In this article Susan Walker explores
a question we have touched on before...
conventional wisdom and hedging against
bad times like inflation and recession.
Editor
Gold, the Dow, T-Notes: Which Does Best
During Recessions?
By Susan C. Walker,
Elliott Wave International
Each year, the NCAA college basketball
tournament winnows its starting field of 64
teams to the Final Four teams who play for a
chance to become the national champion.
Congratulations to the University of Kansas
and the University of Tennessee, this year's
men's and women's basketball champions.
The structure of the NCAA tournament got
me to thinking. Wouldn't it be great if we
could set up brackets for our own
investments the same way – start with 64
equities, bonds, mutual funds, commodity
futures, metals, etc. Then let them duke it
out against one another to see which ones
emerge as the "Investment Final Four"?
Click here to download a free 5-page report
from Elliott Wave International with even
more information on which investment does
best during recessions. The report,
excerpted from Bob Prechter's Elliott Wave
Theorist, includes in-depth historical
analysis and six eye-opening tables.
Since most of us have neither the time
nor the money to act as our own version of
the NCAA (which might stand for the
"National Coordinator of Asset Allocation"),
it's worth knowing that Bob Prechter of
Elliott Wave International has already set
his mind to the task. He has specifically
explored which investments do best in times
of recession and which do best during
economic expansions. But instead of starting
with a field of 64 investments, he
researched the three most popular
investments – gold, the Dow, and Treasury
bonds. We can call them the Treasured Three,
rather than the Final Four.
Gold and Recessions
Since economists and even Ben Bernanke,
chairman of the Federal Reserve, now admit
that it looks like the U.S. economy has
entered a recession, many people may wonder
whether they need to change the mix of their
investments. In particular, as some prices
keep going up – notably for food and gas –
the threat of inflation makes people more
interested in gold as an investment, since
it's usually seen as a bulwark against
monetary inflation.
It is this conventional wisdom that
piqued Prechter's curiosity. He wanted to
find out whether it would hold up to a
reality test. As he writes in The
Elliott Wave Theorist, "I have often
read, 'Gold always goes up in recessions and
depressions.' Is it true? Should you own
gold because you think the economy is
tanking? Whenever we hear some claim like
this, we always do the same thing: We look
at the data."
So he and another Elliott wave analyst
ran the numbers, reviewing the behavior of
these three key investments during
recessions following World War II, from
February 1945 through November 2001. This is
what they learned:
Gold was not the best
investment during recessions in terms of
total return.
The winner of this tournament was
actually Treasury Notes, which had a total
return of 9.96%. In contrast, gold had a
total return of 8.80%, and the Dow came in
at 6.89%. But that's not all – once they
figured in the transaction costs for each
investment (at a 2008 level), gold fell from
second to third place as a worthwhile
investment during recessions. The total
returns with transaction costs came out this
way:
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1. T-Notes
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9.82% |
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2. Dow |
6.85% |
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3. Gold |
4.80% |
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This result turns conventional wisdom on
its head. It's also worth being aware of as
you invest in 2008. Here's how Prechter sums
up the results:
The Best Investment During
Recessions
The most important question, however,
is not whether the Dow beat gold or vice
versa but whether making either
investment would have been better than
taking no risk at all. Table 3 [see
free report provided by Elliott Wave
International] shows that ten-year
Treasury notes beat both gold and the
Dow during recessions since 1945,
and they did so far more reliably.
T-notes provided a capital gain in 10 of
the 11 recessions, and of course they
provided interest income during all of
them. And the transaction costs are
low….
So if you want to make money
reliably and safely during
recessions and depression, you should
own bonds whose issuers will remain
fully reliable debtors throughout the
contraction. Of course, as Conquer
the Crash [Editor's note: Bob
Prechter's best-selling business book]
makes abundantly clear, finding such
bonds in this depression, which will be
the deepest in 300 years, will not be
easy. Conquer the Crash
forecast that in this depression most
bonds will go down and many will go to
zero. This process has already begun.
This time around, you have to follow the
suggestions in that book to make your
debt investment work. [The Elliott
Wave Theorist, March 2008]
Susan C. Walker writes for
Elliott Wave International, a market
forecasting and technical analysis company.
She has been an associate editor with Inc.
magazine, a newspaper writer and editor, an
investor relations executive and a
speechwriter for the Federal Reserve Bank of
Atlanta. Her columns also appear regularly
on FoxNews.com.
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