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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* January 2,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
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December
2025: The Month Liquidity Came Back in Style
December
didn’t end with a classic “Santa Claus rally.” It ended with a reminder that
markets don’t always need good news to go up — they just need liquidity
and a convincing narrative.
Yes, gold
and silver made the loudest headlines. But the bigger December story wasn’t the
fireworks in metals — it was the quiet policy pivot underneath nearly every
asset class: the Federal Reserve shifted from “draining” to “maintaining,” and
Wall Street treated that as permission to keep risk-on behavior alive into
year-end.
1) The Fed’s
December pivot: rate cut + “reserve management” that looks a lot like easing
At its
December meeting, the Fed cut the policy rate by 25 bps to a 3.50%–3.75%
target range. The statement also acknowledged softer labor conditions (“job
gains have slowed,” unemployment has “edged up”) while noting inflation
“remains somewhat elevated.”
But the most
telling line was about the balance sheet: the Fed judged reserves had fallen to
“ample” and said it would initiate purchases of shorter-term Treasury
securities as needed to maintain ample reserves.
That’s not
the same as pandemic-era QE in spirit or scale — but in market terms it has the
same psychological effect: the Fed is no longer pulling liquidity out of the
system and is now prepared to add it back when needed. In a market conditioned
to respond to liquidity, that matters more than semantics.
2) QT ended
— and the balance sheet stopped shrinking
December was
also the month when the Fed’s QT program effectively ended (as previously
announced). Starting Dec. 1, the Fed stopped the runoff and moved to
roll Treasury maturities and reinvest agency principal into Treasury bills.
That’s a
meaningful regime shift: a central bank that stops shrinking its balance sheet
in a market already priced for calm is basically saying, “We don’t want tighter
financial conditions. We want stable plumbing.”
3) A
year-end tell: banks leaned on the Fed’s standing repo facility
Another
underappreciated December headline was the spike in usage of the Fed’s standing
repo facility — banks borrowed roughly $26 billion on Dec. 29, one of
the highest readings since the facility launched.
Year-end
funding stress is not unusual. But the optics are important: the system is
still reliant on backstops, and the Fed has been actively encouraging smoother
use of those backstops (including removing a daily limit on the facility, per
Powell). Markets may look calm, but the plumbing still matters — and
December reminded us that liquidity is managed, not guaranteed.
4) Inflation
looked better — but the data itself was messy
December’s
CPI report for November gave markets what they wanted: inflation came in cooler
than expected (2.7% YoY), providing cover for dovish expectations.
However,
there was a critical caveat: the CPI was distorted by missing October
observations because of prior disruptions, and the BLS explicitly said it
couldn’t provide specific guidance for users navigating those missing
observations.
That creates
a subtle but real problem: when markets have to price policy based on imperfect
data, confidence becomes fragile. It’s one reason liquidity tends to dominate:
when the statistics are noisy, investors lean on the assumption that the Fed
will err on the side of support.
5) Stocks
levitated anyway — AI euphoria remained the dominant bid
Despite
December’s late wobble and a weak final session, 2025 closed with large annual
gains: the S&P 500, Nasdaq, and Dow all posted double-digit returns. AI
enthusiasm remained central to the story — Nvidia even became the first public
company to reach a $5 trillion market cap.
In other
words: December did not bring a broad “risk reset.” It brought a continuation
of the same psychology that has defined late-cycle markets for years: investors
are willing to pay up for growth stories as long as financial conditions stay
easy.
And the VIX?
It spent part of late December at its lowest close since December 2024,
which is the market’s way of saying: “We don’t feel any urgency to hedge.”
6) Metals
were the symptom, not the whole story
Gold and
silver were extraordinary in December — but the more useful interpretation is
not “metals are going up.”
It’s this:
in a month when equities stayed calm and volatility got cheaper, the metals
market still demanded a premium for hard assets. That’s a vote — not
necessarily for imminent disaster, but for skepticism about long-run purchasing
power and policy discipline.
What
December is really telling us about 2026
If December
had a single takeaway, it’s that 2026 will likely be a tug-of-war between two
forces:
1.
Liquidity support (rate cuts, balance sheet stability,
reserve purchases) that can
keep asset prices elevated even with a softening economy; versus
2.
Inflation and credibility risk — the possibility that policy support arrives faster than
inflation truly cools, forcing markets to reprice the “easy money forever”
assumption.
The most
important question isn’t whether we get another cut.
It’s whether
the Fed can stay supportive without re-igniting inflation psychology —
and whether investors will keep paying record multiples while relying on
central bank “plumbing” as the safety net.
That’s the
real December story. The metals just made it impossible to ignore.
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