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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* April 21,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
================
Monday’s
market action suggested that Wall Street is no longer demanding a good
outcome from the Iran crisis. It’s demanding an outcome—almost any
outcome—as long as it keeps oil from spiraling and
lets traders get back to the business of buying risk.
That’s the
clearest read on why early selling faded so quickly.
Oil jumped
back above the mid‑$90s on renewed tensions, stocks opened weak, and the
ceasefire narrative looked shaky again. But by the close, the damage had been
mostly contained: the Dow was barely down, the S&P 500 slipped only
modestly, and small caps even managed a gain. That is not the behavior of a
market that is carefully weighing long-term consequences. It is the behavior of
a market that wants to believe there is always another extension, another
temporary truce, another “framework” to keep the music playing.
And maybe
that’s because Wall Street is probably right about one thing: neither side
looks ready for the sort of full settlement that would truly solve anything.
Reuters
reported last week that U.S.-Iran talks have already scaled back their
ambitions from a comprehensive peace deal to a temporary memorandum
designed mainly to prevent a return to all-out conflict. The biggest unresolved
issues—what happens to Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile, how long enrichment
would halt, and how reliably the Strait would reopen—remain just that:
unresolved. The U.S. wants something like a 20-year halt. Iran
reportedly wants three to five years. Tehran has floated the idea of
sending only part of its highly enriched uranium abroad, not all of it. That’s
not a peace settlement. That’s a framework for buying time.
And yet,
markets may be perfectly willing to celebrate exactly that.
Why? Because
what equities really care about right now is not “lasting peace.” It’s:
That is the
whole game.
The problem
is that none of those conditions is secure.
The Strait
was reopened, then re-closed, and Reuters noted Monday that traffic remains
largely halted. Citi’s estimate is even starker: even if a ceasefire is
extended and flows return to normal by end-June, global crude and product
inventories could still fall by roughly 900 million barrels, because of
ramp-up delays, logistics bottlenecks, and war damage. If disruptions last
another month, the drawdown could deepen toward 1.3 billion barrels,
which Citi says could keep Brent around $110 in Q2. That’s not a market
that has actually solved its oil problem. That’s a
market trying to price around it.
That’s what
makes the optimism feel so brittle.
Stocks are
acting as if:
That is a
lot of assumptions stacked on top of each other.
The metals
market is being more careful. Gold and silver have not run away again, but they
also haven’t collapsed. They are acting like markets that understand the
difference between “a peace deal” and “a pause.”
And the
bigger macro picture hasn’t changed at all:
So Tuesday’s real question is not whether the market can rally
on another hopeful headline. Of course it can.
The real
question is whether investors are pricing resolution when all they are
really getting is delay.
Because
delay can be bullish—for a while.
But delay is
not the same thing as solving anything.
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