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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 22, 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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Independence on Trial

Kevin Warsh’s confirmation hearing did not settle the market’s biggest question. It sharpened it.

The line that stood out was his repeated emphasis that monetary policy would remain “strictly independent” of the White House, even as he said he would work with the administration and Congress on non-monetary Fed matters. Reuters’ summary captured the tension well: he pledged independence, but “with limits,” and senators from both parties treated that as the core issue in the hearing.

That matters because the market is not just trying to handicap one nominee. It is trying to figure out what the Fed will look like later this year if growth weakens, inflation stays sticky, and the war-driven oil shock lingers. Right now, none of those conditions is hypothetical. Oil is still hovering near the $100 area even with the ceasefire extension, because traffic through Hormuz remains largely halted and the market is not fully convinced the truce is durable. Reuters said the extension was unilateral and not confirmed by Iran or Israel, while AP noted the Strait remains the critical variable for traders.

That is why the Fed conversation is suddenly more important than the war headlines alone. If oil remains elevated, the inflation problem gets worse. If growth weakens at the same time, pressure for rate cuts rises. And if the Fed looks politically compromised while trying to navigate both, the bond market may be the first place to rebel.

A lot of investors still want to believe later-2026 cuts are the likely outcome. Reuters reported that major brokerages continue to expect two cuts this year even though the Fed’s own guidance is more restrained, and even though the war pushed some market pricing toward “no cuts” only days ago. That is the market trying to split the difference: the economy is soft enough to need help eventually, but the inflation backdrop is too hot for the Fed to admit that yet.

Warsh’s hearing did not give the market a green light for aggressive easing. Quite the opposite. He said he made no promises to President Trump about cutting rates, criticized the Fed’s past inflation framework, and argued that the institution’s credibility had been damaged by failing to maintain price stability. Reuters’ account makes clear that he avoided signaling any near-term cut bias. So if investors are hoping a new chair means “reckless cuts,” the hearing did not validate that thesis.

Could hikes become all but impossible? Not necessarily. They may be politically harder, but they are not economically impossible if inflation expectations become unanchored. The better way to frame it is this: the bar for hikes is very high because the economy is already uneven, but the bar for cuts is no longer low either because oil, tariffs, and a weaker dollar all threaten inflation. That leaves the Fed in the least comfortable place: hold steady, talk tough, and hope the data cooperate.

This is where the “bond vigilantes” question comes in. Reuters has described them as investors who impose discipline when they think governments or central banks are becoming too tolerant of inflation or debt. If markets decide the next Fed leadership is more political than disciplined, the long end of the Treasury curve can do the talking by pushing yields higher. In practical terms, that means the market can tighten conditions even if the Fed refuses to.

And that risk has not gone away just because stocks and oil have been wobbling rather than breaking. Reuters reported that the ceasefire extension lifted sentiment only modestly, while oil remained elevated near $100 because the Strait is still effectively constrained. That is the key point: Wall Street may be desensitized to the headlines, but the economic transmission mechanism is still there. Elevated oil plus soft growth is not a friendly mix.

So what does this mean for the rest of the year?

If the war cools and oil retreats materially, the Fed can stay on hold for a while and later cut without looking reckless. If the war drags and oil stays high, the Fed’s room to maneuver shrinks. In that case, the market may discover that the real referee is not the nominee, not the headlines, and not the speeches. It is the bond market.

                                                                                          


 

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