Gold's Momentous Rally From 2000 Compared To SPY And QQQ – PART II

 | Nov 16, 2020 02:47AM ET

In Part I of this research article I highlighted the incredible rally in Gold related to a 2020 Anchor point and how that rally in Gold compared to the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) and SPDR S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY). In this second Part I am going to highlight the price appreciation in the QQQ and SPY in comparison to Gold since 2009. It is important to understand how the equities/stocks have rallied in comparison to Gold because the ratio of valuation levels in equities/stocks compared to Gold appears to show when price disparities become outrageous and begin to revert.

Part I of our research showed the 2000 anchor point ratios, where we saw that Gold appreciated faster than the QQQ and the SPY over the span of the past 20 years. You’ll also see that the QQQ and SPY have appreciated very quickly over the past 5+ years in an attempt to close the gap. This represents a shift in how traders view opportunities in different asset classes.

h3 9 TO 9.5 YEAR GOLD DEPRECIATION CYCLE ENDED IN 2018 – WHAT NEXT?/h3

We will now shift the anchor point to January 1, 2009, to see how the markets have reacted to valuations since the downturn created by the Global Financial Crisis. The starting point is to determine how Gold, the QQQ, and the SPY have rallied since this major event in the global markets, and at what ratio. Ideally, we would have seen moderately uniform appreciation ratios over the past 10 years. This would mean that traders placed nearly equal enthusiasm for higher valuations in the QQQ, SPY, and Gold. As we will see below, this is not the case.

Taking a look at this first Monthly 2009 Anchor ratio chart below, we see the QQQ is the big winner with a current ratio level above 9.0. This suggests that the QQQ has rallied over 900% since the January 1, 2009 anchor price. The SPY has rallied to current levels near 3.9. This suggests that the SPY has rallied over 390% since the January 1, 2009 anchor point price levels. Gold has only rallied to levels near 2.1 on this chart. This suggests that Gold has been ignored as an asset class and has failed to keep up with the rally in the QQQ and the SPY over the past 10+ years.