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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 July 15, 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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Transitory Rides Again

Tuesday’s CPI report gave Wall Street exactly what it wanted: a big enough drop in headline inflation to knock the near-term rate-hike panic off the table.

CPI fell sharply in June, with the annual rate dropping to 3.5% from 4.2% in May. That is a big move, and on the surface it looks like relief. But the reason should surprise no one: oil and gasoline prices plunged during the month. When energy prices fall that hard, headline inflation falls with them.

The market immediately took the number and ran with it.

Only a few days ago, traders were beginning to talk seriously about a possible July hike. After the CPI report, that idea was quickly pushed aside. Now the conversation is already drifting back toward the familiar dovish script: if inflation is cooling and the economy is uneven, maybe the Fed can stay patient. Give it another weak report or two, and don’t be surprised if the word “cuts” starts creeping back into the conversation.

That is how fast Wall Street’s bias toward lower rates reasserts itself.

But the bond market was not nearly as impressed.

Yields dipped at the short end, but the longer end remains stubbornly elevated. The 10-year is still around the mid-4% area, and the 30-year is still near levels that should make stock bulls uncomfortable. That tells you the bond market is willing to acknowledge one softer inflation report, but it is not ready to declare the inflation problem solved.

And it shouldn’t be.

A single CPI report does not erase the larger issue. Inflation is still well above the Fed’s 2% target. Core inflation is still not clean. Tariffs have not disappeared from the cost structure. The dollar has already had a big rally. Oil has bounced again with the renewed Middle East conflict. If crude keeps rising, the next few reports could start moving the other way again.

That is the danger of reviving the “transitory” argument too quickly.

The market wants to believe the June inflation drop is the beginning of a trend. It may be. But it could also be the after-effect of one temporary oil-price collapse that is already reversing. If oil fell because the war premium came out, and then the war premium starts coming back in, the inflation relief may have a short shelf life.

The Middle East conflict is now almost background noise, which is remarkable considering how large the headlines still are. There are strikes, threats, tanker concerns, and continuing uncertainty over the Strait. Earlier this year, any one of those stories would have sent markets into convulsions. Now traders shrug unless the oil price moves enough to change the Fed math.

That is the new market logic: geopolitics only matters if it moves inflation.

The Fed now has a more complicated job. The CPI report gives Warsh cover to avoid a July hike. It does not give him cover to cut. Inflation is too high for that. The economy may be too uneven to hike aggressively, but the Fed cannot credibly pivot dovish just because gasoline prices dropped for one month.

So the most likely Fed path is still no move, tougher language, and another round of “data dependence.”

That may be enough for stocks in the short run. Investors love a market where inflation cools just enough to stop hikes, but not enough to signal recession. That is the sweet spot Wall Street is trying to buy.

But the longer-term question remains unanswered: is inflation really cooling, or did energy just give everyone a one-month hall pass?

If oil stays contained and core inflation keeps easing, the bulls will have another reason to push records higher. If oil rebounds and core prices remain sticky, Tuesday’s celebration will look premature.

For now, Wall Street is doing what it always does: taking one friendly data point and stretching it into a whole new story.

The bond market is not fully buying it yet.

And neither should anyone else.


 

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