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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* February 3,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
================
Stocks
Bounce, Yields Press Higher, Metals Try to Regroup
Tuesday is
opening with a familiar 2026 tension: stocks want to keep levitating, but the
bond market keeps reminding everyone that money is no longer "free" -
and the metals market is still acting like it smells smoke somewhere offstage.
On Monday,
U.S. equities staged a solid rebound after the late-January cross-asset chaos.
The S&P 500 rose to 6,976, finishing just shy of
its all-time high, while the Dow gained more than 500 points to 49,408. The
Nasdaq also advanced, and the Russell 2000 outperformed again, reinforcing the
sense that investors are still willing to take risk when the tape steadies.
But the bond
market is not fully buying the "all clear" signal. The 10-year yield
is hovering near the upper end of its recent range around 4.3%, while the
30-year remains elevated in the high-4% area. That is not panic - but it is a
quiet warning: long rates are acting like inflation and deficit math are still
in the room, even if stocks would rather look away.
The dollar,
meanwhile, has stopped sprinting. After the Warsh nomination sparked a
credibility-style bounce, the greenback is now more in "hold and
digest" mode. A big part of that is simple: markets are trying to decide
whether the Warsh pick signals a genuinely tougher Fed stance, or just a
strategic attempt to calm the dollar and cool the optics of runaway metals. The
immediate effect was real. The long-run effect is still an open question.
Which brings
us to the most emotional market on the board: gold and silver.
After
Thursday's blow-off highs and Friday's brutal reversal, the metals are trying
to find their footing. Early Tuesday, gold has rebounded back into the
high-$4,700s/low-$4,800s zone and silver is back in the low-$80s (with screens
varying by contract and timing). That is still far below last week's extremes,
but importantly: the market is no longer in pure free-fall.
Two
underappreciated drivers of the whipsaw:
1.
CME margin hikes after the extreme volatility (which tends
to flush leverage and force selling at the worst possible time).
2.
The "crowded trade" effect: once too many
participants are leaning the same way, the first break becomes self-fulfilling
liquidation.
The other
macro wrinkle today is that the data is still sending mixed signals. The ISM
manufacturing index jumped to 52.6, the strongest reading since 2022 - not
exactly the kind of print that screams recession right
now. At the same time, the jobs report is still delayed by the partial
shutdown, keeping markets half-blind on the most politically sensitive economic
variable: employment. In a data vacuum, narratives trade harder than facts.
What to
watch today
Bottom line:
Tuesday looks like a tug-of-war session. Stocks are acting like the storm has
passed. Bonds are acting like the storm is merely taking a breath. Metals are
acting like they know exactly why people buy insurance - and exactly how
painful it is when everyone buys it at once.
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