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New Alrosa Client List Excludes Leviev Firm
Jan 31, 2019 5:36 AM
By Joshua Freedman
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RAPAPORT... Alrosa has stopped supplying rough diamonds to Lev Leviev’s
LLD Diamonds through its contract-sales arrangement, as part of a reshuffle of the miner’s long-term client list.
The tycoon’s Israel-based firm is one of “several” former customers
that have dropped off the 2019 supply roster, known as the Alrosa Alliance
program, the Russian company said.
“Last year, there was a decision to exclude LLD from the
long-term client list due to noncompliance with Alrosa Alliance principles,” a
spokesperson for the Russian producer explained in an email to Rapaport News
this week. The Russian company has guidelines that state various possible
reasons for suspending a client.
Alrosa has not confirmed the identity of the other companies it removed from the list.
LLD has been under the spotlight since Israeli police
arrested several of its employees in November on suspicion of smuggling
diamonds worth hundreds of millions of shekels into the country. Alrosa
declined to say whether the move was directly related to the probe, while LLD
did not respond to a request for comment.
The Alrosa Alliance accounts for about 70% of the miner’s
rough sales by volume. It operates a similar arrangement to De Beers’
sightholder system, offering stable supply to companies that can demonstrate
demand and comply with its rules on business practices.
Alrosa has expanded its list to 59 long-term buyers of
gem-quality rough for 2019, from 56 last year. The six new members were Hong
Kong-based jewelry retailer Chow Sang Sang, Indian diamond firms Kapu
Gems, Mohit Diamonds, VD Global and M. Suresh Company, and Switzerland-based manufacturer Richold.
“We confirm the inviolability of Alrosa Alliance principles,
and are interested in diversifying our client base, which has grown compared to
last year,” said Evgeny Agureev, director of Alrosa’s United Selling
Organization. While the new customers showed sufficient “trading activity” to
warrant gaining long-term supply, “several companies dropped out from the
list,” he added.
The miner also accepted two Belgian companies, H.D. Diam and
IGC Group, as candidates for potential future long-term contracts. Both firms
have previously bought from Alrosa in ad-hoc deals, known as spot transactions.
Last year, Alrosa switched to annual assessments of clients’
rough-diamond allocations, bringing its policy more in line with that of De
Beers. Under the old system, Alrosa’s supply deals with clients held for three
years.
Image: A crew bus at Alrosa’s Nyurbinskaya open-pit mine. (Alrosa)
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Tags:
Alrosa, Israel, Joshua Freedman, Lev Leviev, Leviev, LLD, LLD Diamonds, mining, Rapaport News, Rough Diamonds
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