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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 9, 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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Relief Rally, Reality Check

Wednesday’s violent snapback in stocks was a perfect illustration of the market we’re living in: headlines set the tempo, algorithms do the dancing, and fundamentals try to catch up later.

Yes, the ceasefire talk was enough to spark one of the Dow’s biggest up days in a long time and push it back above its widely watched 200‑day moving average. But the part that matters going forward isn’t the rally—it’s what didn’t normalize.

Oil cratered on the announcement… and then refused to “go back to normal.” Even after the historic drop, crude is still hovering around the psychologically important $100 area, which is basically the market’s way of saying: “We don’t believe this is over.” If the Strait of Hormuz were truly open and operating normally, oil wouldn’t be behaving like a spring that’s still compressed. The confusion itself is the message. When you don’t know whether tankers can reliably move, you also don’t know what next week’s inventory picture will look like, what insurance will cost, or what refiners will pay—so prices stay jumpy and elevated.

That brings us to the bigger point: Wall Street has been overly dramatic in both directions because uncertainty is now the main input. When markets rise 2–3% on a “pause,” then get rattled again on the next headline, that’s not confidence—it’s fragility wearing a smile.

And fragility matters because the war is not the only fault line. It’s just the loudest one.

The quieter risk is private credit.

Private credit has grown into a massive “shadow banking” ecosystem—direct lending, private loan funds, business development companies (BDCs), and private vehicles that don’t have the daily price discovery (or transparency) of public credit markets. In calm periods, that looks like a feature: returns appear smooth, volatility looks low, and investors feel clever. But in stress, it becomes the problem: loans don’t reprice quickly… until they do. And when investors want out at the same time, gates go up, withdrawals get limited, and everyone discovers that “monthly liquidity” was always conditional.

If we get a sustained growth scare, if defaults tick higher, or if funding markets tighten, private credit could become the next domino—not because it’s identical to 2008, but because it’s built on the same human assumption: “It’ll be fine, because it’s been fine.”

So here’s the setup for Thursday and into next week:

  • If oil stays sticky near $100 and shipping remains constrained, inflation pressure doesn’t need to explode to matter—it just needs to stop improving.
  • If inflation stops improving while the economy is already limping, the Fed’s job gets harder, not easier.
  • And if the market loses faith that policy makers can “talk it better” every time, the next shock won’t bounce the same way.

The ceasefire headlines may have bought time. They did not remove risk. They may have simply shifted the spotlight—away from missiles and tankers, and toward the credit plumbing underneath this entire market.

                                                                                          


 

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