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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 12, 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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Records With a Fuse Lit

Monday was one of those market days that looks bullish on the surface and deeply strange underneath.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq set new records again. The Dow moved higher and remains within sight of 50,000. Small caps joined the move. Silver surged, miners caught a bid, and oil pushed back toward the danger zone. At the same time, long bond yields remained uncomfortably close to the 5% line.

That is not a normal “risk-on” backdrop. It is a market trying to price prosperity, inflation, war uncertainty, and hard-asset demand all at once.

The strangest part is not that stocks went up. Stocks can rally on earnings, buybacks, momentum, and the belief that the worst-case war outcome has been avoided. The strangest part is that they are doing it while oil is still near $100, the Strait remains a problem, and the bond market is refusing to relax.

Wall Street seems to be treating the Middle East conflict as a manageable inconvenience rather than a macro shock. The current market belief appears to be:

  • the war will drag but not break anything,
  • oil will stay elevated but not explode,
  • inflation will rise but not enough to matter,
  • the Fed will stay patient,
  • and AI earnings will carry the indexes anyway.

That is a very optimistic stack of assumptions.

The silver rally is worth watching because it says the appetite for speculation has not gone away—it has simply moved around. Silver’s sharp jump looks less like pure fear and more like a hard-asset momentum trade returning after the late-January and March shakeouts. When silver and miners surge on the same day stocks hit records, investors are not hiding. They are reaching for anything that can benefit from reflation, scarcity, or liquidity.

That may be bullish in the short run, but it also tells you risk appetite is still extremely aggressive.

The real referee remains the bond market. The 30-year yield hovering near 5% is not just a number for bond desks. It is the cost of mortgages, corporate borrowing, long-term government financing, and equity valuation. If the long bond breaks convincingly above 5% and holds there, the market’s favorite stories become harder to tell. Future earnings get discounted more heavily. Debt service becomes more painful. And “eventual Fed help” becomes less convincing if inflation is still being fed by oil, tariffs, and supply-chain disruptions.

That is where the contradiction lives. Stocks are trading as if the future is bright. Bonds are trading as if the future is expensive.

Oil is the other piece that refuses to fit neatly into the rally. A quick drop from panic highs helped stocks breathe, but oil near $100 is still a major inflation impulse if it lingers. The market keeps acting as if elevated crude is temporary. Maybe it is. But if it becomes the new operating environment for another month or two, the damage will start showing up in freight, food, margins, consumer confidence, and inflation expectations.

That is why the next inflation data matters so much. If inflation stays hot while stocks are hitting records and long yields are pressing higher, Wall Street may have to confront the possibility that “good news” is being priced too aggressively.

For now, the bulls are still in control. The rally is real. The records are real. The momentum is real.

But so are the risks.

The market is not pricing perfection because everything is perfect. It is pricing perfection because investors believe the bad news can be managed, delayed, or ignored. That works until one of those assumptions breaks.

And with oil near $100, the 30-year near 5%, and silver suddenly acting like a rocket again, the fuse is still lit.

                                      


 

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