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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* June 30,
2026 *
*
*
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
================
Monday
looked bullish if you only watched the Dow.
A new record
close, oil contained near $70, Bitcoin stabilizing after a brutal slide, and
another bounce in speculative names gave Wall Street exactly the story it
wanted to end June: the ceasefire is holding well enough, the economy is not
falling apart, and the Fed may not have to be quite as aggressive as feared.
But
underneath the headline index strength, this remains a very split market.
The Dow hit
a new record, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq bounced strongly, and risk appetite
returned after last week’s punishment. Yet the rally still feels selective. A
handful of favored areas continue to attract money, while other corners of the
market look damaged or confused.
That is
especially true in crypto.
Bitcoin held
steady near the $60,000 area, but “steady” is doing a lot of work. The chart still
looks fragile, and the crypto-related stocks remain wounded. Strategy’s
announcement that it can now sell Bitcoin, raise cash, build dollar reserves,
and buy back its own stock was treated as good news on Monday. The stock
bounced sharply.
But step
back and think about what that really means.
For years,
the whole pitch was simple: never sell Bitcoin, issue stock, issue debt, buy
more Bitcoin, repeat. The premium valuation was the magic machine. Now that the
stock’s enterprise value has fallen below the value of its Bitcoin holdings,
the machine is reversing. The company is talking about selling the asset it
once treated as untouchable in order to support the
equity and preferred shares.
That may be
smart balance-sheet management. It may also be the clearest sign yet that the
“sure thing” is no longer sure.
This is how
speculative structures usually start to wobble. First the strategy is genius. Then
it becomes crowded. Then it becomes financial engineering. Then the underlying
asset stops rising, and everyone discovers that leverage cuts both ways.
The market
liked the announcement because it bought time. But if Bitcoin fails to regain
traction and starts another leg lower, the question becomes much larger: how
many crypto-treasury companies can survive when the premium disappears?
Metals are
sending a different message, but not a comforting one.
Gold fell back
toward the $4,000 area again, and silver remains under pressure after its
spectacular rise and collapse earlier in the year. The easy-money metals trade
has been badly wounded. For now, the market believes the dollar is strong, the
Fed is not cutting, and Warsh may actually talk
inflation-fighting language long enough to keep hard assets on the defensive.
But even
here, the move may be getting stretched. Gold is suffering its worst monthly decline
in years, and silver has been absolutely punished. That may mean the metals
bull market is over. Or it may mean the market has swung too far from one
extreme to the other: from “the Fed will print forever” to “the Fed is suddenly
Volcker.”
The truth is
probably somewhere between those two stories.
Oil remains
the biggest wild card. Crude is sitting near $70 even though the Middle East
situation is still not fully resolved. That is either a major relief signal or a
warning that something else is happening. If oil is falling because traffic
through Hormuz is normalizing and supply is catching up, that is bullish. If
oil is falling because global demand is weaker than investors realize, that is
a much darker message.
Either way,
oil near $70 removes some immediate inflation pressure. That helps the stock
market. It also gives the Fed more room to talk tough without having to act
tomorrow.
The dollar is
another key piece. It has rallied hard on the belief that U.S. rates will stay
high and that rate cuts are not coming soon. But how much further can it run if
the economy weakens? A strong dollar is useful while markets believe the Fed is
credible and the U.S. economy is resilient. If growth starts cracking, that
same dollar rally could lose momentum quickly.
So June ends with a market full of contradictions:
That is not
a clean bull market. It is a market where different asset classes are telling different stories.
For now, the
stock market is choosing the optimistic one. The risk is that crypto, metals,
oil, and the dollar may be warning that the story is more complicated than the Dow
record suggests.
The July
question is simple: is this rotation and stabilization after a wild first half,
or are the weakest speculative trades starting to break before the broader
market notices?
When the
“sure things” start needing rescue plans, it is usually worth paying attention.
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