Home Categories Submit Republish Tools Links Credits Contact
Popular Articles
 
     
 
 Categories
 
 
Submit your articles online!

Dow Jones Gold Ratio: Making Money From This All-Important Indicator

By: Michael Lombardi, MBA

Published: February 1, 2011
Link To Article Link To Article  E-mail Article E-mail Article  Republish Article Republish Article
If you are a stock market investor or a gold investor, or both, today’s PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL is a must-read. Why? Because, by the time you are finished reading this issue, you could very well be convinced long-term that the stock market is going down and gold is going up. And you can make a lot of money from these moves.

Let’s start with the important numbers all investors should be aware of:

Stock history first: The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened the year 2000 at 10,786. The same index ended 2010 at 11,577.50. In a nutshell, if you were an investor in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, your capital gain appreciation over the past 11 years would have been a paltry 7.3%. (No wonder we have always preferred micro-cap stocks, penny stocks and small-cap stocks!)

Gold history now: At the beginning of the year 2000, gold bullion was trading at $280.00 per ounce. Gold bullion closed out 2010 at $1,422 per ounce—a gain of 407% in 11 years.

Now, let’s pretend you can’t buy the stocks that comprise the Dow Jones Industrial Average in U.S. dollars, but you can only buy them with gold bullion. Taking the numbers above, in 2000, it would have taken 38.5 ounces of gold to buy the Dow Jones Industrial Average. At the end of 2010, it would have taken only 8.2 ounces of gold to buy the Dow Jones Industrial Average. In other words, when measured in gold and not dollars, the value of the 30 big stocks that make up the Dow Jones Industrials has plummeted over the past decade.

Now, when we look back at almost a century of data in respect to the relationship between gold bullion and the Dow Jones Industrials (often referred to as the Dow Jones Gold Ratio), it gets really interesting.

In the period from 1930 to 1949, a 19-year span, the price of the Dow Jones Industrial Average measured in gold bullion was under 5.0 (during that 19-year period it would have taken less than five ounces of gold to figuratively buy the Dow Jones Industrial Averages’ index).

In the period from 1974 to 1989, a 15-year span, the price of the Dow Jones Industrial Average measured in gold bullion was under 5.0 again.

As I started writing years ago, with the sharp rise in the price of gold since the year 2000, I believe we are entering another multi-year period where it will cost less than five ounces of gold to buy the Dow Jones Industrial Average. To see that happen, the price of gold needs to rise sharply, or the stock market has to come down, or both events need to occur.

Now the scary part: over the last century there have been three times when only one ounce of gold could buy the Dow Jones Industrial Average. If we are headed close to that level again (which I believe we are), fortunes will be made over the next few years on the long side of gold and short side of stocks.

Michael’s Personal Notes:

Words of wisdom from our esteemed technical analyst, Anthony Jasansky, P. Eng., on President Obama inadvertently putting the brakes on the stock market rally:

"Money talks, and it has been talking very loud after Uncle Ben started the money printing presses at the old Fed in late 2008. He was so impressed by the results of the magical out-of-thin air creation of $1.75 trillion—dubbed ingeniously as ‘quantitative easing (QE)’—that, in the fall of 2010, he cranked up the printing presses again, launching the $600-billion QE2.

"Though these two huge money injections have been credited with reversing financial and economic calamity, they still fell short on some important fronts. Among the notable failings of QE are the anemic recovery in GDP, lack of growth in employment, continued weakness in residential and commercial real estate, the battered U.S. dollar, and unexpectedly higher yields of long-term treasuries and bonds.

"When recently questioned on the effectiveness of QE, the Fed’s chairman has pointed to the strong stock market as one important benefit. Without missing a beat, the U.S. President in his January 25 State of the Union speech mentioned the recovery in the stock market as being the result of government actions to prevent a depression. Knowing how perverse the market can be, Obama’s bullish assertion may turn out be a timely signal for the stocks to take a deep breather."

