*****************************************************************************
* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* February 2, 2026
*
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
*****************************************************************************
Fiend Commentary
================
January
Whiplash: Metals Mania, a Dollar Scare, and the “Warsh Shock”
January 2026
will be remembered as the month the precious-metals market stopped acting like
a “hedge” and started acting like a headline. Gold and silver didn’t just grind
higher, they went vertical. Then, on the final trading day, the elevator doors
opened and gravity returned.
The numbers
tell the story better than adjectives ever could: gold printed a record high
near $5,595/oz and silver tagged a record near $121/oz before both were
hammered lower in a violent, late-month reversal. Even after that trapdoor
drop, gold still finished January up roughly 13% and silver up roughly 17%. In
other words, the “collapse” was real, but so was the underlying bid.
1.
THE METALS MOVE: THIS DIDN’T FEEL LIKE A HEDGE, IT FELT LIKE
A RUN
When a market starts clearing psychological levels like they’re speed bumps,
you’re no longer watching cautious accumulation. You’re watching urgency.
What changed
in January wasn’t simply the price; it was the message the price action was
sending:
That last
point matters. A strong metals rally with a calm dollar is one thing. A strong
metals rally while the dollar is under pressure and long rates refuse to behave
is another. That combination whispers (and sometimes shouts) that the market is
worried about the purchasing power of money itself, not just the monthly CPI
print.
Then came
the month-end gut punch. The late-January plunge had the fingerprints of a
“positioning event” all over it: a crowded trade meeting a catalyst, leverage
getting forced out, and profit-taking turning into liquidation. In bull
markets, the biggest drops often happen after the most convincing
breakouts, precisely because that’s when the most late money arrives.
2.
STOCKS: “BAD NEWS” COULDN’T STICK, UNTIL IT DID (A LITTLE)
Equities spent much of January acting like none of this was their problem.
The Dow
flirted with the once-unthinkable 50,000 level, and the S&P 500 briefly
crossed 7,000 intraday. That’s not the tape of an investor base that is
worried. That’s the tape of a market trained to believe that policy will
cushion every stumble.
And that’s
exactly why the metals matter here. In a healthy, confident environment, you
typically don’t get:
That
cocktail suggests something deeper: the “wealth effect” is still alive in
stocks, but the “store of value” trade is getting louder. When both are
screaming at the same time, it usually means the market is betting on a
familiar modern solution: easier financial conditions, even if the fundamentals
are messy.
3.
THE ECONOMY: STALL SPEED JOBS, BUT NOT-COMFY INFLATION
January’s key economic backdrop was uncomfortable because it wasn’t clean. It
was mixed in the worst way: softening labor signals, but inflation that refuses
to neatly go away.
On jobs, the
tone was clear: hiring is sluggish. Payroll growth was stuck around “stall
speed,” with the unemployment rate still in the mid-4s and job creation
increasingly narrow. That’s not a collapse, but it is a market that can be
knocked off balance if downside surprises arrive in bunches.
On
inflation, the problem is simple: the “2% world” still feels like a story
people tell, not a destination we’re approaching at a steady pace. December CPI
ran around the high-2s year over year, but the details were not exactly
comforting (food was a notable pain point). Meanwhile producer prices were hot
enough to revive a fear markets hate: that tariffs and supply frictions can
re-ignite price pressures even as growth softens.
That’s the
dreaded word markets don’t want to say out loud: stagflation risk. Not
necessarily the 1970s, but the setup where policy choices become
lose-lose: cut to support growth and risk inflation credibility, or hold tight
to fight inflation and risk a sharper slowdown.
4.
THE “WARSH SHOCK”: A HAIL MARY FOR THE DOLLAR?
The month didn’t truly break until the final day, when President Trump’s
decision to tap Kevin Warsh to succeed Powell hit the tape.
Why did that
matter so much?
Because
markets were drifting toward a very specific expectation: that the post-Powell
Fed might become the easiest Fed imaginable. The idea was simple (and
seductive): inflation is “tolerable,” growth is fragile, debt is enormous, and
politics prefers stimulus. Therefore: cuts, liquidity, and eventually more
balance-sheet help.
