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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 15, 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 Finally Talking Back

Thursday gave us one of the strangest splits of the year.

Stocks rallied again. The Dow closed back above 50,000, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit fresh records. On the surface, Wall Street is still behaving as if the bull market has a force field around it.

But the bond market is saying something very different.

The 30-year Treasury pushed above 5% again, with the long bond around the 5.0%–5.1% zone and the 10-year nearing 4.5%. That is not background noise. That is the market charging a higher price for long-term money because inflation risk is no longer theoretical.

And that is the key divide right now:

Stocks are pricing optimism. Bonds are pricing consequences.

The inflation data this week gave the bond market every reason to push back. CPI came in hotter than expected, and PPI was even worse, with producer prices posting their largest monthly increase in four years. Import prices also surged, led by fuel. In other words, inflation pressure is not isolated to one report or one category. It is showing up across the pipeline.

Meanwhile, oil is still elevated because of the ongoing Strait disruption. That matters because energy shocks rarely stay neatly contained. They leak into freight, food, packaging, fertilizer, utilities, travel, and consumer psychology.

That is why the idea of quick rate cuts is fading fast. A few months ago, markets were still dreaming of an easy Fed in 2026. Now rate-hike odds have moved meaningfully higher, with some pricing showing roughly a 40% chance of a hike later this year and other measures edging closer to the “coin flip” zone depending on the meeting path.

That is a wild reversal.

It also explains why metals are getting hit. Gold and silver were supposed to benefit from inflation anxiety, and longer term they still may. But in the short run, the market is seeing a different threat: higher yields, a stronger dollar, and a Fed that may be forced to act tougher than the metals bulls expected. When interest-bearing assets suddenly pay more, non-yielding assets like gold and silver have to fight harder.

So yes, there is a strange contradiction here.

The bond market is saying: “The Fed is behind the curve.”

The metals market is saying: “The Fed may be forced to catch up.”

Both can be true for a while.

But here is the bigger question: if inflation is really starting to accelerate again, would one or two 25-basis-point hikes actually matter?

Mechanically, probably not much.

A quarter-point hike will not reopen the Strait. It will not lower diesel prices overnight. It will not reverse tariffs, shipping costs, or import-price inflation. It will not magically fix food inflation or insurance costs.

But symbolically, it matters a lot.

A rate hike would tell markets the Fed is not willing to simply tolerate higher inflation because the economy is politically inconvenient to tighten. It would be a credibility move. The problem is that credibility moves are expensive. They hit stocks. They hit housing. They hit leveraged borrowers. They hit Washington’s financing costs.

That is why this is such a dangerous setup.

The Fed may need to sound tough enough to satisfy the bond market, but not act tough enough to break the economy. That is a very narrow lane, especially with a new chair coming in, a $39 trillion debt load, and an economy that is hardly roaring underneath the stock-index headlines.

The stock market, for now, is ignoring that lane entirely. Investors are still buying AI, buying records, buying the idea that earnings and momentum can outrun everything else.

Maybe they can for a while.

But if the 30-year yield holds above 5%, the whole conversation changes. At that point, borrowing costs stop being a future problem and become a present one. Mortgages, corporate refinancing, private credit, government interest expense, equity valuations — they all start to feel it.

That is what makes this market so uncomfortable. Stocks are acting like inflation is manageable. Bonds are acting like inflation is getting away from policy. Metals are being crushed because traders fear the Fed may finally be forced to respond.

Someone is wrong.

And if the long bond keeps rising, it probably won’t be the bond market.

                   


 

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