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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* June 4,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web address:
http://www.fiendbear.com
*
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Fiend Commentary
================
When
the Soft-Landing Trade Meets the Long Bond
Wednesday
finally gave investors a little taste of what happens when multiple stress
points line up at the same time.
Stocks fell
from record highs, crypto was hit hard, oil stayed elevated, and bond yields
refused to back away from the levels that matter. The Dow fell more than 1%,
the S&P 500 dropped roughly three-quarters of a percent, and the Nasdaq
gave back close to 1%. That is not a crash, but it is a reminder that after a
huge run, the market doesn’t need a catastrophe to start taking profits.
The most
important thing is not that stocks went down. It’s why the selloff felt
different.
For weeks,
investors have treated the Middle East conflict as a trading inconvenience: buy
the ceasefire rumor, sell the oil spike, rotate back into AI, repeat. But the
“ceasefire” increasingly looks like a label slapped on top of a conflict that
is still very much alive. There are still attacks, counterattacks, disrupted
shipping lanes, and uncertainty over what “normal” even means for the Strait.
Oil holding near the mid-$90s is not a market saying the problem is solved. It
is a market saying the problem has been contained — for now.
That “for
now” is where the risk lives.
If oil stays
around $95 long enough, it becomes less of a headline and more of a cost
structure. Freight, diesel, insurance, food distribution, airline costs, and
consumer psychology all start to feel it. The market keeps trying to call this
temporary before the economy has even had time to digest it.
The bond
market seems less willing to play pretend.
The long end
remains the key tell. The 30-year is hovering near the 5% zone, and the 10-year
is still close to the 4.5% area. Those levels are not just abstract numbers.
They influence mortgage rates, corporate borrowing costs, private credit,
government interest expense, and the valuation math for long-duration growth
stocks.
That’s why a
selloff in tech and crypto makes sense. When yields stay high and the dollar is
firm, speculative assets lose some of their oxygen. Bitcoin’s recent slide is
especially telling: it’s behaving less like “digital gold” and more like a
high-beta risk asset tied to liquidity, sentiment, and leverage.
The same
goes for parts of tech. AI optimism is still the market’s favorite story, but
Wednesday showed that even the winners are not immune to a broader de-risking
impulse. When a narrow rally has carried the indexes to records, profit-taking
in that leadership can quickly turn into index weakness.
This is
where the soft-landing story starts to wobble.
The market
wants to believe that inflation will ease, the war will stay contained, oil
will drift lower, and the Fed will eventually have room to help if growth
slows. But the current evidence is less comfortable:
Oil is still
high.
Long yields are still high.
The dollar is still firm.
Inflation risk is still alive.
The ceasefire is still fragile.
And the rally has been increasingly dependent on a smaller group of stocks.
That does
not mean a major bear market starts tomorrow. But it does mean the market is no
longer as forgiving as it looked during the record-setting run.
The next
question is whether Wednesday was just a healthy shakeout after a big rally, or
the first hint that investors are starting to price the actual cost of this
environment.
If oil
breaks lower and the 30-year yield retreats from 5%, the bulls will probably
regain control quickly. But if oil stays sticky and long yields stay elevated,
then the soft-landing simulator starts to look less like a model and more like
a hope.
And hope is
not a strategy when the long bond is moving against you.
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