News

Advanced Search

Diamond Trading Slows over Diwali

1ct. RAPI -0.2% in October

Nov 1, 2017 5:29 AM   By Rapaport
Comment Comment Email Email Print Print Facebook Facebook Twitter Twitter Share Share
RAPAPORT PRESS RELEASE, November 1, 2017, New York… Diamond prices softened slightly in October amid slow trading as businesses closed for Indian and Jewish holidays. Polished inventory levels dropped during the month, but remain higher than usual for this time of year, exerting downward pressure on prices.

The RapNet Diamond Index (RAPI™) for 1-carat diamonds slid 0.2% in October and has declined 4.7% since January.


© Copyright 2017, Rapaport USA Inc.

The Rapaport Monthly Report – November 2017 notes that the US and Chinese jewelry markets are showing signs of sales growth. However, fewer jewelers are operating in the US: 228 businesses closed in the third quarter, while just 40 opened, according to the Jewelers Board of Trade.

Jewelers who can create a sense of community, tell an authentic story, guarantee ethical sourcing, and mesh online engagement with their in-store experience are gaining market share and will have a successful holiday season.

Jewelers are maintaining cautious inventory controls as they adjust to the new consumer reality, and diamond buying has consequently contracted. Manufacturers have built up polished inventory, due to aggressive rough buying in the first half.

The number of unique diamonds listed on RapNet has increased 18% since January to 1.4 million. Dealers are holding large volumes of hard-to-move goods and seeing shortages of select in-demand categories, such as RapSpec A3+, SI-clarity diamonds.

Rough trading slowed in October due to low profitability and Indian manufacturers closing for three weeks over Diwali. Still, mining companies remain bullish about rough supply. In the third quarter, global production rose to its highest quarterly level since 2008.

Stable diamond trading is expected in the next two months, with demand shifting to the Far East ahead of the Chinese New Year. The first quarter will likely see stronger activity as jewelers replenish stock following the Christmas season, hopefully enabling dealers to reduce their built-up inventory.

The Rapaport Monthly Report is available at store.rapaport.com/monthly-report.

Rapaport Media Contacts: media@diamonds.net
US: Sherri Hendricks +1-702-893-9400
International: Gabriella Laster +1-718-521-4976
Mumbai: Karishma Nagpal +91-98206-60574

About the Rapaport RapNet Diamond Index (RAPI™): The RAPI is the average asking price in hundred $/ct. of the 10% best-priced diamonds, for each of the top 25 quality round diamonds (D-H, IF-VS2, GIA-graded, RapSpec-A3 and better) offered for sale on RapNet – Rapaport Diamond Trading Network. www.RapNet.com has daily listings of over 1.4 million diamonds valued at approximately $8 billion. Additional information is available at www.diamonds.net.


About the Rapaport Group: The Rapaport Group is an international network of companies providing added-value services that support the development of ethical, transparent, competitive and efficient diamond and jewelry markets. Established in 1976, the Group has more than 20,000 clients in over 121 countries. Group activities include Rapaport Information Services, providing the Rapaport benchmark Price List for diamonds, as well as research, analysis and news; RapNet – the world’s largest diamond trading network, with over 15,000 members in 95 countries and daily listings of over 1.4 million carats valued at approximately $8 billion; Rapaport Laboratory Services, providing GIA and Rapaport gemological services in India, Israel and Belgium; and Rapaport Trading and Auction Services, the world’s largest recycler of diamonds, selling over 500,000 carats of diamonds a year. Additional information is available at www.diamonds.net.



Image: Shutterstock.com
Comment Comment Email Email Print Print Facebook Facebook Twitter Twitter Share Share
Tags: Alrosa, De Beers, diamonds, jewelers board of trade, Jewelry, Rapaport, RAPI, RapNet
Similar Articles
Comments: (0)  Add comment Add Comment
Arrange Comments Last to First