More Information:

Read more on:

http://www.profitconfidential.com/stock-market-advice/3992/

http://www.profitconfidential.com/stock-market-advice/small-cap-tech-stock-returns-excellent-but-have-you-missed-the-boat/

http://www.profitconfidential.com/stock-market-advice/investor%E2%80%99s-market-update-stock-charts-bullish/


Visitor Comments

Post Comment Post A Comment
What do you think about this article? Do you agree or disagree with it? Be the first to comment on this article, and share your thoughts with the world. No registration is required to post comments.

Article Icon Continuing Education For Older Adults
Continuing education for older adults allows them to refresh their many skills. Older adults may sometimes need to relearn something they learned several years earlier in order to keep their job. They may also
Article Icon The Importance Of Financial Trends
Financial trends are not always easy to see. In other terms, interpreting a pattern goes well beyond the apparent. In any given data, you will probably observe that costs do not usually shift in an immediately
Article Icon How To Get The Right Advice On Business And Finance
It is important for you to look for the right advice on business and finance. You will be sure that the information you get will be best for your businesses. Make sure that you are able to brainstorm some...
Article Icon Important Factors To Consider When Identifying Coin Dealers
One can choose to go directly to coin dealers to gain access to precious metals investment instruments. These instruments are more familiar to most of us as coins and bars made out of precious metal-gold...
Article Icon The Second Recession: What It Will Feel Like
Why Michael expects we will fall into a recession soon.
Article Icon Michael's Top Seven Reasons To Worry
Michael's top seven reasons to worry about the U.S. economy.
Article Icon Ways To Curb Instances Of Kredi Karti Borcu
Many people around the world are financially subjugated under possible credit card debt and are much prone to a recurrence of the process too.
Article Icon PPI Refund
Did you know that there are companies set up with the sole purpose of helping you claim a PPI refund? You might not know it;
Article Icon Economic Recovery: Trouble In Paradise
Looks like trouble in paradise... We hear and read all kinds of reports telling us that the economy is improving, yet yesterday the Conference Board reported that its index of U.S. leading indicators fell...
Article Icon Why Should I Invest In An ISA. And When?
Make the best of your ISA allowance for 2011 or get a great deal on your SIPP with Fidelity International. Visit us now to invest online!

Article Icon Iconic Chart Shows Biggest Devaluation Of Our Generation
Yesterday, China's central bank said its foreign-exchange reserves have hit $3.0 trillion for the first time in its history. China is awash in dollars. The U.S. itself has too many dollars floating in its...
Article Icon The Bear Market: When It Will Take The Chips Away Again
Article Summary - As you read my regular column section below, "Where the Market Stands; Where it's Headed," you'll see that long-term interest rates have hit a new eight-month high. In fact, the yield of...
Article Icon Why 2011 Will Not Be The Easy Year Most Investors Expect
Why the year 2011 will not be the easy year that most investors and analysts expect.
Article Icon The Untold Inflation Story: Investor Risks And Opportunities
What U.S. investors need to know about inflation and the risks and opportunities it presents.
Article Icon Worst Investment You Can Make In 2011
Why bonds are a bad investment right now.
Article Icon Gold Investing: The Time To Jump Back In Is Very Near
Gold prices are falling, which could mean a good opportunity to buy gold or gold-related investments.
Article Icon The Stock Market: A Word Of Caution As We Start 2011
While I take no pride in being the bearer of bad news so early in 2011, events are unfolding in the stock market that require immediate caution on the part of my readers. Specifically, an indicator I follow...


Print This Article Print This Article
Add To Favorites Add To Favorites
Cite This Article Cite This Article
 
 
Home | Categories | Submit | Republish | Tools | Links | Credits | Contact | Privacy Statement | Terms Of Use
Copyright © 2012 InfoServe Media, LLC (DBA PopularArticles.com). All rights reserved.