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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 January 28, 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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When the Dollar Slips, Gold Roars, and Wall Street Shrugs

If you’re trying to make sense of this week’s tape, here’s the cleanest way to frame it: confidence is leaking out of the currency and out of the consumer — and it’s pouring into hard assets — while equities keep acting like none of it matters.

Gold just pushed to a fresh record above $5,200 and silver is back in full sprint (north of $110 again). That kind of move isn’t a “normal inflation hedge.” It’s the market’s way of saying: something is off in the plumbing of trust — trust in future purchasing power, trust in policy discipline, trust that “we’ve got inflation handled.” When gold is screaming and the volatility index is yawning, that’s not calm. That’s complacency wearing a seatbelt.

Consumers are sending a very different message than stocks

The Conference Board’s consumer confidence just took a hard dive — down to the lowest level since 2014, with commentary that it’s even weaker than the pandemic-era lows. This matters because the U.S. economy is still, at its core, a confidence machine. When consumers feel trapped, they don’t need to “panic” to change behavior — they simply pull back, delay big purchases, and get defensive. That’s how slowdowns take hold.

The dollar’s drop is a louder signal than most investors want to admit

The U.S. dollar sliding to a four-year low isn’t just a chart event. It’s an accelerant:

  • A weaker dollar mechanically supports commodity prices.
  • It complicates inflation control at the exact wrong moment.
  • It can force policymakers into ugly tradeoffs: support growth/markets vs. defend the currency’s credibility.

And now you’ve got currency markets watching Japan closely, with officials talking about close coordination with the U.S. as yen volatility heats up. The point isn’t whether there’s intervention. The point is that currencies are starting to behave like a problem again, and when that happens, it rarely stays “contained” for long.

Bonds are the quiet stress-test

While the Fed is widely expected to hold steady this week, the long end of the Treasury market remains the potential tripwire. The 10-year has been hanging around the low 4’s, and the 30-year has been flirting with the psychological 5% zone again. If long yields start pushing higher while the dollar is falling, that’s when markets stop calling it “growth” and start calling it risk premium.

Stocks: record highs… with a weird kind of fragility underneath

The Dow took a hit largely because one heavyweight name got crushed (UnitedHealth), yet the S&P 500 still managed a new high and is sitting just shy of 7,000. That split personality is important. It tells you:

  • The broad market is still being levitated by big flows and big leadership.
  • But underneath, there’s more single-stock and sector landmine risk than the index level suggests.

And the VIX staying parked in the mid-teens reinforces the bigger theme: investors keep assuming tomorrow will look like yesterday, even though currencies, metals, and confidence indicators are flashing something very different.

What to watch next

1.     Powell’s tone: If the Fed downplays the dollar slide and the metal surge, it may pour more fuel on the “hard assets vs. paper assets” narrative.

2.     The shutdown clock: Another funding cliff is approaching fast, and markets have grown dangerously accustomed to treating shutdown threats like background noise.

3.     The next leg in yields: If the long bond starts acting heavy again, it can change everything quickly — housing, corporate credit, and equity multiples don’t handle a renewed yield surge well.

Bottom line: This is starting to look like a market that’s divided into two camps — one camp buying the “everything is fine” story through indexes, and another camp buying insurance through metals and currencies. When those two stories diverge this sharply, it usually means the next surprise won’t be small.

 


 

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