⚠️ A phenomenon that is gaining increasing attention from investors—the ratio of the Dow Jones Industrial Average to gold. Over the past 130 years, this ratio has only experienced three major turning points, each of which involved a significant transfer of wealth. Now, the fourth turning point is forming.
Look at the data: the ratio has fallen from a high of 22.5, and historical patterns suggest it could drop to around 2.1. What does this mean? Gold could potentially rise fivefold relative to US stocks. During the past three turning points, the Dow underperformed gold by more than 90% within an average of 9 years. Will it be the same this time?
Interestingly, regardless of whether the economy enters deflation, stagflation, or inflation, gold has outperformed US stocks. The boom in cryptocurrencies like $ETH and $BIFI has faded, and now the global debt crisis has become an unavoidable topic. Capital is fleeing the so-called "paper prosperity" and shifting toward tangible assets.
Silver has already shown some movement, and gold's rally is accelerating—this is not short-term speculation but a broader re-pricing of assets. Investors are either continuing to bet on technology and innovation or turning to traditional safe-haven assets. Both paths are available, but everyone making a choice knows that such historical turning points are not encountered often.
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NFTArchaeologis
· 7h ago
The ancient game of gold and the US stock market, to put it simply, is an eternal game of scarcity. In 130 years, it has only happened three times. If it truly happens this time, it seems more like a record of a certain civilization cycle — you have to see through it.
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BlockImposter
· 7h ago
Wow, only 3 times in 130 years? Is this really happening now?
I need to double-check the data on the 5x gold, it feels a bit suspicious...
Debt crisis again, asset re-pricing again, it's getting a bit annoying to hear haha
The term "superficial prosperity" is spot on, it hits right in the heart
Wait, is it too late to go all-in on gold now?
Historical turning points are rare, but not everyone can profit from them.
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SadMoneyMeow
· 8h ago
Only three times in 130 years? Is it really happening this time? Feels like gold is about to take off.
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GasBandit
· 8h ago
Historical turning points sound good, but the ones who truly make money are always those who dare to operate in the opposite direction.
⚠️ A phenomenon that is gaining increasing attention from investors—the ratio of the Dow Jones Industrial Average to gold. Over the past 130 years, this ratio has only experienced three major turning points, each of which involved a significant transfer of wealth. Now, the fourth turning point is forming.
Look at the data: the ratio has fallen from a high of 22.5, and historical patterns suggest it could drop to around 2.1. What does this mean? Gold could potentially rise fivefold relative to US stocks. During the past three turning points, the Dow underperformed gold by more than 90% within an average of 9 years. Will it be the same this time?
Interestingly, regardless of whether the economy enters deflation, stagflation, or inflation, gold has outperformed US stocks. The boom in cryptocurrencies like $ETH and $BIFI has faded, and now the global debt crisis has become an unavoidable topic. Capital is fleeing the so-called "paper prosperity" and shifting toward tangible assets.
Silver has already shown some movement, and gold's rally is accelerating—this is not short-term speculation but a broader re-pricing of assets. Investors are either continuing to bet on technology and innovation or turning to traditional safe-haven assets. Both paths are available, but everyone making a choice knows that such historical turning points are not encountered often.