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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 July 7, 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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Records on the Surface, 5% in the Basement

The Dow cruised above 53,000 and set another record, which tells you everything about the current mood. Wall Street is acting as if the hard part of 2026 is over: the Strait didn’t break the oil market, inflation will cool now that crude has fallen, the Fed can stay patient, and the AI/tech engine can keep carrying the tape.

Maybe that is right. But the bond market is not fully buying it.

The 30-year Treasury is back around 5%, and the 10-year is hovering near 4.5%. That is not a crisis yet, but it is a warning light. Stocks are trading like inflation is yesterday’s problem. Long bonds are trading like inflation, deficits, and Fed credibility still matter.

That is the contradiction.

The Dow at a record says: “Everything is fine.”
The 30-year near 5% says: “Not so fast.”

Oil is another strange part of the picture. Crude has fallen dramatically from the war-scare highs and is now back near pre-war levels, with WTI around the high-$60s and Brent low-$70s. The market is treating that as an all-clear signal. Lower oil means lower headline inflation, less pressure on consumers, and less urgency for the Fed to hike.

But context matters. Even after the collapse from the highs, oil is still up roughly 20% for the year. That does not exactly scream “cheap energy.” It just looks cheap compared to the panic levels we saw a few months ago.

So which is it? A genuine inflation relief valve? Or a sign that demand is weakening under the surface?

That second possibility should not be ignored. If oil is falling because supply is normalizing and the Strait is functioning better, that is bullish. If oil is falling because the global economy is slowing, that is a different story entirely. Lower oil can look like relief right before it starts looking like recession evidence.

Meanwhile, tariffs have practically vanished from the market conversation. Remember tariffs? They were supposed to matter. Then the war, oil shock, AI mania, Fed hike odds, and SpaceX circus pushed them off the front page.

But they did not disappear from the economy. Reuters recently noted the average U.S. tariff rate is still just under 10% — about four times where it stood at the end of 2024 and, excluding last year, the highest since the early 1940s. That is not nothing. Tariffs are a cost. They either hit margins or get passed through to consumers. Either way, they are not deflationary.

This is why the market’s calm feels too convenient. Investors are assuming every inflation source fades in just the right order:

  • oil falls,
  • tariffs get absorbed,
  • wage pressure cools,
  • the dollar stays firm,
  • and the Fed never has to do anything too painful.

That is a very neat story for a very messy backdrop.

The Dow’s strength also masks an important split. A record in the industrial average does not mean everything is participating. We have already seen weakness in metals, crypto, and parts of the speculative complex. AI and large-cap momentum remain the favorite hiding places. If those leaders keep working, the indexes can keep rising. If they stumble, the support underneath may not be as broad as the headline suggests.

That brings us back to the long bond.

A 5% 30-year yield is not just a number. It affects mortgages, corporate borrowing, private credit, real estate, and government interest costs. It also challenges equity valuations. If investors can earn 5% for 30 years in Treasuries, then paying extreme prices for stocks requires either very strong earnings growth or very high confidence that rates will eventually fall.

Right now, Wall Street seems to believe both.

The risk is that neither happens cleanly. Earnings may not justify AI-level valuations forever. Rates may not fall if inflation stays sticky. And the Fed may find itself in the same trap it has been trying to avoid: too much inflation to cut, too much economic weakness to hike comfortably.

For now, the market is choosing optimism. The Dow is at records. Oil is down. The Fed has not hiked. The dollar is firm. The war has faded from crisis to background noise.

But background noise can still become the main event again.

The beginning of July looks calm because investors are assuming the second half of the year will go perfectly. The 30-year yield near 5% is the reminder that perfection is not yet confirmed.

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