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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                  May 5, 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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The Soft-Landing Machine Is Glitching

Monday did not look like a normal “bad headline” day. Stocks fell, yes, but the more important message came from the things that usually help when investors get nervous — and didn’t. Oil surged, the long bond broke above 5%, the dollar firmed, and gold got sold anyway. That is not a simple risk-off tape. That is a market being forced to think about inflation and financing costs at the same time.

The stock market damage was real but not catastrophic. The Dow lost 557 points to 48,941.90, the S&P 500 fell 0.4% to 7,200.75, and the Nasdaq slipped to 25,067.80. Energy was the only S&P sector that clearly worked. That tells you the market wasn’t panicking about recession so much as repricing the cost of the war and the cost of money.

The bond market was the real warning light. The 10-year yield climbed to about 4.445%, its highest since July, while the 30-year pushed above 5%. Usually when markets get uneasy, yields drop. This time they rose because investors were suddenly less worried about growth and more worried about inflation, deficits, and what a prolonged oil shock means for the Fed. When the long end moves like that, it tightens the screws on everything else without the central bank doing a thing.

That is also why gold and silver had a rough day. Gold fell about 2% to roughly $4,523, and silver dropped to around $72.95. People like to say gold always rallies on war. It does not. Not when the dollar is stronger, real yields are moving higher, and traders need cash. In those moments, even the “insurance” gets sold.

So what is Wall Street really struggling with here? The old soft-landing machine — the one where every scare turns into future rate cuts and another excuse to buy the dip — is starting to malfunction. If oil stays elevated and shipping through Hormuz remains unreliable, inflation risk goes up. If inflation risk goes up, the Fed cannot rush back to easy money. That breaks the cleanest bullish story of the past two years.

That is why Tuesday matters, even without a major economic release. The market now has to decide whether Monday was a one-day scare or the start of a more serious rethink. If oil eases and yields calm down, the dip-buyers will likely come charging back. But if crude stays high and the long bond stays above 5%, the market may finally have to accept that “bad news” is no longer automatically “future rate cuts.” Sometimes bad news is just bad news.

                                     


 

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