"Say oh wise man how you have come to such knowledge? Because I was never
ashamed to confess my ignorance and ask others." -- Johann Gottfried Von Herder
1744-1803, German Critic and Poet
We decided apply the simple concept of pricing the Dow in Gold and Silver
in the same way we did in an article titled Dow
1200 Illusion or?
We will take the low of the Dow in the last 4 years and the low that gold
put in the last 4 years. As the Dow is priced in Dollars we will divide the
price of gold into the Dow. For the record we could choose other price points
as they only serve to illustrate our point.
In Oct 2002 the Dow was trading at 7200 (4 year chart) and Gold was trading
roughly around 300.
Dow

Gold

If we divide 7200 by 300 (the price of Gold), we get 24 ounces. Now it took
24 ounces of Gold to buy the Dow back in Oct 2002 (remember we taking the Dow's
lows into consideration and not it's highs) so it should take at least 24 ounces
or more to buy the Dow today. Let's check that figure out.
In May of this year the Dow put in a new 52 week high and almost tested its
old all time high of roughly 11700. For arguments sake we will assume that
the Dow traded to 11700 in May. At that time Gold put in a high of roughly
720
11700 divide by 720 = 16.25
Back in 0ct 02 it took 24 ounces to buy the Dow and at this time it was trading
at a 4 year low. This means that the Dow was actually trading higher back in
Oct 2002 then it was today because today it takes 8 ounces less of Gold to
buy the Dow when it's trading at close to a new 5 year high. For the Dow just
to break even to its Oct 2002 levels it would have to be at (24 X 720) 17280.
The Dow only made it to 11700 so far. That mean the Dow has corrected over
35% as it should actually be at 17280 instead it's below 11700. Market
technicians state that we are in a bear market if the market has corrected
over 20%. Based on these figures we have corrected over 35% yet the Dow has
just put in a series of new illusory 52 week highs. Hence in reality the market
could technically rally a lot more and still be in a bear market. The funny
part is that the bears are actually right but they just don't know how to use
this info and the bulls are actually wrong but they happen to using the info
for the time being in the right manner.
If we use Silver as the constant the figure we get is even more outrageous
and it suggests that the markets have corrected even more then 35%.
Silver was trading around the 5.15 mark in Oct 2002.
Dow 7200 divided by 5.15 = 1398 ounces
May 06 Silver traded roughly to 15 dollars
1398 X 15= 20970; that's the level the Dow should be just to equal the level
it was trading in Oct 2002 when priced in silver.
This means that the Dow has already corrected a whopping 44.2% and yet it
has put in a series of new 52 week highs. These highs are all illusory in nature.
Since the Dow is priced in dollars lets perform a final test on the Dow. The
Dow hit an all time high back in 2000 (look at picture below). To simplify
matters lets assume the value of this high was 11700 (actually it's higher).


Charts courtesy of www.prophetfinance.com
Now let's look at what the dollar was doing in the same time period. At the
time the Dow put in its all time high the dollar index was trading around 105;
this is roughly 20 points (currently in the 85 ranges) lower then where it's
trading right now. On a % basis it works out to 19.5%. To make things simple
we will round it of to 20. That means the in today's dollars the Dow would
have to trade 20% higher then the high it put back in 2000 just to break even.
At this point in time the chances of the Dow trading to the 14040 price point
level are slim to none. If we were wildly optimistic we would probably issue
a target of 12600 at the most; for the record we are not wildly optimistic
at this point in time.
Conclusion
This is yet another completely out of the box way of examining the markets
and what they are doing. This viewpoint provides yet another valid reason to
support our bullish out look on the intermediate time frames. We are still
bearish when taking the long term view, however a lot can happen between the
short, intermediate and long term time frames. If you are not properly positioned
you could end up bankrupt while actually being right.
One could technically state that the market is simply experiencing a long
dead cat's bounce or that we are in a long term bear that is truly invisible
for the time being. In the end one must understand that when one is dealing
with the markets that nothing remains the same forever; those who examine the
markets with closed eyes and a closed mindset will find that their wallets
enter into the empty zone rather fast. This little exercise also very clearly
illustrates the evils of inflation.
"Since we can't know what knowledge will be most needed in the future, it
is senseless to try to teach it in advance. Instead, we should try to turn
out people who love learning so much and learn so well that they will be able
to learn whatever needs to be learned." -- John Holt 1908-1967, Australian
Politician, Prime Minister
Final note
Please remember we are just offering another possible way of looking at the
Dow. Do not simply jump on the super bullish bandwagon and assume that the
Dow is going to keep soaring upwards forever.