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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 16, 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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The Market Is Trading the All-Clear Before It Exists

Wednesday’s tape was a little surreal.

The S&P 500 closed above 7,000 for the first time, and the Nasdaq also finished at a record, even though the war is not truly resolved, oil is still sitting around the low-to-mid $90s, inflation is not exactly dead, and growth still looks soft. Gold and silver rose too. The dollar slipped again. Long yields stayed elevated. In other words, the market chose optimism — but not clean optimism. More like optimism with an insurance policy.

That matters because a market can rally on hope for a while. It cannot rally forever on hope alone.

What exactly is Wall Street seeing?

The charitable interpretation is simple: investors believe the worst of the oil shock is behind us, corporate earnings are holding up, and a wider regional war can still be avoided. That’s why the market was willing to buy bank stocks, buy tech, and push the S&P over 7,000. Reuters noted that 84% of companies reporting so far have beaten expectations, which has helped investors shift attention away from the war and back toward earnings.

But there’s another interpretation: the market is front-running a “back to normal” story before the actual conditions for normal have really returned.

Oil is not back to normal. The ceasefire may be holding better than feared, but Brent was still around $95 and WTI around $92. That is not a recessionary oil price, but it is still a meaningful inflation pressure if it lasts. If crude stays anywhere near these levels for another month, the “energy shock is temporary” argument starts to lose some of its comfort.

The inflation issue isn’t gone just because stocks went up

This is the part the market seems eager to gloss over.

St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem said this week that the oil shock is likely to keep core inflation near 3% for the rest of 2026, and that rates may need to stay on hold for quite a while. He even left the door open to hikes if inflation expectations become unanchored. That is not the language of a central bank preparing to ride in with easy money at the first sign of weakness.

So the market is now trying to hold two ideas at once:

1.     Growth is soft enough that the worst of tightening is over.

2.     Inflation is still sticky enough that the Fed can’t really help much.

That’s a tough combination to sustain — especially if oil remains elevated and the labor market keeps cooling.

The dollar is the one market not buying the “all-clear”

This may be the most interesting tell of all.

While stocks celebrated, the dollar slipped to around a six-week low. That is a quiet vote against the idea that the situation is fully stable. A stronger dollar would have fit the “problem solved” narrative better. Instead, the market is still treating the currency as something that deserves a discount while war risk, policy uncertainty, and inflation all remain in the room.

That is also why gold and silver could rise with stocks. Stocks are buying relief. Metals are buying insurance. Both can go up together for a while, but it usually means the market is not nearly as calm as the headline index levels suggest.

What this means going into the end of the week

The key risk now is that investors have moved too quickly from “worried” to “resolved.”

If there is a fresh setback in the ceasefire process, or if the Strait remains only partially functional, or if oil simply stays high longer than traders hoped, the market may have to revisit all the things it tried to wave away:

  • persistent inflation,
  • weaker growth,
  • and a Fed that is not eager to cut.

That does not mean the rally has to fail immediately. It just means the next negative surprise may hit harder than usual, because the market has already spent a lot of optimism in advance.

Bottom line

Wednesday’s rally looked like confidence. But confidence built on an unresolved war, sticky inflation, and a softening economy can change character very quickly. The market may be seeing light at the end of the tunnel. The danger is that it may be headlights.

                                                                                          


 

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