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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 January 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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50K Fever, $90 Silver, and a Very Cheap Price for Fear

Mid-January has a familiar feel: the tape keeps levitating, and every dip still looks like an invitation.

The Dow is once again pressing toward the 50,000 milestone, and the more it hovers nearby, the more “inevitable” it starts to sound. What’s different this time is who is leading. The Nasdaq has been choppier, while smaller stocks have surged—the kind of “broadening rally” that bulls love to see because it suggests the advance isn’t just a handful of mega-caps doing the heavy lifting.

But the real headline isn’t the Dow. It’s the fact that we’re seeing record-setting optimism and record-setting hedging at the same time.

Metals are acting like a smoke alarm

Gold has been holding above $4,600 and silver has been holding the $90 area even after explosive moves earlier in the week. That is not normal “inflation hedge” behavior. It’s the market quietly saying:

“We like risk assets… but we don’t trust the long-term stability of the system.”

Silver’s action has been particularly telling. When it rises this fast, it’s rarely just about industrial demand or a tidy economic narrative. It’s usually about psychology—momentum, crowding, and the sense that the next policy response (whenever it comes) will be bigger than anyone wants to admit.

The idea of $100 silver and $5,000 gold is no longer fringe talk. It’s starting to feel like a timeline debate: second quarter… or sooner.

Rate cuts feel “off the table” near-term—but that isn’t calming anyone

Here’s the twist: rate cuts don’t look imminent right now.

Strong-enough economic data (and firmer dollar bursts) have been enough to cool the “Fed will rescue us next meeting” crowd. Markets are acting like the Fed can wait, at least for the moment, and that any easing is more likely later rather than immediately.

And yet gold and silver are still screaming.

That combination often shows up when investors believe the real choice ahead is unpleasant:

  • If the economy slows more, policy will eventually ease again (good for metals).
  • If inflation firms back up, policy credibility takes a hit (also good for metals).

Either way, metals remain the insurance policy—while stocks remain the performance trade.

Complacency is still the wild card

The VIX has been hanging around the mid-teens, which is the market’s way of saying “we don’t see trouble coming soon.” That’s how big surprises get born: not from panic, but from comfort.

When fear is cheap, people buy less of it. They get more exposed. They use more leverage. They stop imagining downside scenarios because the last few pullbacks have been short and forgettable.

And that’s where the “static in the air” feeling comes from: when everything looks obvious, markets tend to punish that certainty.

What could actually shake things up

If something big hits, it probably won’t arrive neatly. It will arrive as a sudden mismatch—the kind of “wait, this wasn’t priced in” moment that makes everyone grab the same exit at once.

Here are the most realistic tripwires:

1.     Long yields creeping higher at the wrong time
If the long end rises while stocks are priced for calm, it tightens financial conditions without the Fed doing anything.

2.     Inflation re-accelerating in the pipeline
A tame CPI followed by firmer producer pressures is how the “inflation is gone” narrative gets chipped away.

3.     A silver air pocket
Even strong bull markets in silver tend to deliver violent shakeouts. A sharp drop would not disprove the bull case—but it would remind everyone how quickly leverage can flip from tailwind to trap.

4.     Geopolitics re-entering through the commodity door
Energy and supply-chain surprises don’t ask permission. They simply arrive—and markets reprice afterward.

Bottom line

The market’s message this week is: risk-on behavior is alive and well, and Dow 50,000 may be close enough to touch.

But the metal market’s message is different: something about the longer-term outlook is being questioned, loudly.

When stocks and metals are both surging and volatility stays sleepy, that’s usually not the end of a move—it’s the part of the movie where the soundtrack gets quiet right before the next scene changes.

 


 

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