DORADO, PUERTO RICO / Content Syndication Services / — Peter Schiff, chief economist and global strategist at Euro Pacific Asset Management, has renewed his warning that U.S. equities are vulnerable after a prolonged advance that left major benchmarks trading near record levels. In a published interview, Schiff described the U.S. stock market as a “ticking time bomb” and said investors were underestimating risks tied to high valuations, federal debt, inflation and the dollar. His comments placed renewed attention on a bearish market view he has advanced for years.

Schiff said U.S. stocks were expensive by conventional valuation measures and argued that investors had accepted elevated prices because markets continued to rise. He said that position left shares exposed to repricing if economic or financial conditions weakened. He also repeated his preference for assets outside mainstream U.S. equity and bond exposure, including psrecious metals, resource companies, foreign stocks, selected overseas bonds and commodity linked businesses. Euro Pacific Asset Management lists international diversification as a central part of its investment approach.
Recent market data show the warning was issued while U.S. equities remained elevated rather than during a confirmed market breakdown. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, a widely tracked proxy for the S&P 500, was quoted at $759.57 on June 3, 2026. FactSet reported that the S&P 500 forward 12 month price to earnings ratio stood at 21.4 in late May, above its five year average of 19.9 and its 10 year average of 18.9.
Valuations remain above recent averages
The macroeconomic backdrop also showed a mix of growth, persistent inflation and tight monetary policy. The Bureau of Economic Analysis said real gross domestic product grew at a 1.6 percent annual rate in the first quarter of 2026, revised down from an earlier estimate of 2.0 percent. The agency said the revision reflected weaker consumer spending and investment than initially reported. Real gross domestic income rose 0.9 percent in the quarter, while the average of GDP and GDI increased 1.3 percent.
Inflation remained above the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent objective. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the consumer price index rose 3.8 percent for the 12 months ending in April 2026, up from 3.3 percent in March. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose 2.8 percent over the same period. The Federal Reserve kept the federal funds target range at 3.5 percent to 3.75 percent at its April 29 policy meeting and said it remained committed to returning inflation to target.
Debt and rates shape market debate
Federal debt levels formed an cother part of the factual setting for Schiff’s warning. The U.S. Treasury’s daily debt data placed total public debt outstanding near $39 trillion in early June 2026, with debt held by the public accounting for the majority of that total. Higher debt levels and interest costs have remained central topics for investors assessing Treasury supply, federal borrowing needs and the role of U.S. government securities in portfolios. Schiff said he saw little reason for long term investors to hold U.S. bonds.
Official data do not show that a U.S. recession has been declared in 2026. The National Bureau of Economic Research is the private organization that maintains the U.S. business cycle chronology, and its dating process is separate from market forecasts and investor commentary. Schiff’s remarks therefore stand as a market warning from a known bearish commentator, set against confirmed facts that include elevated equity valuations, positive but slower growth, above target inflation, steady Federal Reserve rates and historically high federal debt.
