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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 27, 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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The Market of Maybes

Tuesday was another example of how strange this market has become.

The Dow opened strong, then faded. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq, however, kept pushing higher and closed at fresh records. Tech is again the engine, and semiconductors are once again the spark. Micron’s huge move and the broader chip rally gave traders another reason to chase the AI story, even while the geopolitical and inflation backdrops remain messy.

This is starting to look less like a calm bull market and more like a momentum blow-off that has learned to ignore almost everything except the next upside catalyst.

The market is not waiting for the Middle East situation to be solved. It is waiting for just enough hope to keep buying. Every few days we hear that a deal is “close,” “possible,” or “a few days away.” Oil drops, yields ease, tech rallies, and the same playbook gets run again.

But the actual situation is not clean.

The U.S. has made “defensive” strikes in recent days. Iran has accused the U.S. of violating the ceasefire. The Strait of Hormuz remains the real issue, and the terms of any agreement are still unclear. Iran may not be willing to give up enriched uranium in any meaningful way, and it may view leverage over the Strait as more valuable than whatever nuclear concession is being demanded.

That’s the part Wall Street seems determined not to price.

Oil has moved lower on deal hopes, with WTI back in the low-$90s and Brent below $100 again, but that is not the same as normal. It is lower than panic levels, not low. If the Strait is not reliably open, and if insurance, routing, and tanker flows remain uncertain, then oil carries a risk premium even without a full shooting war.

The market is basically saying: the war can be messy, as long as it stays tradable.

That is a dangerous assumption.

The tech rally is another piece of this. The Nasdaq is acting like the Middle East, oil, inflation, and bond yields are secondary details. Maybe they are for another few days. But if the rally is being driven by a narrow group of AI and semiconductor winners, it can look stronger than it really is. A few stocks can drag the index higher while the broader economy gets more fragile underneath.

That is what makes June so important.

May has been an extraordinary month for risk appetite. Stocks have surged. AI enthusiasm is back in full force. Oil scares have repeatedly been waved away. But the next batch of economic reports may not cooperate with the story. If PCE inflation stays hot, if employment weakens, or if consumer confidence continues to slide under the weight of high prices, the market may have to stop trading rumors and start trading numbers.

The Fed is still the elephant in the room. The market wants to believe that weaker growth eventually brings relief. But with inflation still hot and oil still elevated, the Fed may not have the clean path investors want. Rate cuts are not the story right now. If anything, the market has moved toward accepting that rates may stay high longer, or even rise later if inflation refuses to back down.

That is the contradiction: stocks are trading like money will get easier, while the inflation data and bond market are saying the opposite.

For now, optimism is winning. It may keep winning if the market gets the deal it wants and oil keeps falling. But the closer indexes get to a vertical move, the more they depend on every “maybe” turning into a “yes.”

Maybe the Strait opens.
Maybe oil keeps falling.
Maybe inflation cools.
Maybe the Fed doesn’t have to hike.
Maybe AI earnings justify the valuations.
Maybe no one gets surprised by the next war headline.

That is a lot of maybes.

And markets can rally on maybes for a while. But they usually correct on facts.


 

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