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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 27, 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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Oil Up, Everything Else Down

Thursday was a reminder that "risk" is not one trade - it is a chain reaction. When crude holds above $90 (and Brent stays north of $100), it stops being a headline and starts acting like a tax: it squeezes consumers, crimps margins, and pushes inflation expectations the wrong way.

That is when markets get less forgiving.

Tech and the Nasdaq took the brunt of it again, not because "tech is bad," but because expensive, rate-sensitive stocks are the first to feel the pressure when inflation risk rises and bond yields won't cooperate. The Nasdaq is now firmly in correction territory, and the S&P 500 has slipped below its 200-day moving average (a widely watched long-term trend line). Those are not magic numbers, but they do matter psychologically. They change investor behavior from "buy any dip" to "prove it first."

The bigger problem: there is no Fed cushion priced in anymore.

Only weeks ago, traders were still talking about multiple cuts. Now the market is increasingly pricing no rate cuts in 2026, with a meaningful chance of a hike instead. That shift matters because it removes the usual escape hatch: "bad economic news = the Fed rides to the rescue." If oil-driven inflation is heating up, weak growth is not automatically bullish - it's just weak growth with higher costs.

Gold and silver are acting like markets that just came off an epic blow-off move and are now being forced to re-price under tighter conditions. January's surge was historic. March has been a liquidation tape. That doesn't mean the bull case is dead, but it does change the test:

  • In a healthy bull market, pullbacks find real buyers and rebounds hold.
  • In a tired bull market, every rebound gets sold quickly because participants are de-risking.

So far, the pattern feels closer to "rallies are followed by selling" than "buyers stepping in with conviction." Miners have been even weaker, which is often what you see when the market is prioritizing liquidity over long-duration stories.

The real tell remains the Strait.

Peace talk headlines come and go. What matters is whether ships can move reliably, what insurance costs, and how long disruption lasts. As long as flows are impaired, crude stays elevated. As long as crude stays elevated, inflation pressure stays sticky. And as long as inflation stays sticky, the Fed stays boxed in.

What to watch next week (the simple version):

1.     Oil closes, not oil spikes
If crude can't break down on "good" headlines, the shock is not over.

2.     Long-term yields
If yields keep rising while the Fed stays on hold, financial conditions tighten without the Fed lifting a finger.

3.     Market participation
If only a handful of stocks bounce while most stocks keep slipping, it confirms a market losing internal strength.

4.     The next hard economic prints
In this setup, a weak report can scare investors instead of comfort them - because it highlights slowdown without guaranteeing easier policy.

Friday's question is whether this was a one-day "flush" that resets positioning, or the start of a more stubborn downtrend where rallies keep failing. If oil stays high and rate cuts stay off the table, the market is going to have to re-learn a lesson it has avoided for a long time: easy credit is not a permanent feature.


 

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