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Why Now Is The Best Time To Buy Gold

History favors September for gold performance.

History favors September for gold performance.

[This article originally appeared on BullionVault and is republished here with permission.]

We don't make price predictions. If we knew where prices were heading by a certain date, we'd be in another business entirely...ruling the world most likely from a black basalt tower shrouded in thunder and lightning.

Or at least cleaning the office with an army of enchanted mops.

History can help point the way however. And as lots of coin-dealers and pundits will tell you today, the month of September historically sees the best average gain in gold prices.

"Gold has its best month of the year in September," as UK bank and London market-maker Barclays put it in a note today, "as investors shy away from riskier assets such as equities."

Whatever the reason (India's Diwali demand? the end of gold's typical summer lull as Western traders return from the beach?) the simple averages bear this out. Since prices began floating in 1968, buying gold has returned 2.3 percent in September (US Dollar prices) on average, gross of costs. That's well ahead of the average 0.7 percent from the other months of the year.

More than that, according to our own number-crunching, September has been the best single month in 9 of the last 46 years. That beats March, May and July (5 each) as well as February (six).

But most important for active investors, perhaps, is looking beyond one month's date. Because the last third of the year...from September to New Year's Eve...has offered the best time to buy and then sell gold since 1968.

The last four months of the year has returned an average 5.1 percent to Dollar-gold traders. That beats the earlier two thirds both on the average return (Jan-April 3.1 percent, and May-Aug 2.5 percent) and also on frequency (best gain 17 times versus 14 and 15).

These are just historical gold data, remember. There's no guarantee 2014 will play out like the "average" year. But if you fancy playing the odds, take note. Gold currently stands 7.3 percent higher in Dollar terms so far in 2014. It has matched or beaten that year-to-date gain 19 times since 1968.

In those 19 years, gold only fell to end the year lower 4 times. And where gold ended August within 1 percentage point of its current year-to-date rise (6 times in total), it only fell once by New Year.

The average rise by year-end has been 8.9 percent.

These are just numbers, of course. And if you see active trading like playing roulette, then the wheel...like a pair of dice...has no memory. Choosing to buy gold because the historical averages suggest it, however, may just become self-fulfilling.

Imagine if everyone reading coin-dealer blogs, pundit columns and Barclays' note today decided to act.


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