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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* February 9,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
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Dow
50,000, Gold 5,000: Same Celebration, Different Message
Last week
ended with a market paradox that’s getting harder to ignore: the Dow finally
printed 50,000, while gold pushed back towards $5,000 and silver staged yet
another violent rebound. When “risk-on” and “hard-money” both rally, it usually
means the crowd is confident in one thing above all else — that liquidity will
show up if anything breaks.
January’s
metals story is still the backdrop, even if the stock market would rather talk
about record highs. Gold went vertical into late month, peaking near $5,595,
while silver screamed to roughly $122 before the trap door opened. The reversal
was fast and brutal — the kind of air pocket you only get when leverage,
momentum, and crowded positioning all meet at the same exit. Margin changes may
have accelerated the move, but the bigger point is psychological: the market
discovered that a “can’t lose” trade can absolutely lose, quickly.
And yet…
here we are again. In early Monday trading, spot gold is back above $5,000
(around $5,013) and silver is back above $80 (around $81.50) after a huge
one-day jump late last week. That’s not what a broken bull market looks like.
It’s what a market looks like when the bid is still there — just more skittish,
more reactive, and more prone to whiplash.
Stocks are
sending their own message — but it’s not as clean as the headline “Dow 50K”
makes it sound. On Friday, the Dow closed at 50,115.67, but the week was not a
uniform rally across equities. The S&P 500 finished near 6,932 and the
Nasdaq near 23,031, with the Dow outperforming while the Nasdaq lagged.
Translation for normal humans: parts of the market are still celebrating, but
the leadership is wobbling and rotating.
Meanwhile,
bonds are acting like the adult in the room who’s not impressed by the party.
The Fed held its policy rate steady at 3.50%–3.75% in late January, but
longer-term yields haven’t exactly “followed” the Fed lower. The long end is
behaving like it wants to re-price inflation risk and fiscal risk again — and
that matters because real-world borrowing costs (mortgages, corporate debt,
government interest expense) care a lot more about long rates than the Fed’s
press conference vocabulary.
Which brings
us to the uncomfortable part: inflation has not been behaving like a tame
housecat. December CPI was still running above target, and producer prices ran
hotter than many expected — the kind of data that doesn’t scream “easy cuts
forever.” At the same time, the labor picture looks vulnerable enough that the
market keeps trying to “pull forward” the next easing cycle anyway.
That tension
is why the Fed-chair transition drama matters. Kevin Warsh’s nomination was
treated by markets like a credibility shock: the dollar perked up, metals got
hit, and the assumption was “adult supervision is coming.” But the next step is
the hard one: what does a so-called hawk do if growth and jobs weaken? History
says hawks can turn into doves quickly when the economy starts taking on water.
Add in the wild-card that Powell could potentially remain on the Fed’s Board
(he has declined to say), and you’ve got a policy backdrop that is anything but
settled.
So for this
new week, here’s what actually matters:
Bottom line:
Dow 50,000 is a victory lap for optimism. Gold $5,000 is a vote of no
confidence in the long-term discipline of policy. When you see both at once,
don’t assume it means “everything is fine.” More often, it means we’re living
in a market that believes it can have growth, easy money, and contained
inflation all at the same time — and it only takes one ugly data print (or one
bond-market tantrum) to challenge that belief.
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