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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 6, 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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Brinkmanship as a Bull Case

Tuesday’s market action made one thing clear: Wall Street is no longer waiting for a real peace deal. It is buying the idea that both sides will keep stepping up to the edge, then stepping back just enough to avoid the worst outcome.

That helps explain the odd combination on the screen. Oil dropped back, stocks rallied to fresh highs, the 30-year yield slipped back below 5%, and the dollar weakened again. At the same time, gold and silver rose strongly. That is not the picture of a market that believes the conflict is over. It is the picture of a market that believes the conflict will be managed.

The most important signal is oil. Prices eased because traders are starting to think the blockade itself is becoming leverage for negotiation, not just a military tactic. If that is true, then the market is effectively betting on a form of controlled brinkmanship: enough pressure to force a deal, not enough to trigger a lasting global supply shock. That is a bullish assumption. It may also be a very fragile one.

Because the underlying problem has not changed. If the Strait remains uncertain, then oil does not need to spike back to crisis highs to be a real economic drag. Even “only” $90–$100 oil would still be a major jump from where energy was sitting not long ago. If that persists into summer, it starts showing up in freight, fuel, food, and inflation psychology whether policymakers like it or not.

That is what makes the current rally feel a little too neat. Stocks are acting as if the market has already figured out the endgame, even though the actual terms remain hazy. Gold and silver are acting more cautiously. They are participating in the relief move, but they are also reminding everyone that distrust in policy and paper assets has not gone away.

There is another way to frame the issue: perhaps there is no clean “win” available. If Iran sees control or disruption of Hormuz as strategically more valuable than whatever compromise the U.S. can put on paper, then the market may be overestimating how easily this gets turned into a durable deal. That would mean more extensions, more temporary arrangements, and more volatility every time one side tries to call the other’s bluff.

So what did Tuesday really say? Not that peace is near. More that investors are choosing to believe in a version of peace that keeps markets functioning, oil below panic levels, and the Fed’s later-cut story alive.

That can work for a while. But it also means the market is once again paying for an ending before it exists.

                                     


 

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