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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* May 20,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
================
The stock
market can still cheer a hopeful headline. The bond market is no longer buying
the whole story.
Tuesday’s
Treasury action was the real market signal: the 30-year pushed near 5.2%,
its highest area since 2007, while the 10-year moved toward 4.7%. The
quiet erosion in bond prices is becoming louder by the day. If the 10-year
eventually prints a clean 5% handle, that’s when the conversation
changes from “higher for longer” to “bond market stress.”
This is not
just about oil. It’s about trust.
The market
is asking whether the new Fed leadership will actually be
willing to contain inflation if doing so means crushing growth, housing,
private credit, and federal financing costs. The official answer may be “yes.”
The bond market’s answer appears to be: “Prove it.”
That is why
the current rate-hike pricing is so interesting. Futures are now assigning a
meaningful chance of a rate hike later this year or by early next year. A few
months ago, Wall Street was arguing over how many cuts we would get. Now
traders are talking about hikes. That is a massive shift.
But let’s be
honest: a rate hike may be what the inflation data calls for, but it is not the
path of least political resistance.
The economy
is uneven. Employment is not exactly bulletproof. Private credit is wobbling.
The federal debt load is enormous. And Washington almost always prefers
inflation to deflation when forced into a corner, because deflation breaks
balance sheets quickly and visibly. Inflation spreads the damage around and
gives politicians something to blame.
That’s why
the Fed’s real test may not be whether it hikes. The real test is whether it
can avoid cutting too soon, or avoid quietly adding
liquidity while pretending it is only managing reserves.
In other
words, the market may be pricing hikes, but the system may still be built for
rescue.
That
contradiction is exactly what long bonds are reacting to.
The Middle
East only sharpens the problem. Oil remains above $100 even as officials keep
talking about progress. A few tankers moving through the Strait is better than
none, but it is not the same as normal traffic. Iran’s negotiating posture
still looks designed to stretch time and preserve leverage. If Tehran believes
influence over the Strait is more valuable than a narrow nuclear concession,
then the market may be underestimating how long this standoff can last.
And if it
lasts, oil does not need to explode to $150 to cause trouble. A prolonged
period of $100-plus crude is enough to pressure freight, food, diesel,
insurance, inventories, and consumer confidence. That feeds into inflation
expectations — and once inflation expectations move, the Fed’s room to maneuver
shrinks.
This is the
uncomfortable setup heading into the rest of the week:
The bond
market is the referee now. If the 30-year holds above 5% and the 10-year keeps
marching toward 5%, the Fed can talk all it wants.
Financial conditions will tighten without permission.
And that may
be the most important point: markets are no longer waiting for the Fed to act.
The long end is already acting for them.
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