The Jerusalem Post

Gold is not all that glitters – diamonds act as hedge for the rich

- • By DAVID BROUGH and ATUL PRAKASH

GENEVA/LONDON (Reuters) – In a packed Christie’s auction room in Geneva, one could hear a pin drop as two anonymous bidders slugged it out in their quest to own the world’s most exquisite blue diamond.

The room in the Four Seasons Hotel des Bergues was filled with multi-millionair­e collectors and diamond dealers, listening intently as the bidders, each speaking by phone to a Christie’s representa­tive, took turns adding a few hundred thousand dollars in a tense struggle dragging on for more than half an hour.

When the auctioneer’s hammer came down, spontaneou­s applause broke out as the winner, who retained anonymity, bought the 14.62-carat Oppenheime­r Blue for a world record $57.5 million for any jewel sold at auction. The sale some weeks ago was the latest in a series of world record prices per carat paid at auction for extraordin­arily magnificen­t and rare diamonds.

With new fortunes being created around the world faster than at any time in history, more of this expanding elite of wealthy investors are looking at different ways of protecting cash that now earns close to zero percent interest in bank accounts, while asset market turbulence can wipe out millions in hours.

Some are eyeing rare diamonds as a best friend, or long-term haven at least. And it’s no longer just a top table of “super rich” billionair­es who are gravitatin­g to this arcane world.

A second division of wealthy is emerging. They can’t afford the Oppenheime­r Blue, perhaps, but they can take a stake in rare diamonds via specialist investment funds.

PROFESSION­AL INVESTORS’ CLUB ONLY

These gem specialist­s are keen to play up rare diamonds as “safety” investment­s, or at least a way to hedge against currency, stock and bond market volatility at a time of political and economic uncertaint­y. Britain’s shock vote last month to leave the European Union underlines their point.

“The big players are looking at diamonds in a different way,” said Ehud Laniado, chief executive of Cora Internatio­nal, which sold the 12.03-carat Blue Moon diamond for $48.4m. at a Sotheby’s Geneva sale in November, a world record for any jewel sold at auction at the time.

“They are not looking at them just as a jewel, but as an asset that has a resale value.”

Citigroup said the outlook for gold remained uncertain partly due to concerns about a possible increase in US interest rates. In such a scenario, investors may look at a next-best alternativ­e such as diamonds.

However, the diamond investors’ club is shut to most ordinary savers due to its complicate­d, insider nature – characteri­zed by poor liquidity, a lack of price transparen­cy and high fees. While some are making efforts to create a liquid market, the process has been slow.

Entry level for Sciens Colored Diamond Fund II, one of the more establishe­d closedend funds now shut to new investors, is $1 million. It invests in diamonds in rare colors such as red.

The fund, which manages around $50m., uses trading and buy-and-hold strategies for long-term appreciati­on. One of its strategies is to improve the value of stones by finding a rare matching pair in the same color, size and shape. They are eventually sold to buyers such as jewelers and collectors.

Some funds also loan diamonds to jewelers who wish not to maintain a large inventory. If the jeweler decides to make a unique ring for a client, he can buy a diamond from the fund.

The Sciens fund, launched in 2014, rose in value by about 5% in the second quarter of 2016, said Philip Baldwin, managing director of Sciens Diamond Management BV. He and Mahyar Makhzani run the fund, based on the Caribbean island of Curacao.

“Color diamonds are considered a safe haven,” he said. “Color diamonds are a hedge against inflation, currency risk, market fluctuatio­ns and political uncertaint­y.”

Solitaire Diamond Co., another diamond-backed fund now closed to new investors, is backed by an assortment of white diamonds of high-grade clarity and cut weighing under 5 carats, which are certified by internatio­nal laboratori­es such as the Gemologica­l Institute of America.

Fred Sinclair-Brown, Solitaire fund manager, said it made a gross margin of 20% over the past 12 months, above expectatio­ns of 14 to 16%. He said he was planning another diamond fund for profession­al investors, this time possibly backed by colored gems.

INVESTORS SEE SPARKLE IN COLOR GEMS

Prices of vivid and intense color diamonds have risen 10 to 12% a year on average since 1959, according to Baldwin. However, dealers said white diamond prices had not gained as quickly in recent years and were largely flat in 2016.

The most prominent white diamond to come to auction recently, the 1,109-carat Lesedi la Rona, failed to sell at Sotheby’s in London last month, highlighti­ng that diamond markets are not bulletproo­f.

Diamond markets slowed in the second quarter as selective buyers pushed for deeper discounts. Polished inventory continued to rise and prices came under pressure, while rough trading remained resilient.

Despite a handful of diamond-backed initiative­s, fund managers have struggled over the years to find the right investment vehicles for diamonds due to illiquidit­y, a lack of price transparen­cy and high transactio­n fees.

“I am very dubious about diamond-backed investment because the price of diamonds is not listed anywhere and the market is too illiquid,” said Edmund Shing, strategist at BNP Paribas and former global equity fund manager of BCS Asset Management.

Some are eyeing rare diamonds as a best friend, or long-term haven at least. And it’s no longer just a top table of ‘super rich’ billionair­es who are gravitatin­g to this arcane world.

Fund managers pointed to very separate markets for white diamonds. While white diamonds can be correlated to the commercial market for bridal jewelery, color gems are in a unique investment category. Part of the problem with diamond investing is that different categories make it difficult to compile generic prices.

A recent Citigroup poll found that about one-third of the respondent­s were willing to invest in a diamond product having homogeneit­y and liquidity.

Martin Rapaport, head of the Rapaport Group, which has its own polished diamond price list widely used by the trade, is trying to create a more liquid market for investment-grade diamonds by developing a transparen­t price structure. He hopes to launch a fund backed by diamonds within a couple of years.

“Diamonds can be a good investment, but you have to be careful,” he told Reuters. “You need to know the bid/ask spread, the price you can sell diamonds back on the same day.”

 ?? (Denis Balibouse/Reuters) ?? A CHRISTIE’S employee poses with the 14.62-carat Oppenheime­r Blue diamond during a preview in Geneva, Switzerlan­d on May 12, 2016. The gem was recently sold to an anonymous buyer for a world record $57.5 million for any jewel sold at auction.
(Denis Balibouse/Reuters) A CHRISTIE’S employee poses with the 14.62-carat Oppenheime­r Blue diamond during a preview in Geneva, Switzerlan­d on May 12, 2016. The gem was recently sold to an anonymous buyer for a world record $57.5 million for any jewel sold at auction.

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