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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* June 5,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
================
A
Record Dow, a Softening Labor Tape, and the Same Old Question
Thursday
gave Wall Street exactly the kind of split-screen market that has defined 2026:
the Dow surged to another record, but the details underneath were much less
convincing.
The Dow
jumped nearly 875 points to close at 51,561.93, powered by healthcare
and financials. The S&P 500 gained modestly. The Nasdaq actually slipped,
dragged lower by weakness in chip stocks after Broadcom disappointed investors.
In other words, this was not a clean “everything is working” rally. It was
rotation: money leaving one hot corner and piling into another.
That matters
because the market keeps celebrating index highs while the internal story keeps
getting more complicated.
The labor
data was not great. Weekly jobless claims rose to 225,000, the highest
level in several months, and announced corporate layoffs climbed again in May
to 97,006, with a large share tied to technology and AI-related
restructuring. Layoffs are still not exploding by historical standards, but the
trend is no longer as comfortable as the stock market wants to pretend.
That sets up
today’s jobs report as the next major test.
The
consensus is for May payrolls to rise by about 85,000, with unemployment
around 4.3%. A strong report would not necessarily be bullish anymore.
If job growth comes in too hot, it reinforces the idea that the Fed has no room
to cut and may even need to stay tougher for longer. If the report comes in
weak, it validates the slowdown story—but with oil still elevated and inflation
still sticky, weak jobs do not automatically equal “easy money is coming.”
That is the
uncomfortable place the market has reached: good news can be bad news, and bad
news can simply be bad news.
Meanwhile,
Bitcoin continues to act like a warning light for speculative liquidity. It hit
a four-month low around $61,000 and is now down sharply from its October
peak. That matters because crypto has often acted as the purest expression of
risk appetite. When the Dow is hitting records while Bitcoin is breaking down,
it tells you the rally is becoming selective. The market is not uniformly
bullish. It is choosing winners and abandoning losers.
Tech is also
no longer invincible. Broadcom’s sharp decline showed that even AI-related
stocks now have to clear a very high bar. Investors are still willing to buy
the dip in chips, but the reaction suggests the market is starting to ask a
question it avoided for months: are these valuations still realistic, or has
the AI trade simply been priced for perfection?
That brings
us back to the breadth problem. The NYSE advance/decline line did rise, but not
in a way that fully matched the drama of the Dow’s nearly 900-point gain. The
Nasdaq lagged outright. The headline index said “record.” The tape said
“rotation.” Those are different messages.
For Friday,
the key issue is whether the jobs report confirms a market that is still
healthy beneath the surface—or exposes a market leaning too hard on hope, AI,
and selective leadership.
Wall Street
has been extremely good at finding bullish interpretations for every piece of
news:
That kind of
optimism can carry a market a long way. But it also creates a fragile setup
where almost anything is assumed to have a positive explanation.
The danger
is not that Thursday’s rally was fake. The danger is that the rally may be
leaning on a labor market, an AI narrative, and a rate outlook that are all
starting to fray at the edges.
Today’s jobs
report may tell us whether the market is right to keep shrugging—or whether
investors have grown a little too comfortable buying every dip.
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