Business Standard

Cash is still king in diamond market

De Beers to offer customers concession­s for a second consecutiv­e buying round to support the market

- THOMAS BIESHEUVEL London/Mumbai, 18 January

As diamond traders descend on Botswana this week for one of the year's biggest sales, the $14-billion industry is struggling to recover from India's war on black money.

De Beers, the world's top producer of gems, will offer customers concession­s for a second consecutiv­e buying round to support the market, according to people familiar with the process, who asked not to be identified because the informatio­n isn't public.

The industry has been hit after India imposed widerangin­g currency reforms in November that created a cash crunch. As much as 90 per cent of the world’s rough diamonds pass through India to be cut, polished or traded by the thousands of gem companies. “The Indian demonetisa­tion programme is showing how much of the polishing industry is still a cash business,” said Richard Chetwode, an industry consultant and former executive at Dominion Diamond Corp and Gem Diamonds.

The company's first sale of the year, which gives traders a chance to replenish stocks following the crucial holiday period, follows its smallest sale of 2016 reported in December.

India’s crackdown on socalled black money has hit the lowest end of the market the hardest. In De Beers’s final sale of 2016, the former monopoly allowed its customers to pass on boxes of the cheaper stones even if they’d used up their allowance of deferrals, people familiar said at the time. De Beers also took the unusual step of permitting buyers to refuse lower-quality stones from pre-mixed assortment­s of diamonds, they said.

Alrosa PJSC, the world's second-biggest producer, said December sales fell 31 per cent from November, after smalland middle-size Indian diamond-cutting companies were hit by the monetary reforms.

India's imports of rough diamonds fell 4.7 per cent to $1.4 billion in December from the same month a year earlier, according to data from the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council. That pared an increase in shipments in the financial year that began April 1 to 25 per cent.

De Beers sells its diamonds at 10 sales a year known as sights in Gaborone, the capital of Botswana. It invites about 80 customers, know as sightholde­rs, who buy the diamonds at prices set by De Beers.

The Anglo American Plc unit, which produces about one-third of the world's diamonds will allow its customers additional flexibilit­y at this week's sale, the people familiar with the process said. However, the gems that can be deferred will be in narrower ranges than at December's sale and customers won't be allowed to separate stones from pre-mixed assortment­s again, they said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reforms came just as the diamond industry was starting to show some signs of recovery following a bruising 2015. Average rough diamond prices rose 9.1 per cent last year, recovering some of the ground lost when prices collapsed 18 per cent in the prior year, the worst performanc­e since the global financial crisis.

De Beers’s decision to offer less flexibilit­y than in December's sale may signal that the worst has passed for the broader market. Still, the lower end of the market was underperfo­rming amid oversupply even before Modi's reforms, and the demonetisa­tion has added further pressure, said Chetwode.

 ??  ?? Demonetisa­tion has hit polishing industry
Demonetisa­tion has hit polishing industry

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