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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* May 8,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
================
The
Market Is Clinging to “Good Enough”
Friday’s
setup feels less like confidence and more like endurance. Oil is back around $101
a barrel, the ceasefire is being tested by fresh clashes and renewed
attacks around the Gulf, and yet markets are still acting as if the conflict
will stay contained enough to avoid real economic damage. That may prove right,
but it is a very generous assumption. Reuters reported that despite renewed
U.S.-Iran exchanges and fresh attacks on the UAE, investors were still focused
on the possibility of a lasting peace deal rather than a wider breakdown.
That is the
balancing act now: high oil, fragile peace, and a slowing economy. If
crude stays near current levels, it stops being a headline and starts behaving
like a tax—on households, on freight, on margins, and eventually on sentiment.
The market can absorb a brief shock. It has a much harder time absorbing a
“temporary” shock that lasts long enough to show up everywhere else. Reuters’
preview of the jobs report already described the labor market as “slow hire,
slow fire,” with April payrolls expected to slow to about 62,000 and
unemployment seen holding at 4.3%. That is not a booming economy going
into an energy shock.
This is why
today’s jobs report matters more than usual. A stronger number would push back
on the idea that rate cuts are coming soon and force markets to confront the
possibility that oil-driven inflation may keep policy tighter for longer. A
weaker number would revive the “cuts later” story—but with an ugly twist,
because weak jobs and high oil is not the clean disinflation setup investors
want. It is the kind of mix that starts to look like stagflation. And once that
word enters the conversation, the market’s cheerful “buy first, explain later”
reflex tends to get a lot less reliable.
So the real
question for Friday is simple: is the market still pricing peace, or is it
finally pricing delay? If the jobs report is soft and oil refuses to break
lower, investors may have to admit that the economy was wobbling before the war
and is now being asked to absorb another shock. That does not guarantee a
selloff today. But it does mean the comforting story—peace soon, inflation
manageable, cuts later—has a lot less room for error than it did a week ago.
Weekly Market Summary Page
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