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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 11, 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 Quiet Day Built on a Big Assumption

After Monday’s commodity shock and Monday’s whipsaw, Tuesday had a calmer tone—even though the war headlines haven’t calmed down much at all. Oil pulled back from the most frightening levels, equities stopped acting like they were in free-fall, and traders leaned into a familiar belief: whatever the disruption is, it will be short-lived.

That belief is doing a lot of work.

The market is essentially pricing the Middle East conflict the way it often prices hurricanes: serious, expensive, and disruptive… but temporary. In that worldview, higher crude is a spike, not a new baseline. Shipping snarls are a bottleneck, not a shutdown that drags into weeks. And any shortages can be bridged with strategic releases, rerouted flows, and enough diplomatic “jawboning” to keep the system moving.

So far, that’s a profitable assumption. It’s also a dangerous one.

The hard part is that energy shocks don’t need to last a long time to do real damage—especially when the economy is already showing signs of fatigue. We just had a shockingly weak jobs report, and consumers were already feeling squeezed by prices that never came back down. If energy costs stay elevated long enough to show up at the pump and in freight costs, it hits like a tax that nobody voted for and nobody can avoid.

And there’s another wrinkle many investors ignore: the inflation that hurts the real economy most often sneaks in through diesel and distillates, not just headline crude. Diesel is the “workhorse fuel”—trucking, farming, construction, shipping. If diesel stays tight, the cost pressure spreads everywhere even if crude itself comes off the highs. That’s how you can end up with the worst mix: slowing growth and stubborn inflation at the same time.

This is exactly where the Fed’s problem gets ugly.

Rate cuts later in the year are still the comforting story investors want to believe. But if inflation re-accelerates because energy stays high (or because supply disruptions linger), the Fed can’t rush back to easy money without risking another credibility blow. Conversely, if the job market deteriorates faster—as weak labor data is already hinting—then “hands off” becomes harder to defend politically and economically.

So Tuesday’s calm has a hidden message: markets are betting that stability holds because it has held so far. But a lot of that stability has depended on the right headline at the right time. If a contrary headline hits—another shipping disruption, an extended closure, a deeper regional escalation—the market can reprice violently, because today’s pricing is built on optimism about duration.

That’s the setup heading into the end of the week and the start of spring:

  • the economy looks like it’s slipping,
  • energy is the wrong kind of inflation,
  • and markets are calm mainly because they believe the shock won’t last.

Oil shocks rarely end well if they persist. The question for March isn’t whether volatility returns—it’s whether the assumption of a short disruption proves correct.


 

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