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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 5, 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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No Clear Endgame

The market is trying to do something very hard right now: price a war without knowing what “winning” even means.

That uncertainty showed up again on Wednesday. Gold and silver were stable after Tuesday’s rout and continue to look like they are trying to build a base rather than fall apart. At the same time, oil pushed higher, the dollar stayed firm, and the 10-year yield moved back above 4.1%. That is not a clean “risk-off” picture, and it is not a clean “risk-on” picture either. It is the kind of market that looks steady on the surface while stress keeps moving around underneath.

The metals are the most interesting part of that story. Gold is back in the low-$5,100s and silver has steadied in the mid-$80s after being crushed earlier in the week. That does not mean the uptrend is magically safe again. It does mean there are still buyers underneath, even after one of the nastier shakeouts of the year. Rallies are still being sold, but the lows are being defended. That is usually what a market looks like when it is trying to decide whether it just had a correction… or a warning.

Oil is a bigger problem than one day’s headline. If the Strait stays closed, or even partially choked, it doesn’t take a full-blown energy crisis to damage confidence. It just takes enough disruption to keep transport costs, fuel prices, and inflation expectations moving in the wrong direction. Households are already sensitive to prices. Consumers do not need another major spike in visible costs to feel worse about the economy.

That is why the bond market matters so much here. The 10-year moving back above 4.1% is not an emergency, but it is a reminder that investors are not treating this as a simple “growth scare” where yields collapse and the Fed rides in with easy money. The long end is saying inflation risk is still alive, even if growth is wobbling. That is a very uncomfortable mix.

And that is really the heart of the problem heading into the end of the month and the start of spring: the war adds uncertainty, oil adds inflation risk, the economy is still uneven, and nobody can say with confidence how any of it resolves. There is no obvious end parameter. There is no neat diplomatic timetable. There is no guarantee that the next headline will calm things down instead of widening the conflict.

That leaves markets in a familiar but dangerous place. Stocks can still bounce because investors are conditioned to buy dips. Gold and silver can still rebound because trust in policy and paper assets is not exactly abundant. Bonds can wobble because inflation and fiscal math do not disappear just because growth slows. Everything becomes more sensitive to the next data point, the next shipping disruption, the next policy surprise.

The takeaway for Thursday is simple: this market is not panicking, but it is no longer comfortable. And when markets lose comfort before they lose confidence, volatility tends to linger longer than people expect.


 

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