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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* April 6,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
================
The weekend
had plenty of drama (including high-risk rescue operations and another round of
threats), but markets are still pricing one simple question: how long does
the Strait of Hormuz stay effectively closed to normal traffic? Everything
else is secondary.
When a
chokepoint that handles roughly a fifth of the world’s oil trade is
constrained, crude becomes more than just a commodity quote — it becomes a
timer on the global economy. The difference between “days” and “weeks” is the
difference between an unpleasant headline and a genuine macro problem.
Oil settled
back near the $110 area after flirting with much higher levels, but that
“moderation” can be misleading. The market can stabilize on
words for a session or two, yet the physical reality is still the same: fewer
ships, higher insurance costs, rerouted cargoes, and a constant risk that one
incident turns caution into panic. The longer this persists, the more it
behaves like a stealth tax on everyone — consumers, airlines, manufacturers,
and governments that already have thin margins and big deficits.
That’s why
the biggest “economic report” this week isn’t a PDF from Washington — it’s the
flow of tankers.
For the Fed,
this is the worst kind of setup: a potential inflation impulse driven by
energy, colliding with an economy that already looked uneven before the war
headlines took over. Powell has signaled a “wait and see / look through the oil
shock” posture. In plain English: they’d rather not tighten into a shock unless
inflation expectations start to unanchor. The catch
is that energy-driven inflation can hit consumer psychology fast, even if it
hits the official data slowly.
So if oil stays high long enough to lift inflation
expectations while employment weakens, the Fed gets trapped:
That second
path — “we’ll watch it” while the price level grinds higher — is exactly the
kind of backdrop that tends to keep interest in hard assets alive, even when
those markets are choppy. Gold has already shown it
can lose altitude when the dollar and yields firm up,
but the bigger picture is that persistent $100+ oil doesn’t need the Fed’s
permission to tighten financial conditions on its own. If the Fed refuses to
counter it, then the market will.
The week
ahead is likely to trade like this:
In other
words, we’re not just watching a war — we’re watching whether the global
economy can keep its balance with a major artery partially pinched. For now,
the tape is still hoping it clears. But hope is not a supply chain.
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