1973: Stocks -18.19%, Bonds -5.66%, Gold 72.35%, Cash 2.46%
1974: Stocks -29.81%, Bonds -0.05%, Gold 60.00%, Cash 4.61%
(Nifty Fifty Implosion: http://www.ozy.com/flashback/nifty-fift ... 37.article)
(Gold was not legal to own again until January 1, 1975 and only thanks to Ron Paul's diligent legislative efforts, so you'd have crushing PP losses unless you had invested in other real assets like, say, Chinese ceramics. Not kidding.)
1981: Stocks -9.05%, Bonds -3.79%, Gold -32.60%, Cash 9.82%
(Tight money to break inflation expectations; gold imploded previous year.)
1987: Stocks 4.15%, Bonds -10.67%, Gold 19.98%, Cash 2.88%
(US Dollar Implosion: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Monday_%281987%29)
(The year Harry Browne came out with the current PP allocation.)
1994: Stocks 1.31%, Bonds -12.87%, Gold -2.25%, Cash -0.16%
(Bond Implosion: http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/ ... /17/79850/)
2000: Stocks -8.26%, Bonds 21.66%, Gold -5.53%, Cash 4.58%
2001: Stocks -9.57%, Bonds 1.35%, Gold 1.91%, Cash 5.05%
2002: Stocks -22.70%, Bonds 13.28%, Gold 24.65%, Cash 2.12%
(Tech Implosion. Without 09/11 fear, it seems likely gold would not have responded so favorably. That is also the year I first bought gold, so it had to have been a fear trade.)
2008: Stocks -36.19%, Bonds 38.97%, Gold 2.60%, Cash 3.89%
(Subprime Implosion.)
2014-:

(TBD Implosion.)
So it seems to me that the market could vaciilate between either bonds or gold in providing crash protection. I don't think we can universally say that bonds always hedge equity, as I previously thought. In some cases, it is the cash yield alone that barely just saves the overall PP at the end of the day. Can the same be said of now with interest rates at nearly zero if both stocks and bonds crash at once? My worst fear is a worser repeat of 1981 or 1994 where nothing responds; I see nothing to suggest we're not going to have such a "Tight Money" repeat and it'll probably be far worse since I don't believe we've had both stock and bonds overvalued at the same time before along with zero paying cash. That puts a tremendous amount of pressure on gold to outperform against a massive deflationary headwind. And pigs fly.