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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 June 8, 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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The Excuse Finally Arrived

Friday’s selloff looked dramatic, but the surprise wasn’t that markets dropped. The surprise was that it took this long.

For weeks, Wall Street had been levitating on the same handful of assumptions: the war would be contained, oil would eventually drift lower, inflation would not force the Fed’s hand, and AI/tech would keep pulling everything higher. Friday challenged that entire setup in one session.

The catalyst was the May jobs report. Payrolls rose by 172,000, well above expectations, and prior months were revised higher. Unemployment stayed at 4.3%. In a normal cycle, that would be treated as good news. In this market, it became bad news because it weakens the argument that the Fed needs to cut and strengthens the argument that policy may need to stay tighter for longer.

That is the irony: the economy looked too strong for the market’s rate-cut fantasy.

But I don’t think the jobs report alone caused the bloodbath. It was the excuse.

The market was already overheated. Tech had been running almost vertically. Crypto had been weakening under the surface. Gold, silver, and miners were already struggling with higher yields and a firmer dollar. When a strong jobs number hit, the most crowded trades were finally given a reason to sell.

Tech was hit hardest. Reuters said the Nasdaq and semiconductor stocks suffered one of their worst sessions in a long time, with chip shares losing more than $1 trillion in market value. That’s the danger of a market built on narrow leadership: when the leaders wobble, the whole index suddenly looks more fragile than it did the day before.

Bitcoin acted even worse. It did not behave like digital gold. It behaved like leveraged risk. When liquidity confidence fades, crypto is often one of the first things to crack because it is pure sentiment wrapped in a ticker.

The metals also got hit hard. Gold dropped around 3% on Friday and fell to its lowest level since late March. Silver and the mining shares followed. Again, that may seem strange with the Middle East still unstable, but it makes sense if you look at the rate and dollar backdrop. Higher yields plus a stronger dollar can overwhelm the safe-haven bid in the short run. In a liquidation event, people sell what they can—not necessarily what they want to.

And the war didn’t go away.

Over the weekend, the optimism around a quick resolution faded again. Reuters reported Monday that the Strait of Hormuz may remain open only under new conditions, including transit fees determined by Iran and Oman. That is not a clean return to normal shipping. That is the beginning of a possible new toll regime on one of the world’s most important energy chokepoints.

Oil has calmed compared to the panic highs, but “calm” is a relative word. Brent below $95 still reflects a market wrestling with a massive ongoing disruption. Reuters also noted that the Strait has remained largely shut for months, and that oil flows equivalent to a major share of global supply remain severely constrained. Traders may be getting used to the shock, but getting used to it is not the same thing as solving it.

This is what makes the current market so dangerous. Stocks have been pricing the happy ending. Bonds and commodities are still pricing the unfinished middle.

Wall Street no longer seems to see a quick resolution with certainty. At best, it sees a managed stalemate: some traffic, some fees, some threats, some workarounds, and enough ambiguity to keep oil from collapsing back to old levels. That is not bullish for inflation. It is not bullish for consumers. It is not bullish for the Fed’s flexibility.

So Monday’s question is simple: was Friday just a violent shakeout after a massive rally, or was it the first sign that the market is finally losing confidence in its own best-case assumptions?

If tech stabilizes quickly and oil stays contained, the dip-buyers may try again. They have been rewarded all year for doing exactly that.

But if the war drags on, the dollar stays firm, yields remain high, and crypto keeps sliding, then the market may discover that Friday was not just an excuse to take profits.

It may have been the first serious crack in the fantasy that every outcome is bullish.


 

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