

The gauge on the left indicates bull or bear market status, while the right reflects stock market drawdown risk.
Bull/Bear Market
The Bull/Bear indicator remains at 60%, with two of five leading indicators signaling risk-off:
Weekly continued claims increased to 1.974 million on June 14, warning that the labor market is deteriorating. Unemployment was at 4.2% in May, but will likely rise in the next few months.
Stock Pricing
Stock pricing increased to 96.96, compared to a low of 95.04 ten weeks ago and a high of 97.79 percent in February. The extreme reading warns that stocks are at risk of a significant drawdown.
We use z-scores to measure each indicator’s current position relative to its history, with the result expressed in standard deviations from the mean. We then calculate an average for the five readings and convert that to a percentile. The higher that stock market pricing is relative to its historical mean, the greater the risk of a sharp drawdown.
Robert Shiller’s CAPE compares the S&P 500 index against a ten-year average of inflation-adjusted earnings. CAPE increased to 37.29, approaching its December 2021 high of 38.31, which was only previously surpassed during the Dotcom bubble of 1999-2000.
The previous high was 32.56, before the stock market crash of October 1929, shown on Shiller’s long-term chart below.
Conclusion
We are in the early stages of a bear market, with the bull-bear indicator at 60%. Extreme stock pricing increases the risk of a significant drawdown.
Acknowledgments
- Prof. Robert Shiller: CAPE 10 Data
- S&P Global: S&P 500 Sales and Earnings Estimates
- University of Michigan: Survey of Consumers
- Federal Reserve of St Louis: FRED Data
- Bureau for Economic Analysis: Motor Vehicles Data
Notes
- See Managing Risk to learn more.
- See Bull-Bear and Stock Valuation for more on our composite market indicators.

Colin Twiggs is a former investment banker with almost 40 years of experience in financial markets. He co-founded Incredible Charts and writes the popular Trading Diary and Patient Investor newsletters.
Using a top-down approach, Colin identifies key macro trends in the global economy before evaluating selected opportunities using a combination of fundamental and technical analysis.
Focusing on interest rates and financial market liquidity as primary drivers of the economic cycle, he warned of the 2008/2009 and 2020 bear markets well ahead of actual events.
He founded PVT Capital (AFSL No. 546090) in May 2023, which offers investment strategy and advice to wholesale clients.