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Analysts Expect Flat Rough Prices in 2019
Mar 28, 2019 5:36 AM
By Rapaport News
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RAPAPORT... Rough-diamond prices will remain sluggish this year as the
market challenges that arose in the second half of last year are set to continue,
two investment banks have warned.
Prices are likely to drop 1% to 2% in the first half of
2019, before recovering to end the year flat, analyst Kieron Hodgson at
London-based Panmure Gordon said this week. Prices rose 2% last year due to a
strong first half, but the market slowed in the second half. In addition, a
rise in mining production over the last two years has led to supply outweighing
demand, especially in smaller categories, he noted.
Midstream sentiment is weak due to low liquidity and
margins, tight bank lending, weak polished demand and high inventory levels, German
bank Berenberg explained in a report Tuesday. The RapNet Diamond Index (RAPI™)
for 1-carat polished diamonds fell 2.6% in the second half of 2018, while RAPI
for 0.30-carat stones slumped 9.9%. The 1-carat index has slipped 0.4% since
January 1.
Meanwhile, rough-diamond production has peaked since three
new mines — Gahcho Kué and Renard in Canada, and Liqhobong in Lesotho — came on
stream in 2016 and early 2017. Global output grew by between 1% and 2% to 153
million carats in 2018, and will increase slightly to 154 million carats this
year, Hodgson estimated. Miners now hold larger volumes of low-value rough than
they used to, he added.
Berenberg’s London branch backed the downbeat forecast, predicting
flat rough prices this year and next. The supply drop resulting from mine
closures in the coming years — such as the Argyle deposit in Australia, which
is due to run out in 2020 — won’t lift rough prices until 2021 or 2022, Berenberg
analysts Richard Hatch, Laurent Kimman and Michael Stoner wrote Tuesday.
“Between now and then, pending supply shocks, we think the
prospects for material price uplifts for rough are limited,” they forecast.
As production declines from next year on, rough prices are
likely to climb, both banks predicted. Panmure Gordon sees prices rising 2% in
2020 and 2021, while Berenberg expects stability until 2020, a 0.75% increase
in 2021, and 2% growth in 2022.
Image: The Gahcho Kué mine in Canada. (Mountain Province)
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Tags:
Argyle, Berenberg, Canada, Gahcho Kué, investment banks, Kieron Hodgson, Laurent Kimman, Lesotho, Liqhobong, Michael Stoner, oversupply, Panmure Gordon, prices, Rapaport News, RAPI, RapNet, renard, Richard Hatch, rough, Rough Diamonds, rough prices
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