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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 14, 2026                             *

*                                                                           *

*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

*                    web address: http://www.fiendbear.com                  *

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Fiend Commentary
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The New Fed Chair Inherits an Inflation Problem

Wednesday’s PPI report landed like a warning shot.

Producer prices jumped 1.4% in April, the biggest monthly gain since March 2022, and rose 6.0% year-over-year, the highest since December 2022. That’s not a rounding error. That’s inflation moving back into the pipeline with force, across both goods and services, driven in part by the energy shock but not limited to it.

And it arrived on the same day Kevin Warsh was confirmed as the next Fed chair.

That is not a gentle welcome package.

Warsh is walking into a Fed that is boxed in from day one. A few months ago, Wall Street was debating how many rate cuts 2026 would deliver. Now, rate-cut expectations have nearly vanished, and CME pricing shows roughly a one-third chance of a hike by year-end. That is an extraordinary swing in sentiment, and it tells you the market is beginning to accept what the inflation data has been saying: the Fed’s job is not getting easier.

The problem is political as much as economic. Warsh can talk tough. He can talk independence. He can talk price stability. But when growth slows, jobs weaken, and the White House wants relief, the pressure to cut will be intense. The question is not whether a hike might be economically justified. The question is whether the Fed will have the political tolerance to do it.

My suspicion: the market doubts it.

That may be exactly what silver is smelling. Silver is pushing back toward the $90 area, and even though gold has been less dramatic lately, the metal complex is not acting as if the inflation story is safely contained. Metals are no longer just trading “war fear.” They are trading the possibility that policymakers will choose to live with higher inflation rather than strangle a weakening economy.

The bond market is making the same argument, only more bluntly. The 30-year Treasury was sold at a 5% yield for the first time since 2007, and long yields continue to press into levels that challenge every comforting story about easy financing, housing affordability, and government debt service. If the long end breaks out and stays above 5%, that is the bond market saying: “We don’t believe inflation is under control, and we don’t believe policy will be tough enough to force it there.”

That is how bond vigilantes speak. Not with speeches. With higher yields.

The Iran situation only adds to the trap. The negotiations remain stuck around the two issues that matter most: nuclear capability and the Strait of Hormuz. From Tehran’s perspective, influence over the Strait may be an even more valuable bargaining chip than nuclear ambiguity. A nuclear weapon is mostly a deterrent. Control over a corridor tied to roughly one-fifth of global oil and gas flows is leverage that can be used repeatedly.

That is a brutal problem for markets. If a hostile regime can keep energy flows uncertain, then inflation remains vulnerable no matter what the Fed says. And if inflation remains vulnerable while the economy softens, Warsh’s first year could become a test of whether the Fed is still an inflation-fighting institution—or just another crisis-management arm of the government.

The conclusion is simple: hot PPI, rising long yields, and a new Fed chair do not add up to stability. They add up to a credibility test.

And if the Fed blinks, the bond market may not.                      


 

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