Billionaire investor Leon Cooperman discusses artificial intelligence performance and market uncertainty amid geopolitical concerns on 'The Claman Countdown.'

Gary Shilling, the legendary forecaster known for his bearish accuracy and being fired from Merrill Lynch for predicting the 1969-70 recession, is sounding the alarm on a 2026 economic collapse.

In a recent interviewwith Business Insider,Shilling warned that a U.S. recession is "almost inevitable" by year-end, driven by a "frozen" housing market, corporate investment indicators and a weakening consumer base.

"Stocks are very expensive and there probably is a major correction coming somewhere in the relatively near future," Shilling said. "A decline of 20% or 30% is no big deal by historical standards. So I would say that's probably in the cards."

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"I've sort of made a career looking for those hidden flaws, and I don't see anything right now that is just screaming for a big sell-off, but that doesn't mean it isn't there," he added.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading on May 1, 2026, in New York City.(Getty Images)

Across American real estate, buyers and sellers have been reluctant to make moves as interest rates remain elevated, and mortgage loan rates slowly tick down. There is also a lack of affordable inventory andreports of rising foreclosures,signaling homeowners continue to get squeezed.

Shilling also pointed to what he described as a "collapse" in capital expenditures, or large investments that companies expect will last for years and boost overall future value. Business Insider cited that broader capital expenditures grew just 3.9% by the end of 2025, compared with a pandemic peak of 24% capex growth.

The economist spotlighted the state of the U.S. consumer as the third pillar leading to a recession, with the Federal Reserve'spreferred inflation gaugeremaining stubbornly high in March, rising 0.7% month-over-month and up 3.5% from a year ago.

Source: Drudge Report