*****************************************************************************

*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 June 2, 2026                              *

*                                                                           *

*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

*                    web address: http://www.fiendbear.com                  *

*****************************************************************************

Fiend Commentary
================

A New Normal at the Chokepoint

June started with record highs and a warning label.

The major averages pushed to fresh records again on Monday, helped by the same familiar force: technology strength, AI optimism, and the belief that every geopolitical shock eventually becomes manageable. The S&P 500, Dow, and Nasdaq all finished at new highs, while oil jumped back toward the mid-$90s on renewed U.S.-Iran tension and uncertainty over the Strait of Hormuz.

That combination says a lot about the market’s mindset. Stocks are not ignoring the war exactly. They are assuming the war will remain contained enough to be traded around.

That is a very different thing from solved.

The market’s current view seems to be that the Strait will not be fully closed, the conflict will not become a full shooting war, and oil prices will remain elevated but tolerable. In other words, traders are pricing a messy new normal: not peace, not collapse, but a managed chokepoint.

That may be the most important phrase for June: managed chokepoint.

If Iran cannot win a direct confrontation but can keep the Strait uncertain, it may not need to “win” in the traditional sense. It can create leverage by making every tanker, insurer, refiner, and importer ask the same question: what will it cost to move through here safely?

That is why this situation may last longer than Wall Street wants to admit. A total blockade invites retaliation. A fully open Strait gives up leverage. But a partially open, politically managed, unpredictable Strait creates a permanent risk premium. That could become more valuable to Tehran than a narrow nuclear bargaining chip.

That is also why oil above $90 is not just an oil story. It is a toll on the global economy. Even if crude does not spike back to $120, prices in the $90s are still high enough to pressure airlines, trucking, shipping, chemicals, food distribution, and consumer confidence. The damage comes from duration, not just peak price.

Wall Street is betting duration will not be a problem.

So far, that bet has paid. AI optimism keeps overpowering war anxiety. Strong earnings from a handful of leading companies keep the indexes levitating. The market keeps treating every flare-up as temporary and every dip as a buying opportunity.

But the shipping industry is not trading vibes. Ship operators are asking for clear rules before they return to normal operations. The U.N.’s maritime leadership has warned that it remains too dangerous to move stranded seafarers out of the Gulf without a more durable safety framework. That is the real-world version of the chart. If the people actually moving the cargo still don’t trust the route, the market’s optimism may be early.

The U.S. also appears to be trying to avoid a full-scale war while keeping pressure on Iran. That may be the rational choice. But it also gives Iran room to test limits, suspend talks, restart talks, threaten the Strait, and then step back just enough to avoid a bigger response. That rhythm is exhausting for policymakers, but it has been extremely profitable for traders willing to buy every “almost deal.”

The risk is that this pattern becomes the policy.

If the Strait remains permanently compromised—open some days, restricted on others, expensive all the time—then the market may need to reprice more than oil. It would mean:

  • higher shipping and insurance costs,
  • a persistent energy risk premium,
  • more pressure on inflation expectations,
  • and a Fed with even less room to cut if growth slows.

That is the part stock investors are not pricing aggressively right now.

The market is treating June as if records are confirmation that the system is strong. Maybe. But records can also be a sign of crowded confidence. If oil stays elevated and the Strait remains uncertain, the economy may gradually pay a price that the stock indexes are currently refusing to acknowledge.

For now, Wall Street is choosing the optimistic version: contained war, manageable oil, strong tech, resilient earnings.

The less comfortable version is still out there: a protracted standoff, a permanently impaired Strait, and inflation that refuses to cool because the world’s most important energy corridor is no longer fully reliable.

That is the real test for June.

Not whether the market can hit another record.

Whether it can still justify those records if the chokepoint becomes the new normal.


 

Weekly Market Summary Page
[Return to the Fiend's SuperBear Page]