http://fintrend.com/charts/gold-vs-oil-chart/
Which is Over Priced? Oil or Gold?
Updated 2/17/2012
With commodities in general skyrocketing in price (or the dollar devaluing) is there any way to tell what the real value of something is? How much is it really worth? Is Oil overpriced? How about Gold? Is it overpriced? Looking at these commodities in the standard way it is often difficult to tell.
We could look at the inflation adjusted price of Gold but that requires that we rely on the government stated inflation index.
But that is just one way to look at the price by comparing it to U.S. dollars. We could also look at its price in Euros or at what the price looks like to the people in China or India. And each of those are based on the values of their currency and how much they are inflating.
Oil Priced in Ounces of Gold:
Click Chart for Larger Image
But a different way to look at it would be in comparison to the price of other commodities. Theoretically in an ideal world, if the supply of currency is inflating, then all commodities should increase equally.
But in the real world that isn’t true. There are inequalities partially because money doesn’t flow equally initially. Eventually it will even out as traders arbitrage high priced commodities against lower priced ones.
But how do you know which commodities are over priced and which are under priced?
Very simply you just divide one price by the other to get a ratio. If we look at the ratio of Gold to Oil we will see how they relate without bringing dollars into the equation.
Assume for a moment that an ounce of gold is exactly $1000 and a barrel of oil is $100. Lets look at how many barrels of oil an ounce of gold would buy. You can just as easily divide it the other way but the numbers come out messier.
So we are looking at barrels per ounce of Gold. So if Gold is at $1000 /oz and Oil costs $100 per barrel it is obvious that one ounce of gold would buy 10 barrels of oil, right?
And if several years ago, gold was at $500 an ounce and oil was at $50 the ratio would be the same. So we need to look at the historical ratio and see what a reasonable number of barrels per ounce is. (Another way to look at it would be in ounces of Gold per hundred barrels of oil.)
We used the free market price of gold rather than the government fixed price of $35 / ounce. We also used the free market price of oil (called stripper) rather than the government fixed price for the period it was fixed.
From that we come up with the following table:
Annual Average Gold and Crude Price 1946-Present | # of bbl Oil 1 OZ Gold will buy | ||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Average $/bbl | Average $/oz | Ave bbl / oz |
1946 | $1.63 | $34.71 | 21.294 |
1947 | $2.16 | $34.71 | 16.069 |
1948 | $2.77 | $34.71 | 12.531 |
1949 | $2.77 | $31.69 | 11.440 |
1950 | $2.77 | $34.72 | 12.534 |
1951 | $2.77 | $34.72 | 12.534 |
1952 | $2.77 | $34.60 | 12.491 |
1953 | $2.92 | $34.84 | 11.932 |
1954 | $2.99 | $35.04 | 11.719 |
1955 | $2.93 | $35.03 | 11.956 |
1956 | $2.94 | $34.99 | 11.901 |
1957 | $3.00 | $34.95 | 11.650 |
1958 | $3.01 | $35.10 | 11.661 |
1959 | $3.00 | $35.10 | 11.700 |
1960 | $2.91 | $35.27 | 12.120 |
1961 | $2.85 | $35.25 | 12.368 |
1962 | $2.85 | $35.23 | 12.361 |
1963 | $3.00 | $35.09 | 11.697 |
1964 | $2.88 | $35.10 | 12.188 |
1965 | $3.01 | $35.12 | 11.668 |
1966 | $3.10 | $35.13 | 11.332 |
1967 | $3.12 | $34.95 | 11.202 |
1968 | $3.18 | $39.31 | 12.362 |
1969 | $3.32 | $41.28 | 12.434 |
1970 | $3.39 | $36.02 | 10.625 |
1971 | $3.60 | $40.62 | 11.283 |
1972 | $3.60 | $58.42 | 16.228 |
1973 | $4.75 | $97.39 | 20.503 |
1974 | $9.35 | $154.00 | 16.471 |
1975 | $7.67 | $160.86 | 20.973 |
1976 | $13.10 | $124.74 | 9.522 |
1977 | $14.40 | $147.84 | 10.267 |
1978 | $14.95 | $193.40 | 12.936 |
1979 | $25.10 | $306.00 | 12.191 |
1980 | $37.42 | $615.00 | 16.435 |
1981 | $35.75 | $460.00 | 12.867 |
1982 | $31.83 | $376.00 | 11.813 |
1983 | $29.08 | $424.00 | 14.580 |
1984 | $28.75 | $361.00 | 12.557 |
1985 | $26.92 | $317.00 | 11.776 |
1986 | $14.64 | $368.00 | 25.137 |
1987 | $17.50 | $447.00 | 25.543 |
