps into transportation, food costs, and household budgets.
  • It complicates inflation just when inflation was already proving sticky.
  • And it tightens conditions even if the Fed doesn’t move a finger.

That’s where the market’s current optimism starts to look premature. There’s still a heavy “rate cuts will fix it later” mindset—almost as if inflation is optional and growth is the only thing that matters.

Why the rate narrative flipped so fast

The rate story has whipsawed because investors are now staring at a weak-growth foundation.

The latest revision showing Q4 GDP running at just 0.5% is a reminder that the economy was already cooling before oil and trade disruptions had time to fully bleed into prices. When growth looks fragile, markets instinctively reach for the same crutch: “the Fed will eventually ease.”

That’s why rate-hike talk has basically disappeared again, and why even a small whiff of future cuts can become a market tailwind. The logic is simple: Wall Street is betting that weakness will ultimately overpower inflation.

The risk is also simple: what if inflation doesn’t cooperate?

What to watch today and into next week

1.     Does oil drift lower on calm headlines, or stay pinned near $100 anyway?
If it stays pinned, that’s not relief—that’s a new base.

2.     Does the Strait actually reopen in a practical sense?
“Open” isn’t a statement. It’s a flow of ships, normal insurance terms, and predictable delivery schedules.

3.     Does the next inflation print show energy starting to leak into the broader price picture?
If inflation firms while growth is already sluggish, the “cuts are coming” story becomes harder to sustain.

4.     Do we get another “strong” jobs report… followed by another revision later?
One strong report can be a blip. A pattern is what changes policy—and confidence.

Bottom line

Thursday’s market action looked calm, but it wasn’t conviction—it was positioning.
As long as oil stays near $100 and Hormuz remains uncertain, the economy is effectively paying a toll every day. Wall Street can ignore that for a while. It can’t ignore it forever.

                                                                                          


 

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