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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 April 17, 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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As If the War Never Happened

Thursday’s market action looked almost surreal. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both closed at fresh records, the VIX slipped back into the high teens, and investors acted as if the Middle East war was already behind them. Meanwhile oil stayed elevated, the Strait remained anything but normal, and the Fed’s balance sheet quietly moved higher again.

That is the part worth focusing on.

Wall Street is buying the outcome it wants before the facts fully support it. The market is behaving as though the war will end soon, shipping will normalize, oil will drift lower, inflation will settle down, and at some point later this year the Fed will be able to cut without consequence. That is a lot of optimism packed into one trade.

The latest Fed balance sheet report showed total assets rising again, to roughly $6.706 trillion, up about $11.8 billion from the prior week. That is not “QE” in the old, dramatic sense, but it is another reminder that the balance sheet is no longer shrinking and is now nudging higher. In a market already conditioned to believe central banks will ultimately support asset prices, that matters. It reinforces the idea that liquidity is still quietly being added even while the Fed publicly talks patience.

At the same time, the market’s favorite comfort blanket — rate cuts — still doesn’t line up neatly with the data. Fed officials have been warning that the oil shock is already feeding inflation pressures, and some are openly talking about rates staying on hold for a long time. One official, who had previously leaned dovish, is already scaling back his own cut outlook because inflation has become “less favorable.” In other words, the market is still hoping for cuts later this year, but the evidence against cuts in the first half of 2026 remains pretty strong.

That’s why this rally feels odd. Stocks are surging not because the Fed has changed course, but because investors are betting the Fed eventually will.

And that’s where the biggest snag sits: the war may not end on the market’s schedule.

Oil did not behave like a crisis that was solved. It behaved like a crisis that had been temporarily pushed out of the headlines. Brent still traded around $99 and WTI around $95 on Thursday — far below the panic highs, but still much too high for comfort if those levels stick. A few days of hope does not reopen a shipping lane. It does not lower insurance costs. It does not rebuild supply chains. It does not erase the inflation impulse that a month of elevated energy costs can create.

That is the risk going into late April and spring. The market is already pricing in the “after” before the “during” is over.

If the ceasefire actually holds, if shipping resumes in a way that feels normal, and if oil continues to retreat, then Thursday’s record highs may prove justified. But if the conflict drags on, or if the Strait remains only partly functional, then markets are going to discover that they priced in too much relief too early.

That is what makes the current setup fragile. It is not the war itself. It is the possibility that the market’s assumptions about the war’s duration are wrong.

And if that turns out to be the case, the next leg lower will not just be about geopolitics. It will be about inflation, policy credibility, and a market that once again got ahead of itself.

                                                                                          


 

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