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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 March 23, 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 Week the “Easy Money” Story Started to Crack

Overnight trading is sending a message that feels upside-down at first glance: gold, silver, and miners are sliding hard even as the Middle East conflict threatens higher inflation. But markets aren’t trading the headlines anymore — they’re trading the consequences.

Gold has fallen below the mid-$4,000s and silver is sliding with it, extending what is now a multi-session losing streak. The most likely driver isn’t a sudden loss of belief in precious metals — it’s the surge in interest rates and the scramble for liquidity. When yields jump and volatility rises, investors often sell what they can sell (including gold) to meet margin calls, raise cash, and reduce risk. In other words: the “safe haven” can get sold when the system is under stress.

The real shock: the Fed narrative flipped

Just weeks ago, the market was comfortably pricing rate cuts as the economy softened. Now, rate-cut expectations for 2026 have faded sharply, and futures markets are assigning roughly a one-in-three chance of a rate hike by year-end.

That is an extraordinary swing — and it explains a lot:

  • Higher rates raise the “opportunity cost” of holding non-yielding assets like gold.
  • Higher rates also tighten financial conditions for stocks, housing, and corporate borrowing.
  • And higher rates tend to punish crowded trades all at once.

The market’s logic seems to be: war + oil shock = inflation risk = Fed can’t cut.
Even if jobs and growth are weakening, inflation risk is starting to dominate the Fed conversation again.

Stocks are near the edge

The major averages ended last week with a “correction vibe” — not a crash, but the kind of grinding damage that drains confidence. The Dow and Nasdaq have been flirting with the 10% correction line, and each bounce is starting to look more like a relief rally than a confident advance.

What makes this different from the usual dip-buying is that the pressure isn’t coming from one bad earnings story or one sector rotation. It’s coming from the foundation under everything: rates.

Rates are doing the opposite of what bulls need

The bond market is moving in a direction that usually ends the party.

The 10-year yield is back in the mid-4% range after having been below 4% not long ago, and the long bond is creeping toward the psychologically important 5% level. The 20-year is pressing above 5% as well.

That’s not just trivia for bond traders. When long-term yields rise:

  • mortgage rates stay high or go higher,
  • corporate refinancing gets more expensive,
  • and the “price you pay” for future earnings (stock valuations) usually comes down.

If the 30-year yield pushes cleanly through 5% and stays there, it will feel like a regime change — not just a bad day.

The dollar is holding steady — for now

The dollar’s stability is notable because it’s happening alongside rising yields and falling metals. That combo can reinforce itself: a firm dollar plus higher yields is a headwind for commodities, especially after a major run.

But the dollar is also one sharp headline away from the opposite move. This is not a calm environment — it’s a fragile one.

Why this week could be the “shakeout”

Markets are trying to make two stories coexist:

1.     The economy is weakening (which should lead to easier policy), and

2.     Inflation risk is rising again (which blocks easy policy).

They can’t both be true forever without something snapping.

So the market is forcing a decision — and the bond market is currently winning that argument.

What to watch this week:

  • Any credible sign that oil disruption lasts longer than “a few weeks”
  • Whether Treasury yields keep grinding higher even on soft economic news
  • Whether stocks break down decisively from “almost a correction” into a real one
  • Whether gold and silver stabilize (base-building) or continue cascading (forced selling)

If yields keep rising, everything else eventually has to reprice around that reality — stocks, metals, and the economy itself. And that’s why this feels like one of those weeks where markets either find their footing… or lose it all at once.


 

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