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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* June 26,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
================
Temporary
Inflation, Permanent Damage?
Thursday’s
PCE report gave Wall Street exactly what it wanted: bad inflation data that was
“not worse than expected.”
That is the
market’s favorite kind of bad news. It lets everyone acknowledge the problem
while immediately explaining it away.
Headline PCE
inflation rose to 4.1% year-over-year in May, the first move above 4% in
three years. Core PCE, which strips out food and energy, rose 3.4% from
a year ago. That second number matters. It means the inflation problem is not
just gasoline, not just war, and not just the Strait of Hormuz.
Of course,
the narrative is already forming: oil has fallen, the war premium is coming
out, energy inflation will cool, and therefore the Fed can be patient. In other
words, transitory inflation — again.
Maybe that
works for a month or two. Oil did drop sharply, and that should reduce some
headline pressure going forward. But there are two problems with the
“temporary” argument.
First,
inflation was still high after stripping out energy. Core PCE at 3.4% is not
close to the Fed’s 2% target. Services inflation also remains sticky, and those
prices do not reverse just because crude falls.
Second, the
economy has already absorbed months of higher fuel, shipping, insurance, and
supply-chain costs. Those costs don’t vanish instantly. They move through the
system slowly, and once businesses raise prices, they are not usually eager to
cut them back.
So Wall
Street’s new story is not really “inflation is fine.” It is: inflation may
have peaked just enough to keep the Fed from hiking immediately.
That
distinction matters.
After the
report, the odds of a July hike came down a bit. Markets are now treating July
as unlikely, while September remains very much alive. So the rate-cut fantasy
is still dead, but the rate-hike panic cooled slightly. That was enough to
stabilize metals after their brutal slide.
Gold and
silver finally stopped bleeding, at least for the moment. That makes sense. The
metals had been crushed by the stronger dollar and sudden belief that Warsh’s
Fed would turn into a real inflation fighter. But if the market starts to
believe the Fed will talk tough while waiting for energy prices to do the work,
the metals may begin to find support again.
The bigger
crack is showing in crypto.
Bitcoin,
Ether, and the crypto-related stocks are no longer acting like revolutionary
assets. They are acting like broken momentum trades. The whole “digital asset
treasury company” scheme — raise money, buy crypto, watch the stock levitate —
is starting to implode as the underlying coins fall and investor enthusiasm
dries up.
Strategy,
the best-known Bitcoin treasury stock, has been sliding toward 52-week lows,
and the broader copycat trade looks increasingly exposed. When these stocks
were rising, they were treated as brilliant financial engineering. Now they
look more like leveraged wrappers around a falling asset.
That is
usually how speculative schemes end. First they are “innovative.” Then they are
“misunderstood.” Then liquidity leaves and everyone remembers that
balance-sheet games are not a business model.
This is also
why the crypto weakness matters beyond crypto. It suggests that speculative air
is leaking out of the most aggressive parts of the market first. The AI/SpaceX
bubble is still alive, but crypto is warning that not every mania can keep
receiving fresh money forever.
For now,
stocks are trying to digest the inflation report as harmless. The Fed is trying
to sound credible without doing anything dramatic. Metals are trying to
stabilize. Crypto is breaking lower. And Wall Street is trying to convince
itself that the next few inflation reports will magically improve because oil
came down.
Maybe they
will.
But if
inflation remains sticky even with lower oil, the market will have a much
bigger problem. At that point, “temporary” stops being an explanation and
starts looking like an excuse.
The Fed can
wait. Wall Street can rationalize. Crypto can pretend the structure is sound.
But the numbers will eventually decide the argument.
And right
now, the numbers still say inflation is too high.
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