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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 31, 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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Oil at $106, and the Fed’s Patience Test Begins

The market is trying to trade a ceasefire, but the oil tape is trading something else: duration.

Crude has crept back up into the $106 area (depending on the benchmark), even as ceasefire chatter continues. That’s a quiet warning that investors are starting to doubt the “quick resolution” storyline. A war headline can move prices for a day. A month of disrupted flows changes the economic backdrop. And if elevated oil lasts another month, it stops being a shock and starts acting like a slow tax on growth.

What changed overnight is the interest-rate narrative.

Despite the inflation risk that comes with $100+ oil, fear of an imminent Fed hike has eased after Powell signaled the Fed should be careful about reacting to what could be a supply shock, emphasizing stable inflation expectations. That pushed markets away from “the Fed must hike” and back toward “the Fed can wait,” which is why you’re seeing a bit of relief in stock futures and a bounce in metals.

But “no hike” doesn’t automatically mean “cuts are coming.” It just means the bar for hiking is high.

Now the spotlight turns to this week’s economic reports, because they will decide which story dominates next:

1.     Is the economy weakening fast enough to force eventual easing?

2.     Or is inflation sticky enough that the Fed stays sidelined longer than Wall Street can tolerate?

The schedule matters because the market is looking for confirmation that the economy was slowing even before oil added new pressure. Consumer confidence and job openings are early tells about psychology and labor demand. ADP and ISM are the mid-week pulse checks. Weekly jobless claims are a high-frequency truth serum. And the jobs report at week’s end is the big one, especially in a market that’s already skittish.

On Monday, stocks fell again, with tech continuing to look heavy. Overnight, futures are firmer—because hope is still the market’s favorite asset. But hope is becoming more conditional. Each bounce now needs a reason. “Ceasefire vibes” alone won’t be enough if oil remains elevated and the data keeps hinting at slower hiring and stubborn prices.

Gold and silver firmed overnight as well, but their message is mixed. Yes, metals can benefit from uncertainty. But they also struggle when yields and the dollar are firm, because higher rates raise the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets. That’s why the metals market can rally on fear one day and sag on rates the next, even if the headlines look the same.

The main takeaway for Tuesday: the market wants to believe the worst won’t happen. Sometimes that’s right—markets often fear disasters that never fully materialize. But if oil stays high long enough, you don’t need the worst-case scenario for the economy to feel it. You just need time.

And right now, time is the variable markets are least comfortable pricing.


 

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