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  1. This interactive chart tracks the ratio of the Dow Jones Industrial Average to the price of gold. The number tells you how many ounces of gold it would take to buy the Dow on any given month. Previous cycle lows have been 1.94 ounces in February of 1933 and 1.29 ounces in January of 1980.

  2. Gold Price vs Stock Market - 100 Year Chart. This chart compares the historical percentage return for the Dow Jones Industrial Average against the return for gold prices over the last 100 years. Show Recessions. Download Historical Data.

  3. Interactive chart of historical data for real (inflation-adjusted) gold prices per ounce back to 1915. The series is deflated using the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) with the most recent month as the base.

    • Interpretation
    • Further Information

    The Dow to Gold ratio measures the relative value of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (Dow) compared to gold. It indicates the number of ounces of gold it takes to buy the shares in the Dow Jones Industrial Average index. The Dow Jones is a stock index that includes 30 large publicly traded companies based in the United States. It is one of the old...

    TradingView Chart: Dow to Gold Ratio
    Investopedia: Dow Jones Industrial Average - DJIA
  4. Will the Dow Jones Industrial Average index eventually reach parity with the fiat Federal Reserve Note price of gold? Or will we have had a currency crisis and financial restructuring before witnessing such a moment in the time ahead? See these 200 year Dow Gold Ratio charts for a better historical perspective.

  5. View the current and historical Gold to Dow ratio chart on TradingView. The Gold to Dow ratio reached an all-time-high of 1.01 in January 1980, when the price of gold hit $878, and the Dow Jones was trading in a range.

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  7. You can even view a historical inflation-adjusted gold price chart using the 1980 CPI formula. For easy reference, this page also contains a simple table that provides golds price change and percentage change using a single day, 30 day, six month, one year, five year and 16 year timeframes.

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