Warsh
complicated that narrative. He’s widely viewed as a “safer” institutional pick
than some alternatives, and investors quickly interpreted the choice as at
least a partial attempt to stop the dollar from unraveling and to cool the
perception of currency debasement. The immediate reaction was textbook: the
dollar bounced, and the metals trade got hit hard.
But here’s
the key question for February and beyond:
Was Friday the end of the metals story…or just the first real leverage flush in
a much bigger trend?
If the
structural drivers remain (high debt, political pressure for easier policy,
inflation that won’t die, and global currency volatility), then one personnel
decision can buy time, but it cannot permanently repeal math.
5.
WHAT JANUARY MEANS FOR FEBRUARY: WATCH THE “FOLLOW-THROUGH,”
NOT THE HEADLINES
Here are the pressure points that matter now:
BOTTOM LINE
January was a warning shot wrapped inside a fireworks show. The world saw
record prices in stocks and metals, a nervous currency backdrop, and a policy
regime that is visibly in transition.
If you want
the simplest interpretation: January was the month the market started to price
“credibility risk” again. And credibility, once questioned, is not repaired
with a single press conference or a single nomination.
Index 01/30/26
Mn Chng Mnth
% Yr Chng Year % 2K Chg* 2000 %
------
-------- ------- ------
------- ------ -------- ------
Dow30 48892.47
829.18 1.7% 829.18
1.7% 37395.35 325.3%
Trans 18300.31
943.12 5.4% 943.12
5.4% 15323.11 514.7%
Utils 1091.27
23.20 2.2% 23.20
2.2% 807.91 285.1%
S&P500 6939.03
93.53 1.4% 93.53
1.4% 5469.78 372.3%
Nasdaq
23461.82 219.83 0.9%
219.83 0.9% 19392.51 476.6%
NYSE 22719.32
715.39 3.3% 715.39
3.3% N/A N/A
Rus2000
2613.74 131.83 5.3%
131.83 5.3% 2108.99
417.8%
Amex 7841.82
975.03 14.2% 975.03
14.2% 6973.08 802.7%
Val
Lne12676.42 461.85 3.8%
461.85 3.8% 11650.62 1135.8%
30Yr
Tr 48.70 0.30
-0.6% 0.30 -0.6%
-16.10 24.8%
Bnk Idx 167.62
3.44 2.1% 3.44
2.1% 90.62 117.7%
MSH
35 7426.04 101.46
1.4% 101.46 1.4%
6505.26 706.5%
Housing 688.56
24.27 3.7% 24.27
3.7% N/A N/A
Airline 72.61
2.36 3.4% 2.36
3.4% -80.86 -52.7%
Retail 7507.99
316.36 4.4% 316.36
4.4% N/A N/A
*
Change since 12/31/1999
Winners-Losers 19-11 19-11
Dow
Industrials Jan-30 Mn Chg Mnth % Yr Chg Year %
--------------- ------
------ ------ ------ ------
Intel 46.47 9.57
25.9% 9.57 25.9%
Dow 27.55 4.17
17.8% 4.17 17.8%
Honeywell 227.52 32.43
16.6% 32.43 16.6%
Chevron-Texaco 176.9
24.49 16.1% 24.49
16.1%
Caterpillar 657.36
84.49 14.7% 84.49
14.7%
Johnson-Johnson 227.25
20.30 9.8% 20.30
9.8%
Verizon
Comm 44.52 3.79
9.3% 3.79 9.3%
Home
Depot 374.59 30.49
