Rapaport Magazine
Industry

Mixed Messages

As the diamond trade moves into a new year, it is navigating with mixed — and sometimes conflicting — messages from the marketplace.

By Avi Krawitz




For the diamond industry itself, the year closed with welcome signs of stability thatfueled optimism for 2012. Among those signs were the satisfactory growth in holiday sales in the all-important U.S. market and the still-growing demand from Asia and other emerging nations. The industry remains confident about its own position within the luxury category and about consumer interest in and desire for its goods. On initial reports of a positive Christmas season, some diamantaires were even suggesting that U.S. consumers have, in fact, revitalized their spending culture. A more comprehensive post-season holiday sales analysis will confirm whether this is true.

Early feedback indicated that jewelry outperformed other product sectors in year-end sales, boosted by aggressive marketing by the major diamond jewelry retailers. But, while jewelry sales by value have been edging toward prerecession levels, the volume of sales has been less impressive because the trade is working with smaller inventories and budget-wary consumers are opting for smaller sizes and lower-quality goods. Rather, growth has been boosted by price inflation, with the consumer price index (CPI) for jewelry rising 11 percent from January through November, despite a slight easing of prices in November (see chart on opposite page, top).

Wholesale Steady

Overall, wholesale diamond buying at the close of the year was steady and cautious, with transactions made mainly to fill existing orders and to replenish depleted categories when popular items, such as SI clarity stones, became scarce. Wholesale and retail buyers avoided building up inventory as they generally had sufficient stock to last through the end of 2011, following their aggressive buying in the first half of the year.

Most in the industry were satisfied, and somewhat relieved, that there was relative stability in the market at the end of the year, as reflected in the RapNet Diamond Index (RAPI™) during December (see chart at right, bottom), albeit with a slight downtrend. On the whole, polished suppliers held firm on their prices, with the attitude that serious buyers would close deals if they needed the goods for Christmas or the Chinese New Year.

The RAPI for 1-carat diamonds fell .8 percent during the period December 1 to December 27, while RAPI for .50-carat stones dropped by .2 percent and the RAPI for 3-carat diamonds rose by .3 percent. The RAPI for .30-carat stones showed greater weakness, dropping by 3.5 percent during the period, because of the stronger price pressure on smaller stones. 

The Bigger Picture

In terms of the bigger picture — the global economic environment in which the diamond industry must operate — confidence is shakier. Remnants of the uncertainty that has enveloped the worldwide economy since July remain, including the fact that polished prices fell by more than 10 percent in the second half of 2011, as reflected by RAPI. Buyers in China and Hong Kong continued to hold back on their purchases for the Chinese New Year, which is January 23. They, too, had bought aggressively at the start of 2011 and, cautious about the global economy, appeared to be delaying their final year-end purchases.

Similarly, in India, caution reigned and the usual post-Diwali wedding season buzz was a bit lacking for the trade and retailers alike. Tight liquidity was exacerbated by the weakening of the rupee, which depreciated by 12 percent in the second half of 2011 (see chart on page 20), adding to overhead, operating and inventory costs for the local trade and retail sector.

The rupee slid from the stability it exhibited in the first six months of the year, declining from an exchange rate of one rupee to $0.0227 at the beginning of August to $0.0189 on December 27, 2011 (see chart at left). The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM) warned that the rupee could depreciate a further 5 percent to reach levels of $0.0181 by March 2012 if the global economy continues to be weak. “Such wild fluctuations within a short span of time are unsettling and are leaving an imprint on the rest of the economy,” said D.S. Rawat, secretary general of ASSOCHAM. “The depreciating rupee will add further pressure on overall domestic inflation.”

These and other factors have impacted consumer spending, as well as India’s polished diamond trade. Polished exports fell 27 percent year on year to $1.18 billion in November and polished imports declined by 20 percent to $803 million, according to data published by the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC). Other centers showed a more positive trend, with Belgium’s polished exports, for example, up 32 percent to $1.23 billion during November and its imports increasing by 29 percent to $1.16 billion.

Rough Still Weak

Rough trading in India also has slowed. Diamdel noted that while demand for rough at its November-December online tenders strengthened from buyers in Antwerp and Asia Pacific, and held steady from buyers in Tel Aviv, demand continued to decline from buyers in India. Neil Ventura, Diamdel’s chief executive officer (CEO), reported that while the company has reduced its presentations at recent auction cycles to align with prevailing demand, the company noted an improvement in demand and prices during the latest November-December cycle.

However, the decline in rough trading and prices in the second half of 2011 continues to impact the mining sector. ALROSA noted that diamond demand weakened from the third quarter due to the traditional slowdown in business activity between August and October, an unstable world economy, a decline in liquidity and, as a consequence, a reduction of the speculative component in the market. Still, while the company supplied fewer goods to the market, its sales by value surged during the third quarter (see chart at right) because it sold only to long-term clients and shelved its auction channel in response to the turn of the market. 

As ALROSA continued to achieve record prices, it proved to be the exception. Petra Diamonds warned that its revenues in the second half of calendar 2011 would fall $23 million below expectations due to the decline in rough prices between July and mid-December. “In the short term, global economic uncertainty may continue to cause some volatility in rough diamond pricing, but it should be noted that demand from Asia and other emerging markets is continuing to grow strongly and is lessening reliance on the major U.S. market,” Petra stated.

Most would agree with that assessment. But many also are questioning whether global economic weaknesses will impact growth markets like China and India. Already both countries have noted an anticipated slowdown in the pace of growth in the near future, given their reliance on export markets with weak outlooks, most notably in Europe.

While the industry navigates the current economic reality, many are looking to the first quarter for further signs of stability, bolstered by the traditional postseason restocking. But they also are being realistic that the old rules don’t necessarily apply anymore. Wholesalers and retailers are increasingly minimizing their risk exposure by keeping inventories low. As uncertainty about the global economic environment envelops the diamond industry, the outlook for 2012 remains as cautious as ever.

Article from the Rapaport Magazine - January 2012. To subscribe click here.

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