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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  January 1, 2026                          *

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*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

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

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Fiend Commentary

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2025: The Year the Metals Market Stopped Whispering

If you only watched the stock indices in 2025, you could be forgiven for thinking it was just another “risk-on” year. But under the surface, precious metals delivered a far louder message — and by December it wasn’t subtle anymore.

Gold finished 2025 around $4,326/oz, up roughly +65% on the year. Silver ended near $72/oz, up roughly +145%, after printing an eye-popping intrayear record above $83/oz. That’s not a “nice rally.” That’s a regime change — and it came with the kind of volatility that forces even true believers to hold on with both hands.

Why this rally was so extreme in 2025

People will argue about the “one” catalyst. But the truth is that 2025 was a rare year when multiple long-building forces pushed in the same direction — and once price broke through psychological ceilings, momentum did what momentum always does: it attracted more momentum.

1) Metals became a referendum on policy credibility, not just inflation.
When markets start believing that inflation will be “managed” with optimism and messaging — rather than restraint and real sacrifice — gold tends to behave less like a commodity and more like a vote. Not a vote for panic, necessarily. A vote for doubt. 2025 looked like a year where investors increasingly priced in that policy would stay easier than the old rulebook would justify.

2) Silver didn’t just ride gold’s coattails — it found its own industrial jet fuel.
Silver is both precious and industrial, which means it can lag for long periods… and then abruptly turn into a scarcity story. In 2025, silver acted like a market trying to front-run supply tightness and strategic stockpiling fears at the same time that industrial demand stayed intense. When that narrative catches, silver doesn’t drift higher — it tends to gap higher, then punish late chasers with violent pullbacks, then rip again.

3) The “quiet” metals joined the party — confirming it wasn’t only a gold story.
One of the most important tells in 2025: the strength spread beyond gold/silver. Platinum and palladium also posted huge gains, and industrial metals like copper had a standout year as well. When a whole complex moves, it often signals something bigger than a single trade — it can reflect a broader repricing of real assets, supply chains, and the cost of capital.

4) The end-of-year whipsaw wasn’t a contradiction — it was a feature.
The late-December air pocket (especially in silver) looked dramatic, but it wasn’t mysterious: thin holiday liquidity, crowded positioning, and higher margin requirements are exactly the ingredients that turn an uptrend into a rodeo for a few sessions. Big bull markets don’t end volatility — they manufacture it.

Miners: the forgotten “leverage trade” that finally woke up

If 2025 had a “tell” that the metals move was real, it was the mining equities.

Gold miners didn’t simply participate — they went parabolic. Major gold-miner exposure posted triple-digit gains on the year, and junior miners were even more explosive. Silver-miner funds were among the top-performing ETFs in the entire market.

That matters because miners are where disbelief tends to show up first. When the crowd thinks a metal move is temporary, miners lag. When the crowd starts believing the move has legs, miners behave like a spring that was compressed for years.

A clean way to think about 2026: three signposts, not slogans

No “stocks up unless they go down” nonsense. Here are three concrete signposts that will tell you a lot about how 2026 may develop:

Signpost #1: Does silver hold a higher floor after the fireworks?
Silver’s job in 2026 is not to avoid pullbacks — pullbacks are guaranteed. The real question is whether the next deep shakeout stops at a level that would have sounded ridiculous a year ago. If silver starts building support well above former “ceiling” prices, that’s how new long cycles typically behave.

Signpost #2: Do bond yields and gold rise together, or do they diverge?
Gold can rally on falling yields, rising yields, or both — but the reason matters. If yields rise because inflation expectations re-ignite and fiscal credibility frays, gold can remain strong even with higher rates. If yields rise because real growth is ripping and policy is credibly tight, gold often has a harder time. Watch the why, not just the number.

Signpost #3: Does the next growth scare produce “deflation first,” then “printing later”?
Many crises follow a familiar rhythm: risk assets break, credit tightens, something deflationary snaps — and only then does policy respond with liquidity. If that pattern repeats, gold often stabilizes sooner than most assets, while silver (because it’s part industrial, part monetary) can be more chaotic. In other words: gold may act like the lifeboat; silver may act like the speedboat.

A grounded 2026 “range” call

Here’s the honest takeaway after a year like 2025:

  • Gold is increasingly behaving like an asset markets reach for when confidence wobbles — not just when CPI prints hot. If policy stays easy relative to inflation and debt dynamics stay ugly, gold can keep surprising people.
  • Silver can absolutely overshoot to levels that sound absurd in the moment — and then punish complacency with air pockets that feel personal. Triple-digit silver is not “impossible,” but it likely wouldn’t be a gentle climb; it would be an emotionally exhausting sequence of surges, shocks, and recoveries.

Bottom line: 2025 was not merely a great year for metals — it was a year where metals started acting like a headline, not a footnote. If 2026 brings either (a) renewed inflation anxiety, (b) another credibility wobble in bonds/currencies, or (c) a growth scare that forces the next liquidity wave, the metal story probably isn’t finished. But after a year like this, the market’s tuition bill will be paid in volatility.

 


 

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