TechCentralTechCentral
    Facebook Twitter YouTube LinkedIn
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn YouTube
    TechCentral TechCentral
    NEWSLETTER
    • News

      The great crypto crash: the fallout, and what happens next

      22 June 2022

      Winter 1, Eskom 0

      22 June 2022

      What it will take to bring the Guptas to justice

      22 June 2022

      Inflation in South Africa spikes higher

      22 June 2022

      Eskom announces massive escalation in load shedding

      22 June 2022
    • World

      Tether to launch a stablecoin tied to the British pound

      22 June 2022

      Tech giants form metaverse standards body, without Apple

      22 June 2022

      There are still unresolved matters in Twitter deal, Musk says

      21 June 2022

      5G subscriptions to top one billion in 2022: Ericsson

      21 June 2022

      Crypto lenders face a DeFi drubbing

      21 June 2022
    • In-depth

      Goodbye, Internet Explorer – you really won’t be missed

      19 June 2022

      Oracle’s database dominance threatened by rise of cloud-first rivals

      13 June 2022

      Everything Apple announced at WWDC – in less than 500 words

      7 June 2022

      Sheryl Sandberg’s ad empire leaves a complicated legacy

      2 June 2022

      Tulipmania meets the real economy at WhatsApp speed

      30 May 2022
    • Podcasts

      How your organisation can triage its information security risk

      22 June 2022

      Everything PC S01E06 – ‘Apple Silicon’

      15 June 2022

      The youth might just save us

      15 June 2022

      Everything PC S01E05 – ‘Nvidia: The Green Goblin’

      8 June 2022

      Everything PC S01E04 – ‘The story of Intel – part 2’

      1 June 2022
    • Opinion

      Has South Africa’s advertising industry lost its way?

      21 June 2022

      Rob Lith: What Icasa’s spectrum auction means for SA companies

      13 June 2022

      A proposed solution to crypto’s stablecoin problem

      19 May 2022

      From spectrum to roads, why fixing SA’s problems is an uphill battle

      19 April 2022

      How AI is being deployed in the fight against cybercriminals

      8 April 2022
    • Company Hubs
      • 1-grid
      • Altron Document Solutions
      • Amplitude
      • Atvance Intellect
      • Axiz
      • BOATech
      • CallMiner
      • Digital Generation
      • E4
      • ESET
      • Euphoria Telecom
      • IBM
      • Kyocera Document Solutions
      • Microsoft
      • Nutanix
      • One Trust
      • Pinnacle
      • Skybox Security
      • SkyWire
      • Tarsus on Demand
      • Videri Digital
      • Zendesk
    • Sections
      • Banking
      • Broadcasting and Media
      • Cloud computing
      • Consumer electronics
      • Cryptocurrencies
      • Education and skills
      • Energy
      • Fintech
      • Information security
      • Internet and connectivity
      • Internet of Things
      • Investment
      • IT services
      • Motoring and transport
      • Public sector
      • Science
      • Social media
      • Talent and leadership
      • Telecoms
    • Advertise
    TechCentralTechCentral
    Home»In-depth»The elite club that rules the diamond world is starting to crack

    The elite club that rules the diamond world is starting to crack

    In-depth By Agency Staff29 July 2019
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Email

    It’s one of the world’s most exclusive clubs, known over the years as the Syndicate, the Central Selling Organisation and the Diamond Trading Company.

    For more than a century, De Beers has sold most of its rough diamonds to a select number of customers, a list that reads like a who’s who of the opaque gem-trading world. Tiffany & Co, Graff Diamonds and Signet Jewelers all own subsidiaries in this group, guaranteeing a steady supply of gems with the pedigree of being vetted by De Beers.

    In the diamond trading world, becoming one of De Beers’ elite buyers is viewed as essential to achieving success and making money. Now, it’s no longer so easy.

    It’s not an easy time right now, I’m not going to pretend it is and I’m not to pretend to my clients that it is

    De Beers sells its gems through 10 sales each year in Botswana’s capital of Gaborone, and the buyers — known as “sightholders” — have to accept the price and the quantities they’re offered. It’s a system that originated in the 1890s and designed to benefit both miner and customer, who receives the diamonds at a discounted rate.

