HomeNewsBusinessStocksWhat the gold-to-oil ratio may be saying about Indian stocks

What the gold-to-oil ratio may be saying about Indian stocks

Okay, no one is asking you to actually empty your bank locker, make a hurried trip to the jeweler and drive home a tanker full of Brent. But calculating the gold-to-oil ratio is an exercise that analysts over the years have found useful in predicting the behaviour of stock markets.

March 29, 2017 / 12:25 IST
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Sitaraman Shankar Moneycontrol News

Are you in the market to sell a few ounces of gold? Check out how many barrels of crude oil the proceeds could buy. The answer might just give you an insight into the direction of Indian shares in the near future.

Okay, no one is asking you to actually empty your bank locker, make a hurried trip to the jeweler and drive home a tanker full of Brent. But calculating the gold-to-oil ratio is an exercise that analysts over the years have found useful in predicting the behaviour of stock markets.

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This is how it works:  Take the price of gold (in ounces) and divide it by the price of a barrel of crude. The long-run ratio is about 15 globally, a figure that is considered positive for equities.

A Moneycontrol scan of 22 years of data shows that the Nifty has a low degree of correlation (0.27) with the gold-to-oil ratio. But look a little closer, say, at times where oil has been costly (above USD 90 a barrel) and gold prices have been high or oil has been cheap (below USD 60) and gold moderate, the correlation is more than -0.5, which is considered moderate to strong. Through 2008, when markets were roiled by the financial crisis, the ratio rose, with the correlation a strong -0.6.