Gold vs the S&P 500

In 2024, the S&P 500 delivered a total return of 25%, while gold finished the year up 27%. This marks the first time in recent financial history in which gold and stocks achieved gains exceeding 25% within the same calendar year.

This rare state of affairs has sparked intense interest among financial commentators, and investors want to know – is this a new normal?

Gold is off to a commanding lead in 2025. It cleared the mythical $3,000/oz barrier and is hitting fresh all-time-highs (read the dollar is hitting fresh all-time-lows) and is up over 14% YTD, while the S&P 500 is down 3.5% YTD. Curious to hear where we think it’s going to go next? Read our Gold Outlook 2025 report.

Today’s article will be a deep dive into the data around gold and the S&P 500. History is often the best, albeit imperfect, indicator of the future. We’ll seek an answer to our future-oriented question, and a few others, by mining past data. Let’s dig in!

Gold Versus the S&P 500 – What Does the Data Show?

We looked at the previous 54 years of return data for gold and the S&P 5001. We included the data table showing the years that gold outperformed at the end of the article.

Here are a couple of immediate insights from the data.

  • Gold had superior returns in 23 out of 53 years, just shy of half the time. According to the data, its performance was especially strong during periods of weak market performance (the inflationary 1970’s, the dot-com boom and bust, and in the immediate aftermath of the Great Financial Crisis.)
  • When gold outperformed, it did so by an average of 28.8%. During the nine years when the S&P 500 posted negative returns, gold outperformed in eight of them, averaging returns of 19.4% compared to -15.3% by the S&P 500.
  • The S&P 500 had superior returns in 31 out of 54 years. Its strongest periods were during the 1980’s, the high-growth 1990’s, and throughout the 20-teens and 2020s. When the S&P 500 outperformed gold, it did so by an average of 20.5%.

This analysis lends credence to the view that gold is not only a good asset for diversification, but also an excellent choice for when markets trade sideways or negative.