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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* March 30,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
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Jobs
Week in a $100+ Oil World
The war has
dominated the headlines, but the economy was already wobbling before the first
missile flew. Growth had been losing altitude, hiring was cooling, and
inflation wasn’t behaving like a problem that’s “solved.” The conflict didn’t
create those issues — it poured gasoline on them.
That’s why
this week matters. Markets can spend only so long trading fear and hope.
Eventually they have to trade evidence.
Oil above
$100 is not just a chart move — it’s a slow-motion tax. If it’s a one-week
spike, businesses and consumers absorb it. If it becomes a one- or two-month
condition, it starts changing behavior: fewer discretionary purchases, tighter
corporate margins, weaker sentiment, and higher inflation expectations. Even if
the worst-case war scenario never materializes, “oil staying high” is enough to
matter.
And that
brings us to the key point: the market’s confidence in rate cuts is fading
fast. The Fed can talk tough, but if the data weakens sharply, the pressure to
pivot will return. The problem is timing: if inflation expectations re-ignite
while growth slows, policy becomes a trap. That’s when markets start to feel
like they’re balancing on a pin.
So what
should we actually watch this week?
Here’s the
uncomfortable setup for markets: investors want peace because peace lowers oil,
lowers inflation risk, and reopens the door for rate cuts. But even if a
ceasefire appears on paper, disrupted shipping, higher insurance costs, and
damaged infrastructure don’t reset instantly. Oil can stay elevated well after
the headlines cool off.
If oil
remains high and the labor market softens at the same time, we’re looking at
the kind of mix markets hate: slowing growth with sticky inflation pressure.
That’s how you get a market that can’t decide whether “bad news is good news”
anymore — because bad news stops being a trigger for Fed easing and starts
being… just bad news.
The bottom
line for Monday: don’t get hypnotized by war headlines alone. This week’s data
is the reality check. If it confirms that the economy is weakening into an oil
shock, the next leg down in risk assets becomes much easier to imagine — even
if the war doesn’t escalate further.
Weekly Market Summary Page
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