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*                       FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET REPORT                     *

*                                 June 24, 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 Dollar Is Calling Warsh’s Bluff — For Now

The big story in metals is not complicated: the market suddenly believes Kevin Warsh is a hawk.

Gold has been knocked back toward the low-$4,000s, silver has been hit even harder from its early-year extremes, and the dollar has surged to its strongest level in more than a year. That is not the old “easy money is coming” trade. That is the market pricing a Fed that may keep rates high, talk tough, and perhaps even hike later this year.

But there’s a big difference between talking like a hawk and actually being one.

So far, what has Warsh done? He has not cut rates. That’s it. He held the line at his first meeting and delivered a hawkish press conference. That was enough to change the psychology of the market. A few months ago, traders were debating how many cuts were coming in 2026. Now the futures market is assigning a serious chance of a hike before the midterms.

That is a huge narrative shift.

But is it believable?

The Fed may want the bond market to believe it is serious. Warsh may want to establish credibility quickly. And after the ugly inflation reports, he almost has to sound tough. But hiking before the midterms would be political dynamite, especially under a president who has made no secret of wanting lower rates, higher asset prices, and a cheap-credit sugar high.

That is why this feels like jawboning.

The Fed is trying to cool inflation expectations with words because actual rate hikes would be painful. They would hit stocks, housing, private credit, commercial real estate, and federal interest costs. They would also directly conflict with the political pressure that will almost certainly build if the economy softens later this year.

For now, the jawboning is working.

The dollar is stronger. Metals are weaker. Crypto is struggling. Speculative assets are suddenly less comfortable. The rate-cut fantasy has been pushed out of the room.

But the bond market is more interesting. Yields have stayed elevated, but they have not exploded higher in the last few sessions. That suggests the market is listening to Warsh, but not fully convinced yet. The long end is basically saying: “Fine, you sound serious. Now prove it.”

That is the test.

If inflation reports keep coming in hot and the Fed does nothing beyond tough talk, the bond market will eventually call the bluff. Long yields will rise again, the dollar rally could become unstable, and the metals could stop falling because investors would begin to see the Fed as trapped rather than credible.

That’s the key distinction:

  • Metals fall when the market believes the Fed will fight inflation.
  • Metals rise when the market believes inflation will be tolerated.

Right now, gold and silver are trading the first scenario. The market believes Warsh may actually try to restore discipline. But if that belief fades, the reversal could be sharp.

The irony is that inflation itself hasn’t gone away. The war may have cooled somewhat, oil has come off the highs, and the Strait drama has been pushed into the background. But the price level remains high, tariffs are still in the pipeline, money growth has picked up, and the Fed’s balance sheet is no longer shrinking the way it was. Calling inflation temporary does not make it temporary.

That is where Warsh risks walking into the same trap as past Fed chairs. If he talks tough but waits too long, he looks like Arthur Burns. If he truly tightens into weakness, he risks breaking markets. If he protects markets when they wobble, he looks like Greenspan with a sterner vocabulary.

So how long before the jawboning is exposed?

Probably when one of three things happens:

1.     Inflation stays hot for another round or two, and the Fed still refuses to hike.

2.     Employment weakens sharply, and the pressure for cuts returns immediately.

3.     Stocks fall hard enough that “price stability” suddenly becomes less important than “market functioning.”

Until then, the market may continue to give Warsh the benefit of the doubt.

But the burden of proof is now on him. A hawkish press conference can move the dollar for a while. It can pressure gold and silver. It can scare crypto. It can even hold the bond market in check temporarily.

But credibility is not built with tone. It is built with action.

And if the new Fed chair talks like Volcker but acts like Greenspan, the metals market will eventually notice.


 

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