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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 June 10, 2026                             *

*                                                                           *

*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

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

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Fiend Commentary
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The CPI Report Becomes a Rorschach Test

Wednesday’s inflation report may tell us less about inflation than about the psychology of this market.

The number is expected to be hot. Economists are looking for May CPI to rise roughly 4.2% year-over-year, up from 3.8% in April and 3.3% in March. That is not a rounding error. That is inflation moving the wrong way again.

But the real question is not whether the report is hot. The question is how Wall Street chooses to explain it away.

If CPI comes in hot because of gasoline and energy, the bullish interpretation will be familiar: “That’s temporary. Oil is down from the highs. The war shock will pass. The Fed can look through it.”

That may work for a day. It may even work for a few weeks. But it is not the same thing as solving inflation. The average household does not experience inflation as a Fed model. It experiences inflation as gasoline, groceries, rent, insurance, utilities, and wages that don’t quite keep up.

A CPI print well above 3% should kill the rate-cut discussion if it wasn’t already dead. A number near 4% or above should at least force the market to confront the possibility that the Fed is not merely “on hold,” but may eventually have to talk about tightening again.

No one expects a hike next week. That is not the issue.

The issue is whether the Fed starts jawboning in that direction later this year. CME pricing has already moved toward roughly a 70% probability of a hike by December, which is a stunning reversal from the “multiple cuts coming” mindset that dominated earlier this year.

That shift has already shown up in the metals.

Gold and silver have gone from early-year “easy money beneficiaries” to casualties of higher-rate expectations. Gold has fallen hard from its highs and is now near its lowest level in months. Silver has also weakened. The market is no longer pricing metals as if the Fed is about to unleash a fresh wave of easy money. It is pricing them as if higher yields and a stronger dollar are the immediate threat.

That does not mean the long-term hard-asset case is dead. It means the short-term narrative has changed.

The bond market is making the same point in a different language. If inflation runs hot and the Fed hesitates, long yields can keep pushing higher. If inflation runs hot and the Fed turns more hawkish, risk assets may have to reprice. Either way, the clean “bad news equals rate cuts” trade is broken for now.

Meanwhile, the war has become background noise, which is remarkable in itself.

Oil has backed down sharply from panic levels, with U.S. crude around the high-$80s and Brent in the low-$90s. That has helped calm markets. But the conflict has not ended. Strikes, counterstrikes, and Hormuz uncertainty are still part of the backdrop. The difference is that traders have stopped treating every headline as new information. The war has become a condition rather than a shock.

That is dangerous, because conditions have a way of working slowly into the economy.

If the oil shock fades quickly, the market’s “transitory again” story may get another lease on life. If energy prices stay elevated or flare back up, the next few CPI and PCE reports could keep moving in the wrong direction.

So Wednesday’s CPI is not just a data point. It is a test of what markets want to believe.

A soft number would reinforce the idea that the worst is behind us.
A hot number would force investors to choose between two stories:

1.     Inflation is temporarily elevated because of war and energy.

2.     Inflation is becoming embedded again because policy stayed too easy for too long.

Wall Street will almost certainly try to believe the first story.

The bond market may decide whether it can get away with it.

 


 

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