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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 July 3, 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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Bad Jobs Become Good News — For Now

With U.S. markets closed for the Independence Day holiday, Thursday’s employment report becomes the setup for the long weekend.

The headline was simple: the jobs report was weak.

The economy added only 57,000 jobs in June, far below expectations, and prior months were revised lower. The unemployment rate dipped to 4.2%, but that was not because the labor market suddenly strengthened. It fell largely because people left the labor force. Participation dropped to its lowest level in more than five years.

That is not a healthy labor-market signal.

But Wall Street did what Wall Street does: it immediately turned weakness into relief.

The dollar fell hard. Gold jumped more than 2%. Silver bounced back above $60. Bitcoin caught a bid. Rate-hike odds dropped. The logic was easy to see: a softer labor market gives the Fed less room to sound aggressive.

But this is not the same as saying rate cuts are coming.

That is the important distinction.

The rate-hike trade cooled, but it did not flip into a rate-cut trade. The market is now saying the Fed may not need to hike immediately, but inflation is still too high for anyone to credibly talk about easing yet. CPI and PCE are still running far above target. Core inflation is sticky. Wage growth is not keeping up with prices. The average worker is still losing ground in real terms.

So Thursday’s move was not “easy money is back.”

It was more like: “Maybe the Fed can wait.”

That was enough to hurt the dollar and lift the assets that had been punished by Warsh’s hawkish jawboning. Gold and silver were overdue for a bounce after weeks of relentless selling. Once the jobs report knocked down the dollar and trimmed rate-hike expectations, the metals finally had room to breathe.

The same goes for Bitcoin, although the crypto story is messier. Bitcoin and crypto-related stocks have been badly damaged, and one relief bounce does not fix the broken structure underneath the “digital treasury” schemes. Still, a weaker dollar and lower near-term rate pressure were enough to stop the bleeding for a day.

The stock market reaction was more mixed. The Dow hit another record, but the Nasdaq fell as chip stocks stayed under pressure. That is worth noting. If the market were truly embracing a broad “Goldilocks” story, leadership would look healthier. Instead, the tape is still split: old-economy names and defensive rotation on one side, exhausted AI/chip momentum on the other.

The real issue is that weak jobs and high inflation do not make a clean bullish recipe. They create a policy trap.

If employment keeps softening, the Fed will come under pressure to stop talking about hikes. If inflation stays hot, it cannot cut without risking credibility. That leaves the Fed in the same uncomfortable middle ground: talk tough, wait, and hope the data improves before markets force a decision.

Thursday’s employment report may have delayed the next hike scare, but it did not solve the inflation problem. It also raised the risk that the economy is weakening faster than the headline unemployment rate suggests.

So the long-weekend takeaway is this:

The market got a weaker dollar, a metals bounce, and a temporary break from rate-hike fear.

But it did not get a healthy economy.

And unless inflation starts falling soon, weak jobs may stop being “good news” very quickly.


 

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