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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 June 19, 2026                             *

*                                                                           *

*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

*                    web address: http://www.fiendbear.com                  *

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Fiend Commentary
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The Bond Market Is Not Bluffing

Kevin Warsh said the right things. Now the bond market wants to see the right actions.

Wednesday's press conference gave Wall Street a jolt it was not expecting. Rates held, but the tone shifted. Warsh made clear that the next move is more likely up than down, and that price stability is not a slogan he intends to abandon under pressure.

The stock market flinched. The dollar surged. Metals sold off.

But the bond market reaction is the one worth watching.

When short-term Treasury yields rise sharply after a Fed meeting, that is not traders adjusting a spreadsheet. That is the market issuing a challenge. It is saying: we will hold you to this. Futures now price a 72% chance of a hike by October. That number will either prove prescient or embarrassing, depending entirely on what the inflation data does next.

Here is the problem Warsh cannot talk his way around.

CPI is too high. PPI is hot. Energy prices remain elevated and the Middle East situation has not resolved itself on anyone's preferred timeline. The word "temporary" has been used so many times in the last several years that it no longer carries meaning. If Warsh reaches for it, the bond market will not wait politely.

The White House is the other wall closing in.

A Fed chair who hikes rates before the midterms is not making a monetary policy decision in a vacuum. He is making a political enemy of an administration that has been loudly, repeatedly clear about what it wants: lower rates, higher stocks, cheaper credit. Trump does not absorb that kind of defiance quietly. The pressure will come, and it will not be subtle.

So Warsh is threading a needle that gets narrower by the week.

Talk tough enough to keep bond vigilantes from running yields to levels that break something. Avoid hiking fast enough to trigger a White House confrontation. Hope inflation cooperates before the market stops giving the benefit of the doubt.

That sequence requires a great deal of luck, and the Fed has not been especially lucky lately.

If the next two CPI prints come in soft, Warsh escapes cleanly. The hawkish talk will be remembered as exactly the right medicine, and markets will stabilize.

If they don't, the Fed faces a genuine credibility test. Not a press conference problem. Not a communication problem. A credibility problem, which is the one kind the Fed cannot fix with carefully chosen words.

The bond market has seen this movie before. It knows how it ends when central banks choose political comfort over price stability.

It is not bluffing. The question is whether Warsh is.


 

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