The Dow:Gold ratio broke 9 today.

It just broke 10 yesterday. By the end of this bear market, one ounce of gold will buy the Dow, just as it did in 1932 and 1980. In the short-lived Panic of ’07, it only dropped to 2 ounces.

Gold is money, and in deflation, that’s what you want. I still think gold should fall to $600 or lower after this panic buying subsides and people need to sell it just to pay their bills and debts. Also, the reality of deflation hasn’t begun to set in yet — people are still looking in the rear-view mirror at inflation. A lot of gold bugs are going to bug out when their hyperinflation scenario doesn’t pan out soon. Their timing will be awful, because we will eventually (I’m talking years) get hard-core inflation after the new New Deal kicks in.

Dow:Gold ratio breaks 10 for first time since 1995, on the way to 1.

The Real Dow has gone from 1 in January 1980, to 44 in 2000, and now back down to 9.5 ounces per unit. It has crashed 78% since 2000, and now that we are deflating, the nominal Dow is catching up. This is the latest chart I could find:

Here’s a longer-term view, from 1900 to 2004:

Source: Chartsrus.com

Real bear markets last at least three years

Is this a bear market? Are we in a recession? Let’s assume everyone can finally agree on those points. In that case, nobody should be looking for a bottom for at least another two years.

This is not 1987, nor 1998, nor 2004. Those short-term corrections did not entail full-blown global recessions and debt liquidations. They were mere technical blips, statistical noise to anyone but short-term traders. Today, with the credit markets frozen, home prices down worldwide, unemployment taking off, weekly bank failures, and corporate bankruptcies left and right, we can be pretty sure that there are some real reasons for the global decline in stock prices.

Historical precedents

The aftermath of a society-wide credit binge and speculative mania across all asset classes is best compared to the Great Depression of the 1930s, the earlier depression of the 1830s and ’40s, or the bursting of the South Seas and Mississippi bubbles in the early 1700s. Those respective bear markets lasted roughly 3, 6 and 60 years, so given the circumstances, we should hope for another quick and dirty depression like the 1930s. The most recent run-of-the-mill bear market, the dot-com bust, lasted from March 2000 to October 2002, a mere 31 months, and it was associated with only the mildest of recessions. Prior to that, we had the entire recession-filled period from 1966 to 1982, when the Dow swung wildly in a range for 16 years while inflation raged, resulting in a 75% real loss.

If you measure its age from the nominal peak, the current bear is all of 11 months old, an adolescent or young adult. I actually prefer to think of this as just the next phase down in the bear that started in 2000, since if you measure your assets in gold or a basket of currencies, US stocks never came close to regaining those highs. But then, I think the West is in for a long decline in standard of living, so even 8 years is early in this bear. It takes generations for a society to relearn the lessons of prudence, personal responsibility and laissez-faire that are necessary for sustained growth. Just ask the Chinese.

Here’s a century of the Dow in gold. Look like a bottom yet?

Click chart for sharper view. Source: chartsrus.com

Panic, hope, repeat

On a month-to-month scale, bear markets alternate between periods of panic and hope, appearing on a chart as a series of waterfalls and dead-cat bounces. We have been through two of each since October 2007, and the bounce out of the July lows appears to be rolling over, likely into the deepest sell-off yet (Dow 9000 by Christmas?). Early in the game as it is, after this plunge to new lows, the bottom-callers will emerge and the shorts will scramble to cover, and we could have a mighty rally, maybe 25% over several months, which would just serve to further demoralize buyers during the next leg down.

Real bottoms are lonely

When the bottom-calling stops and the market doesn’t snap back up from a plunge, but just drifts along in a climate of disgust with little volume or public interest, it will be time to think about going long again.

The Dow has bounced in gold, too

The Dow peaked at 44 ounces in late 1999, up from 1 ounce in 1980, and has since been in a steady “silent crash,” to borrow a phrase from Robert Prechter. It has so far bottomed out earlier this year at around 12 ounces, but with the decline in gold to under $800* and the bounce in the Dow to around 11,700, the ratio is back up to almost 15 (still a dangerously high level–take a look below at where the Dow peaked in 1929).

Since deflation took hold in force last year, the crash has been making some noise, as the nominal Dow has finally turned lower. If you think this trend will continue, the Dow’s bounce since mid-July appears as a shorting opportunity in both nominal and gold-priced charts. We might be experiencing the last chance in decades to get 15 ounces for the Dow, since this cycle has a very long period.

Click chart for sharper view. Source: chartsrus.com

But maybe the bounce in Dow:Gold will go further, if gold continues down towards the technically important level of $600 (see chart below for a sense of how much air is left to come out of this market after its premature dash to $1000) before the Dow has a chance to catch up. Commodities do crash faster than stocks, but one other thing is for sure: the Dow has a lot further to fall than gold, since in a financial crisis, whether inflationary or deflationary, nobody thinks of stocks as a safe haven.

Source: kitco.com

[*Bragging rights claimed: I sold half of my puts on gold this morning for about a 160% profit, since we could bounce from here.]