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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 July 8, 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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The Ceasefire That Isn’t

Tuesday was another reminder that markets are still treating the Middle East like a nuisance rather than a structural risk.

The ceasefire failed again, with both sides accusing the other of violations, fresh strikes, and the kind of “temporary calm” that seems to last only until the next headline. Yet stocks barely look rattled. They slipped, but from very elevated levels, and the VIX remains parked in the mid-teens — hardly the panic zone.

That may be the strangest part of this entire market.

Oil jumped on the renewed fighting, but not enough to create a real scare. Stocks fell, but not enough to break the bullish mood. Bitcoin dipped again despite another round of pro-crypto jawboning from Trump. Bond yields, however, moved in a way that deserves more attention: the 30-year climbed back above 5%, and the 10-year pushed above 4.5%.

That is the real story.

The stock market is still saying, “This will be fine.”
The bond market is saying, “Prove it.”

A 5% handle on the long bond is not just a number. It is the cost of long-term money. It affects mortgages, corporate borrowing, private credit, government interest costs, and the valuation math behind high-growth stocks. When the 30-year moves back above 5% while the VIX barely flinches, it means complacency is still alive even as the market’s foundation gets more expensive.

This is the problem with the current “ceasefire.” It is not peace. It is a pause that keeps needing emergency repairs. The market keeps assuming the conflict will be contained long enough for oil to stay manageable and inflation to keep cooling. But each new violation chips away at that assumption.

The Strait of Hormuz remains the central issue. Iran still appears to believe it can use control over the Strait as leverage. The U.S. cannot accept that as a permanent arrangement. That is not a diplomatic detail. It is the entire problem. If one side thinks the Strait is a bargaining chip and the other side thinks it is an international waterway that must stay open, then the “deal” is not really a deal. It is a temporary disagreement with paperwork.

Bitcoin is also worth watching because it is behaving like a speculative asset under pressure, not a safe haven. Trump can talk up crypto, and prices can bounce for a few hours, but the broader trend still looks weak. The Strategy/Saylor complex has already shown that the “never sell” logic starts to break once the asset stops going up. If Bitcoin rolls over again, crypto-related stocks may not get another easy rescue from political cheerleading.

So Wednesday’s setup is simple: the market remains confident, but the parts underneath are less reassuring.

Oil is no longer collapsing.
The ceasefire is no longer credible.
The long bond is back above 5%.
The 10-year is back above 4.5%.
Crypto remains fragile.
The VIX says nobody is afraid.

That last point may be the most dangerous. When markets are calm because the risks are solved, that is one thing. When markets are calm because investors have trained themselves to ignore the risks, that is something else entirely.

For now, Wall Street is still betting that every rupture can be patched before it matters.

But the bond market is starting to charge interest on that optimism.

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