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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* January 9,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
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Friday:
Jobs Day Meets Metal Mania
Today’s
payrolls report has the potential to do something the market hasn’t had to deal
with much lately: force a choice.
For days,
investors have been enjoying a rare combination—stock indexes near record
highs, volatility staying strangely calm, and precious metals holding near
historic levels. That mix is usually a sign of confidence. But it can also be a
sign of something more fragile: a market that believes it has found a way to be
bullish in every scenario.
This
morning’s jobs report is the kind of catalyst that can break that illusion.
Why this
jobs report matters more than usual
The labor
market has drifted into what economists have been calling a “no hire, no
fire” environment: companies are cautious about adding headcount, but
they’re also reluctant to let workers go. It creates the appearance of
stability—until it doesn’t.
The
expectation is for modest job growth (around 60,000
jobs added in December) and for the unemployment
rate to edge down to 4.5% from 4.6%. That sounds benign, but it’s a
tightrope:
Recent
“opening acts” haven’t helped confidence. Private payrolls rose by only 41,000
in December in the ADP report, and job openings per unemployed worker fell
further, underscoring that labor demand is ebbing even if layoffs remain
contained. Meanwhile, productivity has been surging—great for margins and
headline growth, but often a sign that companies are learning to do more
with fewer people.
The metals
are acting like they already know the punchline
Gold and
silver are still trading like the world is headed toward easier money and
bigger debts, not “normalization.”
Even with
the dollar firmer and annual commodity index rebalancing creating short-term
turbulence, gold has been hovering around $4,469/oz and silver around $76–$77/oz—both
still tracking for strong weekly gains. In plain English: people are taking
profits, but they’re not abandoning the trade.
This is what
makes the metals market so interesting right now. It’s not just “inflation
hedging.” It’s also policy hedging—a bet that the next response to economic stress will
be more liquidity, not less.
Gold’s
behavior says: “We’re not confident the system will stay tight.”
Silver’s behavior says: “And we’re not waiting for the Fed to admit it.”
The market
wants one specific outcome
What Wall
Street wants is a Goldilocks report:
soft enough to keep rate cuts alive in 2026, but not so soft that recession
talk becomes unavoidable.
That’s the
sweet spot where:
The danger
is that Goldilocks outcomes don’t last. Not when hiring is slowing, policy
uncertainty still hangs over corporate decision-making, and productivity gains
are masking labor weakness.
Three ways
today can go — and what each implies
1) “Soft but
stable” (the market’s favorite)
Payrolls modest, unemployment around 4.5%, wage growth contained.
This keeps the Fed on hold near-term, but preserves
the option of cuts later in 2026. Stocks likely breathe a sigh of relief.
Metals may consolidate but remain supported.
2) “Too hot”
(bad for cut expectations)
Payrolls meaningfully stronger and/or wages surprise higher.
That pushes out rate-cut hopes. Yields and the dollar could rise, which tends
to pressure gold and silver in the short run. Equities can still rally at
first, but the support becomes shakier because it’s built on “easy money
later.”
3) “Too
cold” (good for cuts, risky for stocks)
Payrolls near zero (or negative), unemployment holds closer to 4.6% or rises,
and revisions bite.
Rate-cut expectations would jump—but that’s not automatically bullish.
Sometimes the market hears “cuts” and cheers; other times it hears “cuts” and
realizes they’re arriving because something is breaking. Metals would
likely interpret this as confirmation and stay well bid.
The real
question behind the numbers
The market
has been celebrating a world where it can have:
all at once.
That
combination can happen—but it doesn’t happen forever. It usually ends when
investors are forced to admit what’s actually driving
the move: not growth, but confidence. And confidence can change quickly
when a single report challenges the narrative.
Today’s jobs
report isn’t just about one month of hiring. It’s about whether the economy is
merely cooling… or quietly slipping into something that eventually forces the
Fed’s hand.
Either way,
the metals market is already voting.
Now we find out whether the jobs data agrees.
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