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Mountain Province Sees Average Price Decline

Jan 4, 2018 3:48 AM   By Rapaport News
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RAPAPORT... The average price of rough diamonds sold by Mountain Province fell in December as a large proportion of the goods on offer were smaller stones, the company said.

The miner sold 364,000 carats of rough from its Gahcho Kué mine at an average price of $53 per carat, for a total of $19.1 million, it reported in a statement Wednesday.

The average price was below October’s $60 per carat and November’s $66 per carat. However, the like-for-like price for equivalent diamonds rose 3% over the previous month, the company explained.

The December sale, Mountain Province’s 10th and final tender of the year, did not include any fancy or special diamonds, as De Beers won the bid to sell these goods. Mountain Province holds a 49% share in the Canada mine, while De Beers owns the remaining 51%. The two companies split the “run-of-mine” production according to their stakes in the venture, but compete against each other for higher-value diamonds.

“Our 10th sale saw further stabilization of rough prices and strengthening of competition, with over 150 companies attending the tender, the highest to date,” said Reid Mackie, vice president of diamond marketing at Mountain Province. “This, combined with solid holiday sales results reported by the retail sector, bodes well for a positive rough market reopening in January.”
Tags: Canada, De Beers, Gahcho Kué, mountain province, Mountain Province Diamonds, Rapaport News, Reid Mackie, Rough Diamonds
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