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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* February 18,
2026 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
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Metals
Hold the Line as Bonds Whisper “Slowdown”
After the
Monday holiday, the first full session back had that uneasy, “feet not quite
planted” feeling. Stocks were choppy, headlines were thin, and the real action
was once again in the markets that tend to sniff out
trouble first: precious metals, rates, and the dollar.
Gold and
silver took another punch on Tuesday, then steadied and bounced overnight. Gold
briefly dipped below the $4,900 area before climbing back into the mid-$4,900s.
Silver probed down toward the low-$70s and then snapped back into the mid-$70s.
In other words, the selloff found buyers — quickly.
That’s worth
noting because it supports the idea that a base may be forming. It doesn’t mean
the volatility is over (far from it), but it does mean the market isn’t
behaving like a “one-and-done” peak. If gold can keep holding the
high-$4,800s/low-$4,900s zone and silver can keep defending the low-$70s, then
$5,000 in gold isn’t “a dream” — it’s just nearby overhead resistance.
Stocks are
telling a more complicated story. Tuesday’s close was slightly positive, but it
masked big intraday swings. The Dow’s ability to hang around major
psychological levels looks impressive at a glance, but
the broader market still feels heavy. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq are not acting
like markets in a clean, confident breakout — more like markets trying to stay
upright while leadership rotates and conviction comes and goes.
The bond
market, meanwhile, is quietly doing what it does before the headlines catch up:
it’s leaning toward caution. The 10-year yield is hovering just above 4% again,
near the low end of its recent range. That usually reflects some mix of “growth
is cooling,” “inflation isn’t re-accelerating right now,” and “the Fed will
eventually have to ease later this year if the data weakens.” You don’t need a
recession call for yields to drift down — you just need investors to start
preferring safety over stories.
And the
dollar? It’s not collapsing in a straight line, but it still looks vulnerable.
Even when it catches a brief bounce, it doesn’t feel like a currency the market
wants to own with conviction. That backdrop — shaky confidence in growth, lower
yields, and a dollar that struggles to sustain rallies — is exactly the kind of
environment where gold and silver can stay supported even when they get hit
hard in the short term.
What could
change the mood this week isn’t “big news.” It’s the next few data points that
markets use to confirm or reject the slowdown narrative. The Fed’s last meeting
minutes and the upcoming inflation data are the main checkpoints. If the tone
is cautious and the data keeps softening, traders will start pulling future
rate-cut expectations forward again — and that’s when metals tend to reassert
themselves.
For now, the
message is simple: stocks are trying to look calm, bonds are quietly cautious,
and the metals market is acting like it still doesn’t trust the long-term
story. When those three disagree, expect more whiplash — not less.
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