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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* December 31,
2025 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
================
The
Calm, the Chaos, and the Credit Behind It
On the last
trading day of 2025, the market is sending two messages that don’t belong in
the same sentence.
The first
message is calm: U.S. equities are still hovering near record highs, and
volatility has been crushed back toward the lows. The second message is chaos:
precious metals—especially silver—have been behaving like a market that’s
trying to price in a regime change, not a routine year-end.
It’s
tempting to treat the silver-and-gold action as a sideshow. I think that’s a
mistake. The metals are not just “going up.” They’re flashing a warning about
what the rest of the market is built on:
1) Easy
credit is still the oxygen of this cycle
The biggest
under-reported shift late this year is not another quarter-point rate cut. It’s
the plumbing.
The Fed has ended
QT and moved back toward reinvestment, and the balance sheet is already
showing signs of stabilizing and turning higher again. In plain English: after
spending years trying to slowly drain liquidity, the Fed appears to have
concluded that the system can’t tolerate much more “tightness” without
something cracking.
You could
call this “not QE.” You can also call it what it functionally is: less
restraint.
And there’s
another tell: banks’ use of the Fed’s standing repo
facility spiked into year-end. That kind of borrowing isn’t a doomsday
siren by itself (year-end funding always gets quirky), but it is a
reminder that financial calm is often manufactured with liquidity backstops—and
the market knows it.
The result
is a weird emotional cocktail:
2) The
economy looks “fine” in the headline… weaker underneath
Yes, the GDP
prints have looked resilient at times. But the more forward-looking signals
have been deteriorating, and the labor market is starting to look less like a
pillar and more like a question mark.
Layoffs and
job-cut announcements have been running hot enough to get attention even in a
year dominated by AI headlines. At the same time, sentiment surveys have been ugly—especially measures of how consumers feel about their current
situation.
That
combination—softening labor + depressed sentiment—doesn’t guarantee an
immediate recession. But it does raise the odds of an economic air pocket in
2026, particularly if credit tightens even slightly or if households finally
hit a spending wall.
3) Stocks
can be overvalued even with a “passive” Fed
A passive
Fed is not automatically bullish. It depends on why the Fed is passive.
If the Fed
is pausing because inflation is conquered and growth is stable, that’s
constructive.
If the Fed
is pausing because it’s stuck—worried that easing reignites inflation, but
worried that not easing breaks the economy—then “passive” starts to look like policy
drift. Markets can levitate for a while in a drift,
but they become fragile because investors stop believing anyone is steering.
Add one more
ingredient: the stock market’s gains remain highly concentrated in the biggest
names. When a narrow group carries the index, it creates the illusion of
strength even as many stocks quietly weaken underneath. That’s how peaks are
built: not with a crash first, but with narrowness and denial.
4) Why
metals matter beyond the “fear trade”
This is the
part most people miss: 2025 wasn’t only a gold-and-silver story.
A number of industrial metals also had powerful moves this year.
Copper has been lifted by electrification and AI infrastructure demand.
Platinum and palladium had their own supply-and-policy tailwinds. Those are not
just “inflation hedges.” They’re inputs—real economy materials—responding to
scarcity, policy, and capital spending.
So when precious metals spike while industrial metals stay
firm, it suggests something bigger than a speculative frenzy. It suggests a
world where:
5) “Too
little, too late” is a real risk for 2026
A string of 25-basis-point
cuts can end up being the worst of both worlds if the cycle turns.
If the
economy is slowing meaningfully, quarter-point cuts may be too small to prevent
rising unemployment and falling confidence. Yet if inflation reaccelerates
(tariffs, rebates, wage pressure, supply shocks), those same cuts can look
reckless in hindsight.
That is
exactly the policy trap metals are sniffing out:
How do the
final sessions play out?
The last few
trading days of the year are often more about positioning than truth. That
said, here are the tells that matter:
The takeaway
into 2026 is simple:
This year
ended with everything up and fear turned down. That’s usually when the real
risk begins—because the system is still living on credit, and credit cycles
don’t end gently.
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