Toronto Star

DIAMONDS AREN’T FOREVER

Famous jeweler to make diamonds synthetica­lly to appeal to frugal shoppers

- THOMAS BIESHEUVEL

De Beers to start selling synthetic rocks, trading quality for affordabil­ity,

For the first time in its 130-year history, De Beers will sell diamond jewelry made in a lab rather than undergroun­d over billions of years.

The move is a historic shift for the world’s biggest diamond miner, which vowed for years that it wouldn’t sell stones created in laboratori­es.

The diamonds will be marketed in the United States under the name Lightbox, a fashion jewelry brand, and sell for a fraction of the price of mined gems.

The strategy will create a big price gap between mined and lab diamonds and pressure rivals that specialize in synthesize­d stones. A 1-carat manmade diamond sells for about $4,000 (U.S.), and a similar natural diamond fetches roughly $8,000. De Beers’ new lab diamonds will sell for about $800 a carat.

“Lightbox will transform the lab-grown diamond sector by offering consumers a labgrown product they have told us they want but aren’t getting: affordable fashion jewelry that may not be forever, but is perfect for right now,” said Bruce Cleaver, chief executive officer of De Beers.

“Our extensive research tells us this is how consumers regard lab-grown diamonds — as a fun, pretty product that shouldn’t cost that much — so we see an opportunit­y,” he said.

There’s been increasing concern in the industry that expensive diamonds aren’t appealing to millennial consumers, who are often more likely to spend on high-priced electronic­s or vacations. Diamonds have also come under fire for environmen­tal and human-rights concerns related to mining in poor communitie­s in Africa.

Unlike imitation gems such as cubic zirconia, diamonds grown in labs have the same physical characteri­stics and chemical makeup as mined stones.

They’re made from a carbon seed placed in a microwave chamber and superheate­d into a glowing plasma ball.

The process creates particles that can eventually crystalliz­e into diamonds in 10 weeks. The technology is so advanced that experts need a machine to distinguis­h between synthesize­d and mined gems.

While De Beers has never sold man-made diamonds before, it’s very good at making them. The company’s Element Six unit is one of the world’s leading producers of synthetic diamonds, which are mostly used for industrial purposes.

It has also been producing gemquality stones for years to help it tell the difference between natural and man-made types and to reassure consumers that they’re buying the real thing. Man-made gems currently make up a small part of the $80-billion global diamond market, but demand is increasing. Global diamond production was about 142 million carats last year, according to analyst Paul Zimnisky. That compares with lab production of less than 4.2 million carats, according to Bonas & Co.

The move also comes at a sensitive time for De Beers and its relationsh­ip with Botswana, the source of three-quarters of its diamonds. The two have a sales agreement that gives De Beers the right to market and sell the diamonds from Botswana.

The deal, which gives De Beers its power over global prices, will soon be up for negotiatio­n and Botswana is likely to push for more concession­s.

For example, last time the two sides negotiated, De Beers agreed to move all its sales staff from London to Botswana. In the talks, one of De Beers’s levers is the threat of synthetics to Botswana’s economy.

On Tuesday, De Beers said it had extensive talks with Botswana about the decision to sell man-made diamonds and the country supports the move.

“(This) affordable fashion jewelry … may not be forever, but is perfect for right now.” BRUCE CLEAVER CEO, DE BEERS

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 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? De Beers vowed for years that it wouldn’t create lab-grown diamonds, but there is increasing concern in the industry that millennial consumers are not interested in buying high-priced jewelry.
BLOOMBERG De Beers vowed for years that it wouldn’t create lab-grown diamonds, but there is increasing concern in the industry that millennial consumers are not interested in buying high-priced jewelry.

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