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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* May 18,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
================
Friday and
Monday have delivered the clearest message yet: the old “rate cuts are coming”
story is cracking, and the bond market is forcing the issue.
Gold,
silver, and miners are still under pressure. Stocks were hit
Friday. The dollar is holding firm. Oil is back above $110. And the long end of
the Treasury market is no longer merely “edgy” — it is openly challenging the
idea that inflation is under control.
The 10-year
yield has pushed into the 4.6% area, while the 30-year has moved deeper above
5%. Those are not just bond-market trivia. Those levels affect mortgages,
corporate borrowing, private credit, government interest expense, and
stock-market valuation. When the long end moves like this, the Fed does not
need to hike for financial conditions to tighten. The market does it for them.
That is why
the metals are getting hit even though the world still looks unstable. Gold and
silver rallied on the idea that inflation, war, money printing, and policy
doubt would all support hard assets. But in the short run, a surge in yields
and a firmer dollar can overwhelm that story. When cash suddenly pays more and
leverage gets squeezed, even “insurance” can be sold.
The bigger
issue is that the Fed narrative has flipped almost completely.
A few months
ago, Wall Street was still talking about multiple cuts. Now the market is
pricing a meaningful chance of a rate hike by year-end. In some measures, the
odds have moved above 50%. That is an extraordinary change, and it reflects
what the inflation data and oil market have been saying: energy-driven
inflation is no longer theoretical, and the Fed may not have the freedom to cut
just because growth is softening.
But here is
the uncomfortable part: if the economy really starts to sink, does anyone
seriously believe the Fed will stand there and do nothing?
That is the
trap.
If inflation
keeps rising, the Fed should be tightening.
If employment weakens and credit cracks, the Fed will be under intense pressure
to ease.
If both happen at the same time, the Fed has no clean answer.
History
suggests what policymakers usually choose when forced between deflation and
inflation. They choose inflation. Not because they admit it openly, but because
deflation breaks balance sheets, banks, credit markets, tax revenues, and
political careers. Inflation is painful, but it can be explained away,
massaged, blamed on oil, blamed on war, blamed on tariffs, or called temporary.
That may be
the real long-term support for gold and silver, even if the short-term trend is
ugly right now.
The Fed can
talk tough. The market can price hikes. Warsh can promise discipline. Powell
can stay on the Board and complicate the “new regime” story. But if credit
stress arrives, if layoffs accelerate, if private capital starts seizing up, or
if stocks fall hard enough to threaten confidence, the conversation will change
quickly.
And we are
already seeing the first step in that direction: the
balance sheet is no longer shrinking. The Fed calls its Treasury bill purchases
“reserve management,” not QE. Fine. But from the market’s perspective, the
system has moved from draining liquidity to adding liquidity again. The label
matters less than the direction.
That is the
contradiction of 2026: hawkish pricing in the rate market, but quiet liquidity support in the plumbing.
Oil is what
makes the whole situation worse. The war still has no durable resolution, and
crude above $110 is a direct hit to inflation expectations. The longer it stays
there, the more the next few inflation reports will reflect it. At the same
time, high energy costs squeeze consumers and businesses, which increases the
odds of weaker growth later.
So the market is being asked to price an ugly combination:
That is why
this week feels important. If yields keep rising, the pressure spreads. If oil
keeps climbing, inflation fears deepen. If stocks wobble further, the “Fed
rescue” trade will start creeping back into conversation — even if nobody wants
to say it out loud yet.
The clean
version is this: the Fed wants credibility, but the system wants relief.
And if the
choice eventually becomes preserving credibility or preventing a deflationary
break, do not be surprised if credibility gets negotiated downward.
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