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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 22, 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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A Record High Built on a Negotiating Rumor

With Memorial Day weekend ahead, Wall Street is doing what it has done repeatedly during this conflict: pricing the deal before the deal exists.

Thursday delivered a familiar pattern. Oil spiked early on bad headlines, then reversed lower as “progress” talk returned. Stocks rallied into the close, and the Dow finished at a new record above 50,000. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq also pushed higher. It was a classic relief trade: oil down, yields easier, stocks up.

But the rally rests on a very optimistic assumption—that this time, the “deal is close” story is real.

The problem is that the actual details still look messy.

Iran reportedly wants to keep its enriched uranium inside the country. The U.S. says it will eventually recover that stockpile. Iran has also been moving toward a controlled maritime zone in the Strait of Hormuz, including ideas like tolling or managed passage. Secretary of State Rubio has already said that sort of tolling system would make a deal unworkable.

That does not sound like a final agreement. It sounds like another framework for more arguing.

And yet, the market’s reaction was overwhelmingly positive. That tells you Wall Street is not really pricing a clean resolution. It is pricing “good enough for now.” As long as oil falls for a day, as long as the Dow makes a new high, as long as traders can tell themselves the worst has passed, the market is willing to look through almost anything.

The oil market is more skeptical.

WTI settled below $100 on Thursday, but Brent remained above $100, and early Friday oil was already climbing again as investors doubted a real breakthrough. That matters because “below $100” is not the same thing as cheap. Even if the panic premium fades, current oil prices are still far above where they were before the conflict. The longer that lasts, the more it feeds into transportation, food, insurance, utilities, and consumer expectations.

The most important point is this: shipping normalization is not a press release. It is not a speech. It is not a handshake. It is tankers moving freely, insurance costs falling, cargo schedules normalizing, and producers actually delivering barrels at scale. Until that happens, oil carries a risk premium.

And the weekend matters. Markets will be closed longer than usual, but the war and negotiations won’t be. If headlines improve, Tuesday could bring another celebration. If talks unravel or there’s another incident in the Strait, the same market that bought the rumor may be forced to sell the reality.

That’s the risk of a rally built on hope. It can be powerful, but it is also fragile.

For now, investors have decided that the war is effectively ending, or at least becoming manageable. Maybe they’re right. But the two biggest questions remain unresolved:

1.     What happens to Iran’s enriched uranium?

2.     Who really controls passage through the Strait of Hormuz?

Until those questions are answered, the market is not buying peace. It is buying a pause.

And pauses can be profitable. They just aren’t the same as solutions.


 

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