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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 8, 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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Two-Week Ceasefire, Two-Minute Memory

Markets got what they wanted Tuesday night: not a full resolution, but a pause button.

President Trump announced a provisional two‑week ceasefire tied to the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and traders reacted the way they always do when the worst-case headline is pulled at the last second—by acting as if the risk has been permanently deleted.

The clearest tell was crude. After living in the “shortage panic” zone, oil took a straight-down elevator ride, dropping roughly $15–$17 into the mid‑$90s. That’s a massive relief move, but it’s also worth keeping perspective: oil is still well above pre-crisis levels, and the Strait isn’t truly “open” until shipping companies, insurers, and captains believe it’s open. A diplomatic headline can change in an hour; re-routing global logistics does not.

Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar gave back its safe-haven bid. The dollar index slipped to its weakest level in about a month, and major currencies caught a bid. That reversal matters because it often acts like lighter fluid for the next move in commodities.

Which brings us to the most interesting part: gold and silver rallied anyway.

A lot of people still think precious metals only rise when markets panic. But this rally has increasingly looked like something else too: a confidence trade—a bet that policymakers will do what they always do when stress arrives (support markets, tolerate higher inflation, and “solve” short-term pain with long-term liquidity).

So even with oil plunging, the metals moved higher—because the ceasefire didn’t remove the underlying anxieties. It simply changed their shape. We didn’t go from “crisis” to “normal.” We went from “imminent supply shock” to “fragile truce with a countdown clock.”

Bond markets also reacted in classic fashion: falling oil equals less immediate inflation fear, so Treasuries caught a bid, and the market quietly leaned back toward the idea that rate cuts could re-enter the conversation later this year. The important point isn’t whether that’s “right” today—the point is how fast the market is willing to flip its entire macro narrative on a single geopolitical development.

That’s the environment we’re in now:

  • Peace rumors = risk-on
  • Oil spikes = risk-off
  • Dollar down = metals up
  • One headline away from reversal

The bigger question for the next two weeks is simple:
Are we watching a genuine path toward normalization—or just a temporary lull before the next jolt?

What to watch next (the “real indicators,” not the talking points):

1.     Actual Strait traffic (not promises, not press releases).

2.     Insurance costs and shipping behavior—the market’s truth serum.

3.     Whether oil stays below $100 or snaps back the moment confidence wobbles.

4.     Dollar trend—because a falling dollar plus sticky inflation is gasoline on the metals fire.

5.     Fed pricing—because the next phase of this cycle may be driven less by growth and more by how the market expects the Fed to behave under stress.

Bottom line: traders are celebrating a two-week ceasefire like it’s a peace treaty. That optimism may be profitable—but it’s also fragile. In 2026, the market’s attention span has become its biggest risk.

                                                                                          


 

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