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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 June 12, 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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Peace Rumors, Inflation Reality

Thursday was a reminder that this market can still turn on a dime.

After Wednesday’s selloff, stocks roared back on another round of “peace is close” headlines. The Dow jumped nearly 930 points, the S&P 500 rose sharply, and the Nasdaq surged more than 2.5%. Semiconductors were the star again, with the chip index posting its biggest one-day gain since April 2025.

So once again, the market heard: “Iran deal soon,” and immediately translated it into: “Buy risk.”

But the macro backdrop did not suddenly become clean.

The latest PPI report was hot. Producer prices jumped 1.1% in May and 6.5% year-over-year, the largest annual gain in more than three years. Energy was the obvious driver, but the inflation pressure was not limited to gasoline. Core producer prices also rose sharply, which means this is not just one volatile category making noise.

That is the problem with Thursday’s rally. Wall Street is trading the possibility that the war ends soon and oil keeps falling, but the inflation data is already showing the damage from the shock that has happened. Even if oil drops tomorrow, price pressure has already moved through parts of the pipeline.

The market’s argument is simple: if the war ends, oil falls, inflation cools, and the Fed gets breathing room.

Maybe.

But the opposite argument is just as simple: if inflation is already running hot and the Fed is forced to hold rates steady next week while hinting at possible hikes later, the stock market may be celebrating too early.

The Fed meeting next week now matters more than it did a month ago. No one expects a move immediately, but the language will be important. The Fed cannot credibly talk about rate cuts with CPI above 4% and PPI above 6%. The best bulls can hope for is a “wait and see” message that avoids sounding too hawkish. But even that may not be enough if the bond market keeps pushing yields higher.

This is where the market’s optimism gets tricky. Stocks are behaving as if the Fed can stay friendly. Bonds and inflation data are saying the Fed may not have that luxury.

The peace headlines also deserve more skepticism. We have heard “deal soon” so many times now that it has become a trading strategy by itself. Each time, oil falls, stocks jump, and investors act like the hard part is over. But until the Strait is truly open, shipping normalized, and insurance costs down, the market is still buying a promise rather than a fact.

There is also a speculative quality to the moment that is hard to ignore. The SpaceX IPO is arriving into a market that just shook off hot inflation, war risk, and rate-hike odds in a single session. That tells you liquidity appetite is still intense. Investors still want the big story, the big name, the next rocket ship. That can push prices higher, but it also says sentiment is far from cautious.

So can the market keep rising?

Yes. If a real peace deal lands, oil breaks lower, and the Fed manages to sound patient without sounding reckless, there is room for another leg higher. Momentum is still powerful, and investors have been rewarded over and over for buying every scare.

But the risk of a major top is rising too.

Not because stocks rallied one day. Not because tech bounced. But because the market is now relying on a very narrow set of assumptions:

  • peace arrives soon,
  • inflation fades quickly,
  • the Fed does not hike,
  • earnings hold,
  • and AI remains strong enough to carry the indexes.

That is a lot to ask.

Thursday’s rally was impressive. It was also highly conditional. If the next few weeks confirm falling oil and cooling inflation, Wall Street will look smart. If the data keeps running hot and the war deal slips again, Thursday may look like another case of buying the rumor too aggressively.

The market is not out of the woods. It is just very good at sprinting whenever it sees daylight.

 


 

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