*****************************************************************************

*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 June 17, 2026                             *

*                                                                           *

*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

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

*****************************************************************************

Fiend Commentary
================

The Market Is Buying the Pause Again

Tuesday’s market action was mixed, but the psychology was familiar: Wall Street still wants to believe the worst is over.

The Dow pushed to another record high, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq slipped. That split says more than the headline. This is no longer a clean broad-market rally. It is a selective market, rotating from one hot pocket to another, with a smaller group of stocks still doing most of the lifting.

SpaceX remains the perfect symbol of the moment. The stock surged again, briefly pushing into the same valuation neighborhood as the largest companies on Earth, while other technology and semiconductor names weakened. When a newly public company can become the market’s favorite object of speculation almost overnight, while the rest of the market quietly narrows, it is hard not to see late-cycle behavior.

The rally is not dead. But it is starting to look tired.

The ceasefire/MOU story is also getting more complicated. Oil continues to fall as traders price in a reopening of the Strait and a gradual return of supply. That gives the market exactly what it wants: lower energy prices, less immediate inflation pressure, and more room to pretend the shock is fading.

But the political response to the deal is less enthusiastic than the market response. There is skepticism on both sides. Supportive pundits are starting to sound less supportive. The reason is obvious: the key issues still look fuzzy. What happens to Iran’s enriched uranium? What happens to the nuclear infrastructure? Is the Strait truly open, or open under some new managed system? Will Iran be allowed to sell oil more freely while the hardest questions are pushed into another 60-day negotiation window?

Those are not small details. They are the deal.

Wall Street, however, is treating the MOU as if the second half of 2026 has already been de-risked. Lower oil today is enough. The market doesn’t seem interested in whether the agreement actually solves the problems that caused the war in the first place.

That brings us to the Fed.

Today’s meeting is largely expected to produce no rate change. The real focus will be the tone. Does Warsh lean into the recent inflation data and keep the door open to tighter policy later this year? Or does he talk patiently about temporary energy shocks, tariff pass-through, and the need to wait?

My guess is that the Fed will try to split the difference: no cut, no hike, and a lot of language about data dependence.

That may satisfy markets for a day, but it does not solve the larger contradiction. Inflation is still too high to justify rate cuts. Growth is uneven enough to make rate hikes dangerous. Oil has fallen, but the pass-through from months of higher energy and shipping costs may still show up. Tariffs have disappeared from the market narrative, but they have not disappeared from the cost structure.

This is exactly how “transitory inflation” gets reborn. The Fed can say the oil spike was temporary. Markets can say the war premium is coming out. Economists can say tariffs will fade from the year-over-year math. But the average household does not live in year-over-year math. It lives in prices.

If inflation eases quickly from here, the market’s optimism will look smart. If inflation stays sticky, then the Fed will look behind the curve again before Warsh has even settled into the chair.

So Wednesday’s setup is simple:

Stocks are hoping the Fed validates the relief trade.
Oil is hoping the deal is real.
Metals are trying to decide whether inflation is fading or policy credibility is weakening.
And the broader market is leaning more and more on a narrow group of speculative leaders.

That can keep working. But the margin for error is shrinking.

The market has spent weeks buying the idea that everything bad is temporary. Today, the Fed gets its first chance under Warsh to tell investors whether it agrees.

 


 

Weekly Market Summary Page
[Return to the Fiend's SuperBear Page]