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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 June 3, 2026                              *

*                                                                           *

*                       e-mail: fiendbear@fiendbear.com                     *

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

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Fiend Commentary
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The Rally Is Getting Narrower Even as the Indexes Get Higher

Wednesday’s setup is familiar: oil is still elevated, the war is still unresolved, and stocks are still pressing records as if none of it matters.

That may be the most important message of all.

The market has become very good at treating every geopolitical scare as temporary and every dip as a buying opportunity. Oil near the mid-$90s is no longer shocking anyone. A fragile ceasefire no longer scares anyone. A stalled negotiation no longer slows the tape. As long as AI leadership keeps working, investors seem willing to ignore almost everything else.

But the internal market is telling a more complicated story.

The S&P 500 has been rising relentlessly, yet breadth has started flashing warning signs. For several sessions, more S&P 500 stocks fell than rose even as the index kept climbing. That is a rare divergence. It means the index is being pulled higher by a smaller group of powerful stocks rather than lifted by broad participation.

That does not mean a top has to happen tomorrow. Narrow rallies can last longer than skeptics expect. But it does mean the market is becoming more dependent on a shrinking leadership group. If those leaders stumble, there may not be much underneath to cushion the fall.

That is especially important because the rally is still leaning heavily on AI and mega-cap technology. Those stocks are acting like the market’s escape hatch: if the world is messy, buy the companies supposedly big enough and profitable enough to rise above it. The problem is that the more money crowds into the same “safe growth” names, the more fragile the trade becomes.

Meanwhile, the oil market is not exactly confirming the happy ending. Brent is still around the mid-to-high $90s, and WTI is in the mid-$90s as well. That is lower than the panic highs, but it is not cheap. If the Strait remains only partly functional, or if shipping and insurance costs remain elevated, this is not just an oil chart. It is a cost structure problem.

The danger is duration. A short oil shock can be ignored. A long one becomes embedded.

The economy was already uneven before oil became a recurring problem. Consumers were already stretched. Inflation was already sticky. The Fed was already boxed in. A few more weeks of elevated energy costs may not create an immediate crisis, but it can slowly poison the “soft landing” story by keeping inflation pressure alive while growth momentum fades.

That’s where the current bullish sentiment feels stretched. Goldman’s David Solomon recently said there is more greed than fear on Wall Street. That sounds about right. Recession concern has faded. Big downturn concern has faded. The default assumption is that AI, earnings, and liquidity will overpower everything else.

Maybe they will.

But it is worth remembering that the most dangerous markets are often the ones where investors stop asking “what could go wrong?” and start assuming every answer will be bullish anyway.

For now, Wall Street is saying:

  • the war won’t widen,
  • oil won’t stay high long enough to matter,
  • inflation won’t re-accelerate meaningfully,
  • the Fed won’t have to get tougher,
  • and AI leadership will continue to carry the indexes.

That is a very optimistic chain.

The stock market may keep rising. But if the advance keeps narrowing while oil stays elevated and economic stress builds under the surface, the risk is not just a selloff. The risk is that the next selloff comes with fewer buyers underneath than the index level suggests.

Records are exciting. Breadth tells you how sturdy they are.

Right now, the records look impressive. The foundation looks less convincing.


 

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