Weekly Market Update by Retirement Lifestyle Advocates

          A couple of weeks ago, I talked in detail about the Dow to Gold ratio.  In case you happened to miss that discussion, the Dow to Gold ratio prices the Dow Jones Industrial Average in gold, rather than in US Dollars.

          The reason that it’s important to pay attention to the Dow to Gold ratio is that it gives one a clearer picture of the true value of stocks.

          As the US Dollar is devalued via currency creation, any asset priced in US dollars sees its price increase as the value of the US Dollar declines or is devalued.  For that reason, it’s important to look at the real value of an asset rather than the asset’s nominal value, priced in US Dollars.

          In the piece that I wrote a couple of weeks ago, I pointed out that when the Dow to Gold ratio reaches one, historically speaking, it’s always been a good time to buy stocks. 

          Presently, the Dow to Gold ratio stands at 16.3, which is a far cry from one but also a long way from the 43+ recorded at the peak of the tech stock bubble.

          It’s interesting to consider what the world might look like today had Nixon not eliminated the direct link between the US Dollar and gold, a move that started the inevitable and ongoing devaluation of the US Dollar.

          John Rubino, a past guest on the RLA Radio program, recently pondered that question on his substack.  I’d encourage you to check it out.  (Source:  https://rubino.substack.com/p/a-world-priced-in-gold)

          Here is an excerpt from Mr. Rubino’s piece:

Pretend, for a moment, that it’s 1971 and you’re President Richard Nixon (admittedly disturbing fantasies, but bear with me). You face the perennial government income/outflow dilemmas, and other countries, noting your struggle, are trying to cash their dollars in for your limited pile of gold bars.

But this time around you don’t cave and “close the gold window,” ushering in the Age of Fiat Currencies. Instead, you cut spending and raise revenues however you have to. You balance your budget and convince your trading partners that the dollar remains “good as gold.”

Thanks to you, the US and by extension the world remains on the post-WW II Bretton Woods quasi gold standard. And what follows is very different.

But how different, exactly? How would a sound-money world depart from the financial train wreck that we’ve come to accept as the new normal?

One way to find out is to calculate asset prices in terms of gold rather than dollars and see what kind of price action the past half-century would have experienced under a gold standard.

Let’s start with stocks. When valued in real money (i.e., gold) the S&P 500 is virtually unchanged since 1971. The following chart ignores the dividends paid by public companies, so let’s give stocks a positive real return of maybe 2% a year, all of it from profitable companies returning cash to shareholders. Share prices still rise and fall, but the fluctuations are more muted and less disruptive than the serial bubbles of the past five decades.

When priced in gold, the US economy (measured by gross domestic product, or GDP) is actually smaller than it was in 1971, giving credence to the people who claim we’ve been in a “capital D” depression since 2000 if not 1971.

As the saying goes, “energy is life, life is energy.” In dollar terms, oil and its distillates like gasoline are far more expensive these days, as is life in general. But priced in gold, oil is actually down by almost two-thirds since 1971. In our hypothetical gold standard world, energy is making life easier and more manageable instead of harder and more stressful.

Housing might be the part of life where inflation has been most debilitating, with two entire generations now priced out of home ownership. What would it be like under a gold standard? US houses would be about as cheap as they’ve been in the past century. Rents would be lower, and our kids and grandkids would own their own homes rather than renting (or staying with us).

          Housing, oil, stocks, and economic output priced in gold would make the world a lot different place.

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

          This week’s RLA radio program features a “best of” interview that I did with Mr. Kerry Lutz the founder of “The Financial Survival Network”.

          The radio program is posted and available by clicking on the "Podcast" tab at the top of this page.  The weekly Headline Roundup newscast is also posted there.  If you haven’t yet done so, check out the free resources available on the website.

 

“A Canadian psychologist is selling a video that teaches you how to test your dog’s IQ.  Here’s how it works:  if you spend $12.99 for the video, your dog is smarter than you.”

                                                      -Jay Leno

 

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