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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 July 16, 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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Well Positioned for What?

John Williams may have said the quiet part out loud.

The New York Fed president still admits inflation is too high, but his message was clear enough: inflation may have peaked, the current rate setting is “well positioned,” and the Fed can afford to wait. That is a very important signal because Williams is not some fringe voice. The New York Fed has always carried extra weight inside the system.

And if that is where the center of gravity is moving, then the great “hawkish Fed” scare may already be losing force.

Williams expects inflation to drift down toward the Fed’s 2% target over time, with some forecasts now pointing to 2028 rather than anything immediate. That alone should make people pause. If inflation is still expected to be above target for years, how exactly is policy already “well positioned”?

That sounds less like an inflation fight and more like inflation management.

The argument is familiar. Tariff pressure will fade. Shelter inflation will ease. Oil has peaked. AI-related supply imbalances will stabilize. The labor market is not pushing inflation higher. Expectations are still anchored. In other words, nearly every inflation problem is being categorized as something that will eventually take care of itself.

Where have we heard that before?

This is the return of the transitory mindset, only with a more careful vocabulary.

Wall Street will love it. It always does. Investors do not need the Fed to promise rate cuts tomorrow. They just need the Fed to stop sounding serious about hikes. If the market believes the July hike is off the table and the Fed is drifting back toward patience, that is enough to revive risk appetite, weaken the dollar, and give metals some breathing room.

But the bond market may be less impressed.

Long yields remain elevated, and that is the warning sign. The 10-year has been hovering around the mid-4% range, and the 30-year continues to flirt with the 5% zone. Those levels do not scream confidence that inflation is solved. They say investors still want compensation for risk: inflation risk, deficit risk, policy risk, and maybe a little skepticism that the Fed will actually do what it says if the economy weakens.

That is the key disconnect.

The Fed wants to talk credibility while avoiding pain. Williams is saying current policy is restrictive enough. Warsh says the Fed has no tolerance for high inflation but avoids giving clear policy signals. Other officials are still split, with some leaning toward action if inflation fails to cool. This is not a unified inflation-fighting machine. It is a committee waiting for the next report to tell it what it wants to hear.

And Wall Street is already eager to interpret one softer inflation print as the start of the next dovish chapter.

Maybe inflation really has peaked. Maybe falling oil will do the hard work. Maybe tariffs and AI infrastructure costs fade. Maybe the war premium disappears. Maybe the Fed gets lucky.

But that is a lot of maybes.

The risk is that inflation does not collapse neatly. It may cool for a month or two because gasoline prices fell, then flatten out at a level still far above target. If that happens, the Fed will face the same problem again: talk tough, do nothing, and hope the bond market stays patient.

That patience may not last forever.

If the 10-year yield pushes back toward 4.6% and then toward 5%, the market will be saying the Fed’s “well positioned” language is not good enough. At that point, financial conditions tighten whether the Fed hikes or not. Mortgage rates stay painful. Corporate refinancing gets harder. Deficits become more expensive. High-valuation stocks become harder to justify.

That is why Williams’ comments matter so much. They suggest the Fed’s institutional bias remains what it has been for decades: wait, explain, smooth, and avoid forcing the economy to take the medicine unless absolutely necessary.

Maybe that is the right call. Maybe the recent inflation spike really was temporary.

But after the last few years, “temporary” should have to prove itself. It should not be assumed.

For now, the Fed seems to be telling markets: inflation is too high, but don’t panic. We think it is peaking. We think policy is enough. We think time will help.

The bond market may soon ask the only question that matters:

What if time doesn’t help fast enough?


 

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