8.9% 30.49 8.9%
Boeing 233.72 16.60
7.6% 16.60 7.6%
Coca-Cola 74.81 4.90
7.0% 4.90 7.0%
Wal-Mart 119.14 7.73
6.9% 7.73 6.9%
Goldman
Sachs 935.41 56.41
6.4% 56.41 6.4%
Procter-Gamble 151.77
8.46 5.9% 8.46
5.9%
Merck 110.27 5.01
4.8% 5.01 4.8%
Amgen 341.88 14.57
4.5% 14.57 4.5%
Amazon 239.3 8.48
3.7% 8.48 3.7%
IBM 306.7 10.49
3.5% 10.49 3.5%
McDonald's 315 9.37
3.1% 9.37 3.1%
Cisco 78.32 1.29
1.7% 1.29 1.7%
Disney 112.8 -0.97
-0.9% -0.97 -0.9%
Travelers 284.51 -5.55
-1.9% -5.55 -1.9%
Nike 61.81 -1.90
-3.0% -1.90 -3.0%
Minn
Mining Mnf
153.16 -6.94 -4.3%
-6.94 -4.3%
Apple 259.48 -12.38
-4.6% -12.38 -4.6%
American
Exprss
352.17 -17.78 -4.8% -17.78
-4.8%
JP
Morgan Chase 305.89 -16.33
-5.1% -16.33 -5.1%
Visa 321.83 -28.88
-8.2% -28.88 -8.2%
Microsoft 430.29 -53.33 -11.0% -53.33 -11.0%
UnitedHealth 286.93
-43.18 -13.1% -43.18 -13.1%
SalesForce.com 212.29
-52.62 -19.9% -52.62 -19.9%
Fiend's Prime-25©
-----------------
Winners-Losers 11-14 11-14
Company Jan-30
Mn Chg
Month Yr Chg
Year %
--------------- ------- ------- ------ ------- ------
Palantir
Tech 146.59 -31.16
-17.5% -31.16 -17.5%
Oracle 164.58 -30.33
-15.6% -30.33 -15.6%
Microsoft 430.29 -53.33
-11.0% -53.33 -11.0%
Netflix 83.49 -10.27
-11.0% -10.27 -11.0%
Visa
Inc. 321.83 -28.88
-8.2% -28.88 -8.2%
Mastercard 538.79
-32.09 -5.6% -32.09
-5.6%
JP
Morgan Chase 305.89 -16.33
-5.1% -16.33 -5.1%
Apple
Comp 259.48 -12.38
-4.6% -12.38 -4.6%
Berkshire
Hath 480.53 -22.12
-4.4% -22.12 -4.4%
Tesla 430.41 -19.31
-4.3% -19.31 -4.3%
Broadcom 331.30 -14.80
-4.3% -14.80 -4.3%
Eli
Lilly 1037.15 -37.53
-3.5% -37.53 -3.5%
Bank
of America 53.20 -1.80
-3.3% -1.80 -3.3%
Abbvie 223.01 -5.48
-2.4% -5.48 -2.4%
NVIDIA 191.13 4.63
2.5% 4.63 2.5%
Amazon 239.30 8.48
3.7% 8.48 3.7%
Walmart 119.14 7.73
6.9% 7.73 6.9%
Google 338.53 24.73
7.9% 24.73 7.9%
Meta
(FB) 716.50 56.41
8.5% 56.41 8.5%
Home
Depot 374.59 30.49
8.9% 30.49 8.9%
Costco 940.25 77.91
9.0% 77.91 9.0%
Johnson-Johnson 227.25
20.30 9.8% 20.30
9.8%
AMD 236.73 22.57
10.5% 22.57 10.5%
Exxon
Mobil 141.40 21.06
17.5% 21.06 17.5%
Micron
Tech 414.88 129.47
45.4% 129.47 45.4%
Prime-25© 32753.60 -57.05
-0.2% -57.05 -0.2%
RNK Company (Bil)
P/E Yield Symb Sector
---
----------------- ------ ------- -----
---- ---------------
1. NVIDIA $4654 65.01
0.02% NVDA Technology
2. Google $4091 37.74
0.24% GOOG Communication
3. Apple $3856 40.48
0.39% AAPL Technology
4. Microsoft $3197 33.25
0.77% MSFT Technology
5. Amazon $2551 39.04
0.00% AMZN Consumer
6. Meta (FB) $1800 27.94
0.29% META Communication
7. Broadcom $1564 160.05
0.71% AVGO Technology
8. Tesla $1386 236.49
0.00% TSLA Consumer
9. Berkshire Hath $1036
12.80 0.00% BRK-B Financial
10.
