SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Non-Tech : The Woodshed

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: bull_dozer who wrote (60439)2/22/2022 8:07:43 PM
From: bull_dozer4 Recommendations

Recommended By
Johnny Canuck
Pianoman1997
roguedolphin
tntpal

  Read Replies (2) of 60902
 
Testing our Dow/Gold System

Bill Bonner

One century, six trades and 17,773 ounces of gold...

We don’t give investment advice in these daily columns. We just try to connect the dots. And one thing we notice is that they form patterns. Hope… despair. Empire… destruction. Summer… winter. Birth… death. Money-printing… inflation. One thing follows another, shaped by some age-old template.

Looking at the stock market, we see long cycles of boom and bust.

The problem with just staying ‘in the market,’ may leave you with a losing position for decades. In the US, after the crash of ’29, it took 26 years for stocks to recover, in inflation-adjusted terms. And in Japan, stocks crashed in 1989; they still have not recovered.

Trying to ‘time the market’ rarely pays off. But rarely is good enough for us. The most dangerous periods – when stocks are extremely overvalued – are rare too. And even an imperfect system for screening them out can be remarkably helpful.

There are times to hold ‘em, in other words, and times to walk away. There are also times to run. In preview, this is a way to tell when to put on your running shoes.

What we aim to do is only to dodge the “big loss.” When you’re young, the ‘big loss’ may be a learning experience. But when you are approaching retirement, losing a substantial part of your wealth can be a bummer.
...
...
Gold is real money. It is not perfect money, because it is heavy and hard to carry around with you. But it is still the best money ever discovered.

When you compare it to the Dow, you are juxtaposing two things that are in constant opposition, like fighting bucks whose horns have gotten locked together.

The Dow represents the flower of American prosperity; gold is the age-old measure of value. The Dow is hope; gold is experience. The Dow is the future; gold is the past. The Dow is dreams; gold is reality.

Companies can create an almost unlimited amount of wealth; but there is only so much gold to measure it. So, in terms of gold, the price of America’s top corporations (the Dow) goes up and down… but never strays too far from its long-term mean – around 10 ounces of gold to the Dow.


One Century, Six trades


Just go back to when the Fed was set up, in 1913. Imagine that you followed a simple rule: you bought stocks when the Dow traded for 5 ounces of gold, or less… and you sold your stocks and bought gold when the Dow sold for 15 ounces of gold or more.

Right off the bat, you would have taken your nest egg – say, $100 – and bought stocks. They were trading at 4 ounces to the Dow in 1913. Then, they got even cheaper as WWI began. But you don’t have to read the news or study the claptrap put out by economists. You just stick with the system.

You sell your stocks and buy gold in 1929, when the Dow/Gold ratio goes over 15… and buy back into stocks in 1932, when the ratio collapses to under 5 again.

The next move is a stock sale 27 years later, when the ratio crosses the 15 mark… followed by another buy in 1974. That is the beginning of another bull market. You stick with it until it reaches a Dow/Gold ratio of 15. Then, you make your final move – selling out of stocks. You’ve been in gold ever since.

What? You missed the biggest bull market in history… from the depths of the mortgage finance crash in 2009 to today’s peaks. You also missed the glory years of the dot.com bubble – from 1996 to 2000. How could this be a good trade?

Well, after the Dotcom crash… and the Mortgage Finance crash… the ratio never fell to our 5 target. So we never bought back into the stock market. We’ve been out of stocks for the last 26 years, patiently biding our time in gold.

And yet, with this trading system – with only 6 trades in the last 100 years – you would have turned 4 ounces of gold in 1913 into 17,773 ounces of gold today. Your original $100 would now be worth about $33 million.


The current Dow/Gold ratio is 18. And by almost all other measures, US stocks are at an all-time high. Do you have your running shoes on yet?


bonnerprivateresearch.substack.com
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext