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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 23, 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 Buying the Ending Before It Exists

Wednesday’s price action looked like a market trying to skip straight to the happy ending.

The S&P 500 closed at a new record around 7,138 and the Nasdaq finished at a new high near 24,658, even though the war is not truly resolved and oil is still trading in a range that would have looked like a crisis only weeks ago. The Dow also climbed back toward 49,500. At the same time, Brent settled around $101.91 and WTI around $92.96 after Iran seized two cargo ships in the Strait of Hormuz, which is hardly the kind of backdrop that normally screams “all clear.”

That’s what makes this moment so strange. Wall Street is acting as if the war’s economic damage has already been contained, even though the basic facts remain messy: the ceasefire extension is unilateral, Iran has not formally agreed to it, the U.S. naval blockade remains in place, and Reuters reports the Strait is still effectively shut. The market is not trading what is happening. It is trading what it wants to happen next.

What Wall Street appears to see at the end of the tunnel is a fairly clean sequence: the fighting winds down, shipping gradually resumes, oil drifts lower, and the Fed gets room to cut later in 2026. That is the bullish script. It also explains why equities can rally at the same time gold and silver firm up again: stocks are buying relief, while metals are buying insurance against the chance that the relief turns out to be temporary. Reuters noted that gold rose to about $4,738 on Wednesday after touching a one-week low, a sign that buyers are still willing to step in even without a full panic bid.

The snag is that several key pieces of that bullish script are still missing. Oil has not returned to anything like pre-war normal, and the long end of the bond market is not behaving as if inflation is gone. The 10-year Treasury yield was around 4.30% and the 30-year near 4.91% on Wednesday—levels that are not catastrophic, but high enough to keep financial conditions from loosening in the way equity bulls would prefer. If energy prices stay elevated, that is a tax on consumers and margins, even if stock traders are pretending otherwise.

This is why the market’s optimism feels more speculative than grounded. Reuters reported that about two-thirds of S&P 500 companies that have reported so far this earnings season mentioned energy costs on their calls, which tells you the issue is very much on corporate managements’ minds. And yet investors keep buying as if those costs are a short-lived nuisance rather than something that could bleed into inflation, earnings, and confidence over the next few months.

The Fed is another part of the disconnect. Markets still want to believe that softer growth later this year will bring cuts back into view. But the Fed’s own posture remains more cautious, and Reuters noted that even the brokerages still expecting two 2026 cuts have pushed the first likely move out toward September, while the Fed itself has only projected one. In other words, the market is front-running a central bank that is not actually giving it much to front-run yet.

So Thursday’s takeaway is simple: this rally is being built on a lot of assumptions arriving in the right order. The war needs to cool. The Strait needs to reopen in practice, not just on paper. Oil needs to stop threatening inflation. The Fed needs to eventually soften without losing credibility. And the economy needs to stay intact long enough for all of that to happen.

That is possible. But it is also a lot to ask of one tunnel.

                                                                                          


 

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