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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 4, 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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Renting Peace

Wall Street has decided that the war is no longer a reason to stay cautious. It may still be a reason to hedge, but not to stop buying.

That is the clearest way to read Friday’s action and Monday’s setup. The S&P 500 closed at another record, 7,230.12, and the Nasdaq finished above 25,000 for the first time, at 25,114.44. The Dow lagged and closed at 49,499.27, still below the 50,000 milestone that looked inevitable only weeks ago. In other words, the market is still bullish — but it is bullish in a very specific way: it is chasing growth and momentum, not broadly embracing everything.

What makes that so strange is the backdrop.

The war is not over. Oil is not cheap. The Strait is not normal. And yet the market is acting as if all of those are temporary annoyances rather than defining features of the macro landscape.

That is why I think “renting peace” is the right phrase. Investors are not buying a durable settlement. They are renting a period of calm just long enough to justify owning the same high-beta winners again.

The oil market tells the truth better than the stock market does. Even after some moderation, Brent was still around $107–108 and WTI around $101–102 early Monday. That is nowhere near a clean normalization. That is still a meaningful energy shock by historical standards. The fact that equities can rally while crude sits there tells you the market is not pricing the present. It is pricing the future it wants: reopened shipping, falling oil, and eventually easier policy.

The problem is that the future has not been delivered yet.

And that brings us to the uncomfortable part: if the market is this strong now, what exactly is it seeing?

It is clearly not seeing lower interest rates today. The Fed has not turned dovish in any clean way, and Reuters reported only a gradual pull-forward of easing hopes tied to weaker growth, not a clear signal that cuts are around the corner. The rally also cannot be explained by low inflation confidence, because inflation pressure tied to energy and tariffs remains very much alive. Instead, what the market seems to be seeing is a more dangerous mix:

  • big-tech earnings are still powerful enough to overpower macro worries,
  • passive flows and FOMO remain alive,
  • and investors still believe that if the economy weakens enough later in 2026, policy will eventually bend.

That is not “all clear.” That is “we’ll deal with the consequences later.”

The dollar’s behavior supports that reading. It hasn’t behaved like a currency blessed with perfect confidence. It has been softer, which fits the idea that money is still uncomfortable with the long-run policy mix even as stocks levitate. The quiet message from the currency market is that this is not a serene boom. It is a liquidity-fueled, narrative-heavy rally in a world where too many important things are unresolved.

So if the war really did end soon, would that be even more bullish?

Probably, yes — in the short run.

A real reopening of the Strait, visible normalization in shipping, and a clear drop in oil would likely add fuel to the same trade that is already working: long tech, long U.S. equities, short fear. That could absolutely push the S&P and Nasdaq to even higher records.

But that is also what makes the setup fragile. If markets are already pricing the happy ending before it exists, then the risk is not that good news is ignored. The risk is that not enough good news arrives to justify the price paid in advance.

That’s why the Dow’s lag matters more than it looks. The rally is real, but it is not unanimous. It is being led by the same kind of leadership that thrives when people stop caring about valuation and start caring about not being left behind.

That can last longer than skeptics think.

But it rarely ends quietly.                                                                                      


 

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