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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                               February 24, 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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50K Hangover: Stocks Slip, Metals Hold Firm, and Bonds Keep Whispering “Inflation”

Monday was the kind of session that reminds you how quickly “inevitable” turns into “fragile.”

After flirting with the psychological fireworks of Dow 50,000, the market suddenly acted like it remembered something important: prices still matter, interest rates still matter, and not every shiny narrative survives contact with higher yields, trade uncertainty, and a world that won’t sit still.

The Dow fell 821.91 points (‑1.66%) to 48,804.06, while the S&P 500 dropped 1.04% to 6,837.75 and the Nasdaq slid 1.13% to 22,627.27. Small caps were hit too, with the Russell 2000 down 1.61%. That’s not a “crash,” but it’s a meaningful slap after weeks of “nothing can touch this market.”

And here’s the part that should keep everyone honest: the Dow is still up year-to-date, but the Nasdaq is down for the year and the S&P 500 has barely moved. That’s not a broad, healthy advance — it’s a narrow one. When leadership gets tired, the whole parade looks different.

Why the tape changed: the bond market won’t play along

Stocks can tell stories. Bonds keep score.

Even as equity bulls talk about “the next cut,” the long end keeps refusing to behave. The U.S. 10-year yield was around 4.04% early Tuesday, and the stubbornness of longer yields continues to say the quiet part out loud: the bond market is not convinced inflation is dead, and it’s not convinced policy risk is going away.

That matters because a lot of this cycle has been built on the assumption that the Fed always rides to the rescue — quickly, aggressively, and with a printing press if needed. But the Fed can’t credibly sprint back to easy money if inflation indicators start pushing the wrong way again.

One example: the New York Fed’s Multivariate Core Trend inflation measure ticked up to 2.8% in December from 2.4% previously. That’s not “mission accomplished” — that’s inflation with a pulse.

Bitcoin is acting like a risk asset again

Bitcoin didn’t “diversify” anyone on Monday. It behaved like what it often is in practice: a high-beta expression of risk appetite.

Bitcoin fell about 4% on Monday, briefly dipping below $64,000 and trading around the mid‑$64,000 area. That puts the $60,000 handle back in view — not because $60K is magical, but because it’s where psychology changes. When traders start talking in round numbers, you’re already in the zone where forced selling can show up fast.

If the Nasdaq is forming a rolling top, crypto usually doesn’t get a free pass.

Meanwhile, gold and silver are sending a different message

Here’s the disconnect that makes this market so fascinating — and so dangerous:

  • Stocks sold off.
  • Bitcoin sold off.
  • Gold jumped hard anyway.
  • Silver stayed elevated and volatile.

Gold rose strongly on Monday (up over 2% at one point), then slipped early Tuesday to about $5,167 as traders took profits after the surge. Silver was around $87 and change early Tuesday — down on the day, but still nowhere near the panic lows from earlier this month when it briefly traded into the low $70s.

This doesn’t look like “the end of the metals move.” It looks like a market trying to decide whether metals are a trade… or a verdict.

When gold and silver keep finding buyers after selloffs — while the dollar struggles and bonds refuse to fully relax — that usually isn’t about greed. It’s about doubt. Doubt about inflation. Doubt about fiscal discipline. Doubt about what the next “fix” is going to look like.

Tariffs, geopolitics, and oil: the inflation accelerant nobody wants to talk about

If you want an inflation story that doesn’t require any exotic theories, start here: oil.

Brent crude traded around $72 and U.S. crude near $67, with traders focused on U.S.–Iran tensions ahead of another round of nuclear talks. Even without an actual supply disruption, the mere risk premium can lift prices — and that’s exactly the kind of pressure that shows up later in transportation and everyday costs.

Layer on trade policy uncertainty (tariffs, legal rulings, countermeasures, retaliation threats), and you get the recipe for the kind of inflation that’s hardest to extinguish: the kind that seeps into everything and gets “normalized.”

My view: tech led the bull… and it will lead the bear when it turns

If the next leg down comes, it’s unlikely to start with the boring stuff. It starts with leadership cracking.

Tech led the current bull market higher. If the Nasdaq is indeed tracing a broad topping process — months of churning, stalled breakouts, heavy dependence on a shrinking number of names — then the next risk isn’t “a bad day.” The risk is a regime change where rallies stop being reflexively bought.

That’s when investors discover the difference between a strong market and an expensive one.

What to watch next (the real “tell” for spring)

If you want a simple dashboard for the next few weeks, here it is:

  1. Does the 30-year yield push convincingly toward 5% again?
    If long yields rise while growth data weakens, that’s a nasty mix for stocks.
  2. Does the dollar resume its slide?
    A weaker dollar plus sticky inflation is exactly the box the Fed doesn’t want to be trapped in.
  3. Do gold and silver hold their higher lows?
    If metals stay bid even when risk assets wobble, that’s a message — and it isn’t “everything is fine.”
  4. Do we get more “mixed” economic numbers that later get revised away?
    At some point, markets stop treating revisions as trivia.

Bottom line: Tuesday feels like a market trying to regain its footing after a sudden reminder that easy narratives don’t cancel hard math. The spring setup is clear — inflation pressure is not gone, growth is uneven, geopolitics is a wildcard, and the bond market is not signing off on the party.

If tech rolls over for real, it won’t be a gentle fade. It will be the kind of shift where investors realize — all at once — that they were pricing perfection in a world that doesn’t do perfection.


 

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