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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 19, 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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The Oil Shock Has a Clock

Tuesday’s market setup is really about time.

The war premium, the Strait disruption, and $100-ish oil can be absorbed for a while. Markets can tolerate a spike. Businesses can hedge. Consumers can grumble and keep spending for a few weeks. Policymakers can call it temporary.

But the longer it lasts, the more it stops being a headline and becomes an economic condition.

That is what the bond market seems to be wrestling with now. The 10-year yield has pushed back into the 4.6% area, and the 30-year has moved above 5.1%. Those are not panic levels, but they are breakout-warning levels. They say investors are starting to price not just higher oil today, but higher inflation and more difficult financing conditions tomorrow.

The Fed is in a box.

A few months ago, Wall Street was sure rate cuts were coming. Now the market is discussing a possible hike by year-end. That is an enormous change in expectations. It reflects the obvious problem: if oil stays high and inflation data keeps moving the wrong way, the Fed cannot credibly cut simply because growth is uneven.

At the same time, the Fed also can’t ignore the economy forever. Growth has been weaker underneath the headlines, and the labor market’s saving grace is that it hasn’t fallen off a cliff yet. If jobs begin to crack in a serious way, pressure for easing will return quickly. So the Fed is trapped between two bad options: defend inflation credibility or support a slowing economy.

The unresolved question is how fast oil can normalize if the Middle East situation improves.

That may be harder than Wall Street wants to admit. Even if a deal is reached or the Strait reopens more fully, prices do not automatically return to $60 or $70. Shipping has to normalize. Insurance costs have to come down. Inventories have to be rebuilt. Refiners and consumers have to regain confidence that the route will stay open. That can take weeks or months.

This is why the futures curve matters. The market still expects oil to be lower later in the year, but “lower” does not necessarily mean cheap. If official forecasts are now discussing Brent averaging around the high-$80s later in the year under a normalization scenario, then sub-$70 oil would likely require more than peace. It would require a real demand slowdown or a major supply response.

That’s the part investors may not like: if oil drops because the economy weakens sharply, that is not automatically bullish. It may solve part of the inflation problem only by confirming the growth problem.

So the next few weeks are less about whether oil can fall for a day and more about whether the market believes $100 oil is temporary, seasonal, or structural.

If oil retreats quickly and stays down, equities can keep leaning on the soft-landing story. If oil stays elevated into summer, the story changes. Inflation expectations harden, consumer stress builds, and bond yields may stay stubbornly high even as growth slows.

That is when “bad news is good news” stops working.

Because in this setup, weak economic data does not guarantee rate cuts. It may simply confirm that higher energy prices are doing damage while inflation is still too hot for the Fed to help.

Bottom line: the market is trying to price a temporary shock. The bond market is warning it may last long enough to matter.


 

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