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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* April 29,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
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Oil’s
Tight Now, Loose Later Problem
The biggest
new headline is the UAE quitting OPEC, but the oil market’s first
reaction was a shrug. That sounds odd until you look at what traders are actually pricing.
Right now,
the market is saying two things at once:
That is what
the futures curve is telling us.
Brent for June
delivery was trading around $111.25, while the more active July
contract was closer to $104.12. That means buyers are paying a big
premium for barrels now versus barrels a month later. Reuters and CME both
describe this as backwardation — a setup that usually means immediate
supply is tight, but traders still expect some normalization later
on. Earlier in the crisis, Reuters noted the gap between front-month
Brent and the six-month contract widened to about $10, the steepest
backwardation since the Russia-Ukraine war in 2022.
In plain
English: the market is panicking about the next few weeks, not the next few
years.
That fits
the current story. The Strait of Hormuz is still disrupted enough to keep
near-term barrels expensive, but traders are assuming the physical blockage,
war risk, and shipping chaos will not last forever. CME’s own analysis says the
current curve implies the market still sees spot crude potentially falling back
into the mid-$70s by year-end if this proves to be a short-lived
logistics shock rather than a structural supply break.
The UAE
leaving OPEC adds a twist to that story.
In the near
term, it does very little because the UAE still can’t magically move a
lot more oil while Hormuz is constrained. HSBC told Reuters the Abu Dhabi
pipeline that bypasses Hormuz is probably already near full use. But once
shipping normalizes, the UAE will no longer be bound by OPEC+ quotas and could
gradually lift production from around 3.4 million barrels per day toward
4.5 million. That doesn’t flood the market overnight, but it does weaken
OPEC’s long-term discipline and makes it harder for the cartel to keep prices
high once the crisis cools.
So how long
does this tight market last?
My read is straightforward:
The World
Bank’s new commodity outlook sits right in the middle of this logic: its
baseline assumes the worst disruptions fade after May and shipping gradually
returns toward pre-war levels by October, yet it still sees Brent averaging
about $86 in 2026—much higher than last year’s $69. And if the
conflict persists or deepens, it says Brent could average $115 this
year. That’s not a forecast for collapse in oil. That’s a forecast for a world
where energy stays expensive enough to keep inflation uneasy.
That brings
us to the bond market.
The 30-year
Treasury has been creeping back toward 5%, and the 10-year is
still above the key 4.23% zone that Reuters’ technical analysis flagged
as the level that favors higher yields. When long yields stay elevated even as
traders talk about possible Fed cuts later in 2026 or early 2027, the bond
market is basically saying: “Fine, maybe you cut—but inflation and deficit
risks are not going away.”
That is why
oil matters so much here. If the Fed cuts later while oil and shipping keep
prices sticky, the long end can do the “tightening” for them. That’s the bond
vigilante version of discipline.
Bottom line:
The oil market is not pricing a permanent shortage. It is pricing a severe
near-term squeeze followed by a gradual easing later. That is why the front
month is so expensive and the back months are not. The
real risk is that traders are still too optimistic about how quickly “later”
arrives. If Hormuz stays messy into summer, the market may have to reprice the
whole curve higher—and that would make the move toward 5% in the long bond feel
a lot less like noise and a lot more like a warning.
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