S&P 500 vs. Gold: The reality check you need
|Most investors measure performance in dollars. That’s a mistake. Because the dollar is losing value every year.
I used to feel satisfied tracking double-digit returns in my stock portfolio. Then I converted every gain into ounces of gold. Suddenly, I understood the broader market hadn’t moved in nearly two decades. It changed how I viewed money, but also how I viewed risk.
Gold has quietly delivered steady gains while stocks have stagnated in real terms.
- Gold CAGR since 1971: 8.9%
- S&P 500 CAGR since 1971: 8.1%
- Since 2006 the S&P 500 priced in gold is flat
- Year-to-date, gold is outpacing stocks
- Housing priced in gold also is almost unchanged over 20 years.
The underlying driver is the same: steady money supply growth averaging 5% annually, accelerated during COVID. Risk-on assets like stocks and risk-off assets like gold now hit all-time highs simultaneously. This is stagflationary and alone a major cause for concern but the point for today is that out of the two, only gold preserves real value.
- Spot gold has surpassed $4,200/oz - +10,000% since the Nixon Shock in 1971
- Ultra-low ‘real’ rates and massive asset bubbles coincide with declining fiat confidence
- Historical S&P 500-to-gold ratio peaks signaled major economic turning points (1929, 1971, 2000)
- Central banks continue stockpiling gold at record pace
- Retail investors remain heavily exposed to stocks priced in a debasing currency
This isn’t just about inflation, it’s about a slow erosion of fiat trust.
Gold shows the real purchasing power of money, unlike stocks or bonds priced in dollars. The smartest investors are thinking beyond percentages, focusing on long-term preservation of wealth in real terms.
What can you do in practical terms?
- Track assets in ounces, not dollars
- Use gold as a core hedge against currency debasement
- Avoid overexposure to paper assets tied to government promises
History repeats. The S&P 500-to-gold ratio has peaked three times before, each ushering in a decade-long market shift. Are you prepared for a fourth?
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