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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* March 4,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
================
Dollar
Strength and a Market Learning to Sweat
Tuesday
looked like the first real “stress test” of March.
The Dow was
down more than 1,200 points at its worst before recovering a large part of the
loss by the close. That kind of reversal tells you two things at once:
investors are still willing to buy dips, but they are no longer calm about
doing it. The market is becoming more fragile, more reactive, and less
convinced that every shock will fade in a day or two.
The bigger
story was not the final stock-market close. It was the combination underneath
it:
That is not
a clean “risk-off” move. In a classic fear trade, gold rallies, bonds rally,
and yields fall. Instead, Tuesday felt more like a “raise cash and rethink
everything” day. Gold and silver were treated less like insurance and more like
liquid positions that traders could sell quickly. That is what crowded markets
do when volatility suddenly becomes the main event.
The
encouraging part for the metals bulls is that the overnight rebound came
quickly. Gold is back above the $5,100 area and silver is back into the
mid-$80s after Tuesday’s damage. That doesn’t erase the hit, but it does
suggest the underlying bid is still there. This still looks more like a violent
shakeout than a completed top.
Stocks,
however, are sending a less friendly message. The Dow may have recovered from
the abyss, but the broader tone was weak. The S&P 500 closed below its
100-day moving average for the first time since November, and volatility rose
to its highest closing level since November. Those are not the kinds of signals
you get in a market that is gliding into spring with confidence.
The war
backdrop is what makes all of this harder to dismiss. This is no longer just a
headline about one country. The conflict has spread wider through the Gulf,
with energy infrastructure, tankers, and regional diplomatic sites all pulled
into the story. Oil has jumped sharply, though it is not yet at the sort of
extreme price that would force an immediate panic on the scale of 2008 or early
2022. That said, the direction matters. Brent in the low $80s and WTI in the
mid-$70s are manageable for a little while. If those prices keep climbing, they
quickly become an inflation problem and a consumer problem.
And that
brings us to the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has clearly made it a threat point, and
traffic is effectively choked. But there is an important distinction between
threatening closure and being able to sustain a long, fully enforced blockade
in the face of U.S. naval escorts and international pressure. Markets are now
trading the risk of disruption more than a settled outcome. That still matters
enormously, because even temporary disruption can push up shipping costs,
insurance costs, and energy prices long before anyone proves who can “control”
the waterway.
So the real
March question is becoming clearer:
Is this just
another scary but short-lived geopolitical shock that gets bought, or is it the
kind of inflationary, growth-sapping event that finally starts to change the
market’s assumptions?
Right now,
the answer seems to be somewhere in between. Investors are not fully panicking.
But they are no longer acting carefree either.
If oil stays
elevated, the dollar stays strong, and bond yields keep pressing higher, then
the market will have to confront an ugly possibility: slower growth, stickier
inflation, and no easy Fed rescue. That is the kind of setup that can turn a
choppy correction into something more serious.
For now,
Wednesday feels like a market trying to bounce while quietly realizing the
floor is not as solid as it looked a week ago.
Weekly Market Summary Page
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