1988 | $14.87 | $437.00 | 29.388 |
1989 | $18.33 | $381.00 | 20.786 |
1990 | $23.19 | $383.51 | 16.538 |
1991 | $20.19 | $362.11 | 17.935 |
1992 | $19.25 | $343.82 | 17.861 |
1993 | $16.74 | $359.77 | 21.492 |
1994 | $15.66 | $384.00 | 24.521 |
1995 | $16.75 | $383.79 | 22.913 |
1996 | $20.46 | $387.81 | 18.955 |
1997 | $18.97 | $331.02 | 17.450 |
1998 | $11.91 | $294.24 | 24.705 |
1999 | $16.55 | $278.98 | 16.857 |
2000 | $27.40 | $279.11 | 10.186 |
2001 | $23.00 | $271.04 | 11.784 |
2002 | $22.81 | $309.73 | 13.579 |
2003 | $27.69 | $363.38 | 13.123 |
2004 | $37.41 | $409.72 | 10.952 |
2005 | $50.04 | $444.74 | 8.888 |
2006 | $58.30 | $603.46 | 10.351 |
2007 | $64.20 | $695.39 | 10.832 |
2008 | $91.48 | $871.96 | 9.532 |
2009 | $53.48 | $972.35 | 18.180 |
2010 | $71.21 | $1,224.53 | 17.196 |
2011 | $87.04 | $1,571.52 | 18.055 |
Average | 14.771 |
If we look at the ratio of Gold to Oil since 1946, the average turns out to be 14.771 barrels of oil per ounce of gold. Or 1 ounce of gold will buy almost 15 barrels of Oil on average.
If we look at the average ratio during 2011 one ounce of gold would buy 18 barrels of oil or slightly more than normal. This tells us that either Gold was slightly expensive or Oil was slightly cheap (or both).
Unfortunately, since we pay for things in dollars we can’t tell whether (in dollars) gold is too expensive or oil is too cheap.
Back in 2008 when the ratio was less than 10 the ratio was the other way around with oil expensive and/or gold cheap.
But this is where arbitrage comes in… what we could done if oil is cheap, is buy oil and sell gold hoping the ratio would move toward normal. That way if oil rises in price and gold stays the same you make money. If gold falls in price and oil stays the same you make money. If both rise in price because of inflation but oil rises more so the ratio normalizes you make money, etc.
Quiz # 1
If could go back to 1985 and be given a choice to invest in Oil or Gold which would you choose?
If you bought 4 ounces of gold in 1985 at $317.00/ oz and a ratio of 11.776 bbl/oz it would have cost you $1268. or you could have bought 47.10 barrels of oil. Three years later you could have exchanged your 4 oz of gold for $1748 and bought 117.55 Barrels of oil. So although your dollars increased by 37.8% your number of barrels of oil increased by 149.6%. Had you held your oil until 2000 when the ratio was back down to 10, your 117.55 barrels would be worth $3220.87 while four ounces of gold would only be worth $1116.44 or about $150 less than you had paid for it!
In 1988 oil was extremely cheap at over 29 barrels per ounce. But if you had bought oil in 1986 at 25 (also very cheap) it would have appeared that you were losing money for two years until the ratio turned around.
Quiz # 2
In 1998 Gold is $294.24 an ounce and Oil is $11.91 a barrel you have $1200 to spend… Which do you buy?
Based on this chart at 24 barrels to an ounce of gold, Oil was cheaper. You could have bought 100 barrels for $11.91 x 100 = $1191 and sold them when oil was expensive in 2008 (once again less than 10 barrels per ounce. At that point you could have exchanged your 100 barrels for $9148 and bought 10.49 ounces of gold. Had you bought gold in 1998 you could have used your $1191 and bought only 4.047 ounces.
Warning: Don’t just go out and start buying oil and selling gold based on this chart. We are using Annual averages for easy comparison. These ratios change on a daily basis. So you need much more up to date information than what an annual chart will tell you. As of today 2/17/2012 oil is $95/ bbl and gold is $1723.80 so the ratio is 18.145 barrels per ounce. So the price isn’t over 20 or under 10 so the price isn’t truly extreme but oil is slightly cheaper than gold.
For more information:
This annual report is really interesting, the point is that the dollar is not a constant measure of value, if the price of oil skyrocket in dollars we have to ask whether it is important or not? we are all aware that by pricing oil in gold the price of oil is a lot different than it appears.
Posted by: Economic Depression | April 03, 2013 at 02:32 AM