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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 10, 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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A Market Held Together by Headlines

Monday was one of those sessions that reminds you how “thin” modern markets can feel when everyone is watching the same newsfeed and the same choke points.

Overnight, crude screamed higher and stocks opened as if they were pricing a brand‑new regime: higher energy costs, tighter margins, and a fresh inflation problem landing on top of a softening economy. The Dow promptly fell hard—roughly a near‑1,000‑point gut punch at the worst of it—before reversing course and finishing the day higher. Oil pulled an even more dramatic move: it surged to levels that felt like a crisis… and then retraced violently as the narrative shifted.

The trigger for the reversal wasn’t an oil tanker magically reappearing or the Strait suddenly reopening. It was words—signals that the conflict could be “short-lived,” plus talk that the U.S. might lean on policy levers (sanctions flexibility, strategic reserves, escorts) to keep barrels moving.

That dynamic should sound familiar.

We saw it in January in the silver market: a near-vertical run, then an air-pocket drop that looked like gravity had been switched back on. Now we’ve seen a similar “historic whip” in crude oil—another key commodity that sits at the center of inflation expectations and consumer psychology. Two major commodity whiplash events in the first couple months of 2026 are not normal. It’s a clue.

It suggests we’re in a year where markets are unusually sensitive and unusually crowded. When positioning gets one-sided, it doesn’t take much to force a violent unwind—just a headline, a rumor, or a sudden shift in perceived odds.

Why this matters more than one wild day

In the short run, Monday’s reversal looks like strength. It proves buyers are still waiting to pounce and that confidence can be restored quickly. But in the medium run, it’s also a warning:

A market that can be rescued by “the right words” is also a market that can be damaged by the wrong ones.

When crude oil can travel from “panic” to “relief” within hours, you’re not watching a stable equilibrium. You’re watching a system balancing on expectations. The same is true of equities that sell off sharply and then levitate into the close.

That kind of behavior is not the mark of a calm, healthy backdrop. It’s the mark of a market that is trying to remain optimistic while the ground under it is shifting.

The real risk: the day the words don’t work

The question—what happens when they don’t—is the most important one for 2026.

Because words only work when reality allows them to work.

If the Strait remains effectively choked, if tanker incidents repeat, if refineries or infrastructure keep taking damage, or if insurance/shipping costs surge and stay elevated, then the “reassuring narrative” runs into a wall. That’s when the market stops reacting to speeches and starts reacting to shortages.

And if oil stays high long enough to show up at the pump, the inflation story changes quickly. Consumers don’t need a CPI report to feel inflation—they feel it at the gas station and in the weekly shopping cart. That becomes a sentiment hit, and sentiment hits are how slowdowns accelerate.

The bond market adds another layer. Yields didn’t collapse into this scare. In fact, after dipping below 4% recently, the 10-year is right back near the middle of its range again around the low‑4% area. That’s a subtle but important signal: investors are not fully embracing the “growth scare equals lower yields equals easy Fed rescue” script. They’re weighing inflation risk alongside economic softness.

In plain English: the market is starting to worry about the ugly mix—slower growth with higher price pressure.

That’s where central banks get trapped. If the economy weakens materially, the Fed will face pressure to ease. But if energy-driven inflation is rising at the same time, easing becomes politically and economically harder. “Hands off” can turn into “no good options” surprisingly fast.

What to watch next

If you want a simple dashboard for the next few weeks, ignore the daily noise and watch these:

1.     Oil’s ability to stay down after the bounce
It’s one thing to drop on headlines. It’s another to stay down if physical disruption persists.

2.     Gasoline prices and consumer tone
If $5+ gasoline starts spreading beyond the usual hotspots, consumer sentiment can break quickly.

3.     Credit spreads and regional bank stress
If credit begins tightening while yields remain elevated, equity dips stop being “buyable” and start becoming “contagious.”

4.     Gold and silver behavior on down-stock days
When equities fall and metals rise, that’s a different message than when everything sells off together.

Monday gave the bulls their familiar ending: the late-day rescue, the sense that the system still responds to reassurance. But it also revealed something more uncomfortable: markets are moving like they’re conditioned to expect intervention—verbal, financial, or political—because the alternative is too expensive to price.

That works… until it doesn’t.

And 2026 is already acting like a year where the market may eventually test that boundary.


 

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