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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                               February 5, 2026                            *

*                                                                           *

*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

*                    web address: http://www.fiendbear.com                  *

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Fiend Commentary
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A Market With Two Narratives—and One Very Nervous Bond

Thursday is giving investors the kind of day they usually don’t enjoy: the day when multiple stories fight for control of the tape.

On one hand, you’ve got a market that still wants to believe the “soft landing / keep buying dips” playbook is intact. The Dow is still hovering within striking distance of 50,000, and even after the recent wobble, equities have not behaved like a market that’s truly afraid.

On the other hand, the internals are getting uglier—especially in tech—and the bond market is quietly tightening the screws again. When stocks stall under big psychological milestones while long-term yields creep higher, it’s often a sign that the market is no longer being pulled by optimism alone. It’s being pushed by the cost of money.

Metals: from “rebound” to “whiplash”

Gold and silver gave bulls a confident bounce on Wednesday, the kind of snapback you often see after a forced liquidation. But early Thursday, they’re slipping again. That’s not surprising—this is what happens after a parabolic move breaks.

The key point isn’t whether metals are up or down on a given morning. The key point is that they’re trading like a crowded theater:

  • When everyone is leaning the same way, every downtick becomes a test of conviction.
  • When the move has been vertical, every rebound becomes a temptation to “sell the relief.”
  • And when volatility returns, it doesn’t politely fade. It lingers.

In short: the metals market is no longer a one-way trade. It’s a battleground. And that’s still consistent with a bull market—just not a calm one.

Tech is the pressure point again

If the S&P 500 can’t hold 7,000, it’s largely because tech can’t hold itself together.

The ongoing tech selloff is being driven by a growing realization that the AI buildout may be hitting a “money wall.” The biggest names can spend breathtaking sums on capex, but at some point investors start asking the obvious question: How many trillions does the world want to borrow to fund this race, and what does that do to balance sheets when rates are no longer falling?

That’s why the market feels so unstable: the AI story is simultaneously:

  • a growth engine,
  • a speculative engine,
  • and a future margin/earnings risk.

When those three collide, index-level calm can mask a lot of pain underneath.

Dollar up, bonds down: the combination worth watching

The dollar firming while bond prices drop is the kind of combo that can rattle multiple asset classes at once.

A stronger dollar normally pressures commodities—especially when the move is sharp. But the bigger issue is what bond weakness implies: the market is still demanding a higher “hurdle rate” for long-duration money.

And that brings us to the real tripwire.

The 30-year yield is back near the 5% line

The long bond doesn’t have to break 5% to change behavior. It only has to threaten it consistently.

When the 30-year yield lives in the high-4s, it quietly tightens financial conditions even if the Fed is on hold. Mortgages, corporate borrowing, and refinancing assumptions all start to reprice. Equity valuations start to look less comfortable. The “buy the dip” crowd becomes more selective.

That is how something “breaks” without a dramatic headline: the long end squeezes until the market stops ignoring it.

ADP jobs: soft, not catastrophic—but the trend is troubling

The ADP employment report showed only a modest gain in private hiring. On its own, ADP is not a perfect predictor of the official payroll report—but it fits the broader pattern we’ve been seeing: the labor market is still standing, but it’s less dynamic, less confident, and increasingly split by sector.

That matters because we are in a fragile phase where:

  • the economy is slowing at the edges,
  • inflation signals are mixed,
  • and markets are trying to price a future that includes easier policy—even though rate cuts appear further off than they did a month ago.

That’s a tough environment. It creates exactly the kind of “everything looks fine until it doesn’t” market we’re living in right now.

So what’s the takeaway for Thursday?

This is a market with two narratives:

1.     Risk-on narrative: “AI and liquidity will carry us; every dip is a gift; milestones are inevitable.”

2.     Credibility narrative: “The dollar is wobbling, long yields won’t behave, and metals are acting like people want insurance.”

Both can coexist for a while. But they don’t coexist peacefully forever.

If you want the simple checklist for the next few sessions:

  • Can the S&P 500 reclaim and hold 7,000, or does tech keep pulling it back?
  • Does the dollar’s bounce actually stick, or fade again?
  • Does the 30-year yield start behaving like 5% is inevitable, not “resistance”?
  • Do gold and silver stabilize after the post-parabolic whipsaw?

Because when the dollar, the long bond, and the leadership stocks start moving the wrong way at the same time—that’s when markets stop feeling like a game and start feeling like a test.

 


 

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