National Post (National Edition)

This gem mine isn’t forever

Rivals hope move pulls industry out of doldrums

- DAVID STRINGER AND THOMAS BIESHEUVEL

The world’s largest diamond mine and main producer of pink stones is closing — and prices are likely to soar.

The world’s biggest diamond mine — famed more for the fistful of coveted pink and red gems it yields each year than being a major producer of lower-quality stones — is being shuttered by Rio Tinto Group after almost four decades. Rivals from Russia to Canada hope that can help turn around the beleaguere­d industry.

Rio’s Argyle mine in remote Western Australia has transforme­d the sector since 1983 when the operation began supplying gems for both ends of the market. RBC Capital Markets and Panmure Gordon are among brokers, banks and competitor­s forecastin­g the closure could kickstart prices that have waned since 2011, according to PolishedPr­ices.com, an industry data provider.

Production at Argyle, about 2,600 kilometres northeast of the state capital Perth, is scheduled to end before the end of next year after finally exhausting its supply of economical­ly viable stones, said Arnaud Soirat, Rio’s head of copper and diamonds.

“There is going to be a fair bit of supply which is going to come out of the market,” Soirat said in an interview Friday at the mine site. “In late 2020 we’ll be stopping operations and will start the rehabilita­tion of the site.”

Argyle is best known as the source of about 90 per cent of the world’s prized pink diamonds — rose-tomagenta hued stones that command among the sector’s highest prices. Sotheby’s auctioned the 59.6 carat “Pink Star,” mined by Rio’s rival De Beers, for US$71 million in April 2017, a record auction price for any gem. While they attract most attention, the pink stones account for less than 0.01 per cent of Argyle’s total output.

The mine also is the biggest diamond producer by volume and that’s what has put the operation at the centre of global oversupply. More than three-quarters of Argyle’s output is comprised of lower-value brown diamonds, and the mine’s overall output sells for an average of between US$15$25 a carat, Canaccord Genuity Group Inc. estimated in 2017. That’s far less than the US$171 a carat average price realized last year by De Beers.

A glut of cheap and small diamonds has eroded profits for nearly every miner and made it increasing­ly hard for the industry’s cutters, polishers and traders to make a profit. In December, some of Rio’s customers refused to buy cheaper stones, while De Beers has been forced to cut some prices and offer concession­s to buyers.

Yet, with consumer appetite for diamonds stable, and major mines including Argyle scheduled to shutter, “the rational offset between supply and demand should lead to price growth,” Stornoway Diamond Corp. Chief Executive Officer Pat Godin said in March. Declining output, led by Argyle’s closure, will help revive prices, Toronto-based producer Mountain Province Diamonds Inc. said in May.

About 21 million carats a year of global diamond production — including about 14 million a year from Argyle — are scheduled to exit the market by 2023, a volume that’ll only partially be offset by new mines, according to Russia’s Alrosa PJSC, the world’s biggest diamond producer. The shortfall between annual demand and supply could be between 11 million and 35 million carats by 2023, the company said in a presentati­on last month.

“In terms of the pink diamonds, the impact is going to be even more dramatic” from Argyle’s closure, Rio’s Soirat said in the interview. “You can imagine the laws of supply and demand will apply, and you can imagine the impact that will have on those very rare pink, red, blue and purple diamonds.”

The producer estimates Argyle has only about 150 coloured diamonds of sufficient quality left to extract and make available for its annual tender, a sale to invited buyers that showcases 50-to-60 of the year’s most valuable gems, he said.

Overall, the diamond sector probably also needs a boost to downstream demand, according to Richard Hatch, a London-based analyst at Berenberg. Mine closures that tighten supply “will help, but is it the shot in the arm that the industry really needs? Probably not,” Hatch said.

Buyers have been hit by a shortage of finance and stagnant end markets, while a weaker rupee has made gems more expensive for Indian manufactur­ers, who cut or polish about 90 per cent of the world’s stones.

The closure of Argyle will remove about 75 per cent of Rio’s diamonds output, yet the impact on the producer’s earnings will be negligible. Diamonds bring in only about 2 per cent of earnings, while iron ore — the company’s top commodity — accounts for almost 60 per cent.

Rio in 2016 shuttered the Bunder developmen­t project in India and in 2015 exited the Murowa mine in Zimbabwe. The producer’s only other producing diamond asset, Diavik in Canada, is scheduled to close in 2025, though exploratio­n work is continuing to potentiall­y extend that site’s life, Soirat told reporters Friday at Argyle.

A FAIR BIT OF SUPPLY WHICH IS GOING TO COME OUT OF THE MARKET.

 ?? CARLA GOTTGENS / BLOOMBERG ?? A scarecrow made from scraps stands near the refuse bins at the Argyle diamond mine operated by the Rio Tinto Group in the East Kimberly
region of Western Australia. The mine, slated for closure, is famed for the fistful of coveted pink and red gems it yields each year
CARLA GOTTGENS / BLOOMBERG A scarecrow made from scraps stands near the refuse bins at the Argyle diamond mine operated by the Rio Tinto Group in the East Kimberly region of Western Australia. The mine, slated for closure, is famed for the fistful of coveted pink and red gems it yields each year

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