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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* January 5,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
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2025:
The Year of Backstops, Bubbles, and Broken Price Signals
If you had
told anyone a year ago that 2025 would feature (1) a trade-policy shock big
enough to knock markets off their feet, (2) a prolonged government shutdown
that literally blacked out key economic data, and (3) gold and silver going
vertical anyway… most people would have laughed.
Yet that’s
exactly what happened. And the biggest takeaway isn’t “markets are irrational.”
It’s that 2025 was a year where liquidity, policy, and leverage repeatedly
overwhelmed traditional “cause and effect.” Fundamentals still mattered—but
often only after price moved.
Below is the
clean recap (with a few conclusions you can actually use).
1) The Big
Story: Easy Credit Became the Economy’s Operating System
By the end
of 2025, it felt like the U.S. economy wasn’t being “run” so much as kept
running—with credit, refinancing, and policy backstops acting like the
plumbing that everything depends on.
When credit
is abundant, almost anything can look healthy:
But the
darker implication is obvious: if something interrupts the flow of easy
credit—funding stress, a spike in long yields, a policy error, a genuine
recession—then the “support beams” get exposed quickly.
2) Stocks:
Another Strong Year… With an Asterisk the Size of Nvidia
U.S. stocks
ended 2025 with big gains despite a rollercoaster year:
The market’s
personality in 2025 can be summed up as:
The
“asterisk” is that so much of what people call “the market” was really a
handful of mega-caps with AI optimism doing the heavy lifting. A market can
feel healthy while quietly becoming more fragile underneath—because breadth and
resilience aren’t the same thing.
3) The Fed:
Cutting Rates While Ending QT (and Signaling the Next Step)
The Fed’s
2025 pivot was not subtle:
Call it what
you want—“not QE,” “liquidity management,” “balance-sheet stabilization”—but
the practical message markets heard was simple:
“The
tightening era is over. The backstop is back.”
That matters
because it changes behavior. When investors believe liquidity will be added
whenever stress appears, risk-taking becomes the default setting.
4) Bonds and
the Dollar: When the Long End Doesn’t Cooperate, It’s a Warning
The bond
market delivered an important reminder in 2025: the Fed controls the front
end, not the narrative.
A softer
dollar alongside roaring precious metals and volatile long yields is the market
whispering something uncomfortable:
“We’re not
fully buying the long-term stability story—fiscal, monetary, or both.”
It doesn’t
mean collapse is imminent. It means confidence is no longer “free.”
5) Inflation
and the Real Economy: The Data Was Messy… and Then the Data Went Missing
Inflation
cooled at times, but it never convincingly returned to “problem solved.”
Then came
the “twist” you almost never see:
This created
an odd environment:
But the
shutdown also created pent-up risk: when the backlog clears, markets can get
surprised all at once.
6) Metals:
The Loudest Signal of the Year (Even When Nobody Wanted to Hear It)
Gold and
silver weren’t just strong in 2025—they were loud.
This wasn’t
just “inflation hedging.” The speed and scale looked more like:
The most
important point: metals moved as if the next cycle of stimulus/liquidity was
not a question of “if,” but “when.”
7) Bitcoin:
A Different Animal in 2025
Bitcoin did
what it often does in a year with policy drama and risk-on/risk-off whiplash:
That
divergence matters. In 2025, gold and silver acted like “monetary distrust”
trades, while bitcoin traded more like a high-beta risk asset tied to
shifting liquidity expectations.
8) A Quick
Taste of 2026 Risk: Geopolitics Is Heating Up Again
Just as
markets try to glide into the new year, geopolitics is throwing sparks:
We’ll dig
into those later this week, but here’s the key connection: geopolitics tends
to matter most when markets are already priced for perfection.
Bottom Line
2025 wasn’t
“the year everything broke.”
It was the year we learned how much of the system is built on the assumption
that liquidity will always be available when needed.
Stocks
proved resilient.
The Fed pivoted dovish.
The dollar softened.
Bonds stayed jumpy.
And metals acted like they were pricing a future where money is easier, debt is
heavier, and policy is more reactive.
A 2026
forecast deserves its own piece—but 2025 left a very clear setup: the gap
between asset prices and underlying economic confidence got wider, not
narrower.
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