Eli Lilly $982 85.93
0.56% LLY Healthcare
11.
Walmart $950 51.13
0.76% WMT Consumer
12.
JP Morgan Chase $841 15.02
1.81% JPM Financial
13.
Visa Inc. $624 32.74
0.73% V Financial
14.
Exxon Mobil $602 18.70
2.80% XOM Energy
15.
Johnson-Johnson $548 25.25
2.24% JNJ Healthcare
16.
Mastercard $484 37.78
0.56% MA Financial
17.
Micron Tech $469 39.44
0.11% MU Technology
18.
Oracle $467 38.63
1.15% ORCL Technology
19.
Costco $417 54.89
0.52% COST Consumer
20.
Abbvie
$395 94.90 2.94% ABBV
Healthcare
21.
Bank of America $394 15.88
1.99% BAC Financial
22.
AMD $386 117.19
0.00% AMD Technology
23.
Home Depot $373 25.11
2.44% HD Consumer
24.
Netflix $354 34.93
0.00% NFLX Communication
25.
Palantir $334 340.91
0.00% PLTR Technology
Prime-25© $32,754 38.12
0.51%
Changes
for 2026:
PLTR
Palantir, AMD, and MU Micron Tech were added while
CRM
SalesForce, PG Procter-Gamble, and UNH UnitedHealth
were removed.
Currencies
----------
Crrncy Jan-30
Mn Chg Mnth % Yr Chg Year % 2K Chg* 2000 %
------ -------
------ ------ ------
------ ------- ------
Pound 136.86
2.38 1.8% 2.38
1.8% -25.04 -15.5%
SwFrnc 129.36
3.36 2.7% 3.36
2.7% 65.89 103.8%
Euro 118.51
1.19 1.0% 1.19
1.0% 16.90 16.6%
Yen 64.66
0.89 1.4% 0.89
1.4% -34.26 -34.6%
US
Dlr
96.99 -1.33 -1.4%
-1.33 -1.4% -4.43
-4.4%
Commodities
-----------
Feb
Cmmdty Jan-30
Mn Chg Mnth % Yr Chg Year % 2K
Chng* 2000 %
------
--------- ------- ------
------- ------ -------- ------
Gold $4,713.90
$372.80 8.6% $372.80
8.6%$4,424.30 1527.7%
XAU 382.33
40.05 11.7% 40.05
11.7% 314.36 462.5%
Oil/Mr $65.21 $7.99
14.0% $7.99 14.0%
$39.61 154.7%
XOI 2065.52
208.76 11.2% 208.76
11.2% 1562.52 310.6%
CRB 320.09
21.31 7.1% 21.31
7.1% 114.95 56.0%
Foreign
Markets
---------------
Exchng Jan-30
Mnth Chg Mnth % Year Chg Year % 2K
Chng* 2000 %
------
--------- -------- ------ -------- ------ -------- ------
TSX 31923.52
210.76 0.7% 210.76
0.7% 23509.77 279.4%
IPC 67598.95
3290.66 5.1% 3290.66
5.1% 60469.07 848.1%
BVSP 181363.90 20238.50 12.6% 20238.50 12.6%164271.90 961.1%
FTSE 10223.54
292.16 2.9% 292.16
2.9% 3293.34 47.5%
CAC-40 8126.53
-22.97 -0.3% -22.97
-0.3% 2168.21 36.4%
DAX 24538.81
48.40 0.2% 48.40
0.2% 17580.67 252.7%
Swiss 13188.26
-79.22 -0.6% -79.22
-0.6% 5618.16 74.2%
Nikkei 53322.85
2983.37 5.9% 2983.37
5.9% 34388.51 181.6%
HngSng 27387.11
1756.57 6.9% 1756.57
6.9% 10425.01 61.5%
AllOrd 9164.80
146.00 1.6% 146.00
1.6% 6012.30 190.7%
*
Change since 12/31/1999
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