HomeProvincesSaskatchewanOctober 2005

GOLD PRICE IN SASKATCHEWAN — OCTOBER 2005

C$553.33 avg/oz

During October 2005, gold dealers serving Saskatchewan based pricing on CAD spot prices ranging from C$542.64 to C$561.02 per ounce, with a monthly average of C$553.33. The month opened at C$543.57 and closed at C$549.79, a gain of C$6.22. Investment-grade gold (99.5%+ purity) remains GST/HST-exempt in Saskatchewan.

DAILY PRICES — OCTOBER 2005

DateClose (CAD)Change
October 3, 2005C$543.57-1.78
October 4, 2005C$546.41+2.84
October 5, 2005C$550.88+4.47
October 6, 2005C$557.03+6.15
October 7, 2005C$557.25+0.22
October 10, 2005C$558.29+1.04
October 11, 2005C$561.02+2.73
October 12, 2005C$554.98-6.04
October 13, 2005C$556.65+1.67
October 14, 2005C$555.86-0.79
October 17, 2005C$559.25+3.39
October 18, 2005C$555.28-3.97
October 19, 2005C$544.94-10.34
October 20, 2005C$542.64-2.30
October 21, 2005C$555.17+12.53
October 24, 2005C$551.91-3.26
October 25, 2005C$556.01+4.10
October 26, 2005C$551.40-4.61
October 27, 2005C$554.87+3.47
October 28, 2005C$556.72+1.85
October 31, 2005C$549.79-6.93

📊 Gold Market Analysis

Gold has historically served as an effective hedge against inflation and currency depreciation in Canada. Central bank policies, including the Bank of Canada's interest rate decisions, directly influence the attractiveness of gold relative to fixed-income investments. The Canadian Dollar (CAD) is strongly correlated with crude oil prices due to Canada's status as a major oil exporter. When oil prices fall, the CAD typically weakens, causing gold priced in CAD to rise even if USD gold is flat. This commodity currency dynamic makes gold an effective diversifier in Canadian portfolios.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

❓ Is gold taxed in Canadian provinces?

Investment-grade gold bullion (99.5%+ purity) is exempt from GST/HST in all Canadian provinces under the federal Excise Tax Act. However, provincial policies may vary for numismatic coins, gold jewelry, and gold items below the purity threshold.

❓ Does provincial tax rate affect gold investment returns?

While GST/HST-exempt gold itself is unaffected by provincial tax rates, the marginal tax rate in your province affects capital gains taxes when selling gold. Provinces with lower marginal rates provide a slight advantage for non-registered gold profits.

❓ What about capital gains tax on gold?

Gold sold at a profit outside registered accounts (RRSP/TFSA) triggers capital gains tax in all provinces. In Canada, 50% of the gain is included in taxable income at your marginal rate. Keep purchase receipts for adjusted cost base calculations.

💡 Canadian Gold Investor Guide

Physical vs Paper Gold: Physical bullion (bars, coins) provides tangible ownership with no counterparty risk, ideal for long-term holdings. ETFs (CGL.TO, MNT.TO) offer convenience for trading and rebalancing. A combination of both can optimize for both security and flexibility.

Tax-Efficient Gold Investing: Maximize TFSA contributions first — all gold gains are 100% tax-free. Then use RRSP for tax-deductible contributions where gains are tax-deferred. Keep non-registered gold purchases for emergency reserves, as the capital gains inclusion rate is 50%.

⚖️ Unit Conversions (CAD)

UnitPrice (CAD)
Per Troy Ounce (31.1g)C$553.33
Per GramC$17.79
Per KilogramC$17,789.95
Per Pennyweight (1.555g)C$27.67
Per Tola (11.66g)C$207.50

📚 Learn more: How to Buy Gold in Canada · Gold Tax Guide · 25 Year Price Analysis · All Guides