    But the discount has been shrinking. In some cases the prices have been higher than the going trading rate, forcing customers to sell at a loss, according to people familiar with the matter. Some sightholders now struggle to make money from a business that was once highly lucrative.

    The problems in the diamond industry are twofold. High-end jewellery sales are stagnating as other luxury offerings, like shoes, handbags and resort vacations, crowd the field. It’s also harder for diamond trading companies to find financing because banks are abandoning the sector after being hit by frauds and bad loans.

    Robust

    “It’s not an easy time right now, I’m not going to pretend it is and I’m not to pretend to my clients that it is,” said CEO Bruce Cleaver. He argues that demand remains robust, and millennials will covet diamonds the same way their parents and grandparents did.

    De Beers says it’s also spending more on marketing and improving tracing in the supply chain as part of efforts to show the diamonds aren’t fuelling conflict or broader human-rights abuses.

    Even so, the relationship between De Beers and its sightholders is becoming strained, as the company keeps prices high even if it means selling fewer stones.

    It’s a change for an industry, where being one of the chosen buyers was long considered the highest achievement. So desirable was becoming a sightholder that some of De Beers’ art collection, which lines its office hallways at its headquarters near London’s Trafalgar’s Square and includes works by David Hockney and Damien Hirst, were gifts from customers hoping to curry favour with the miner.

    In a 2015 Financial Times interview, Graff chairman Laurence Graff said about De Beers: “If you want to be successful with diamonds, you have to get as close to them as possible.”

    That’s less true now. For the 80-some buyers operating from Belgium to Israel to India, the profit margins on trading diamonds have turned wafer thin or disappeared altogether. Many frustrated sightholders are refusing to buy at current prices, according to people familiar with the matter.

    It’s impossible to guess how much money some of the company’s customers — which are almost exclusively private companies — might be losing. For retailers, like Graff and Tiffany, trading and polishing diamonds is a tiny part of their overall business, and they’re less affected.

    But for the many specialist firms, the troubles have been harder to manage. Several have already gone out of business and Eurostar Diamonds, previously one of the biggest buyers of rough diamonds, was put into bankruptcy earlier this year. To be sure, the group has faced previous downturns and De Beers itself reduced the number of sightholders last decade from more than 100.

    De Beers’ sales in the first six months of the year were at least $500-million less than the same period of the previous three years

    As its customers struggle, De Beers is also suffering financially. The company’s parent, Anglo American, saw first-half profit drop almost 30% from the diamond business. Sales in the first six months of the year were at least US$500-million less than the same period of the previous three years.

    Rough diamond prices have declined about 6% this year, while polished stones are about 1% lower, according to data from Polishedprices.com.

    Sightholders face shrinking profit margins from buying from De Beers. The built-in discount they receive has been about 3% in the past year. In some cases, it’s been whittled down to as little as 1% or they’ve paid more than they can sell them for in the secondary market, according to customers and others in the industry.

    The narrow margins means profit on the boxes is wiped out after accounting for a 1.5% value-added service charge payable to De Beers and broker fees of about 0.5%, they said.

    Shift

    It’s a sizeable shift from the end of the last decade, when customers could consistently expect a discount of more than 5%, according to the people.

    De Beers has gone to unusual lengths to support its struggling buyers. The company this year loosened the rules for sightholders by letting them lower their annual quotas and defer purchases. It also says the pricing allows customers to make good-enough profits after averaging out market booms and downturns.

    “I’m conscious that we need to help them ride out the storm,” said Cleaver. “There are things we can do in the rest of 2019 to drive demand and to help customers add a bit more flexibility in their businesses.”

    There doesn’t seem any looming good news. Dutch bank ABN Amro, one of the leaders in the industry’s financing, recently wrote to clients saying it would no longer finance rough purchases if it wasn’t clear a profit could be made on the stones. At the same time, some diamond boxes sold by Russian rival Alrosa this month are trading at steep discounts to the price Alrosa sold them for, according to the people.

    “It’s a perfect storm: you have too much supply, not enough demand,” said Richard Hatch, a metals and mining analyst at Berenberg. “I can’t see it improving anytime soon.”  — Reported by Thomas Biesheuvel, with assistance from Hayley Warren, (c) 2019 Bloomberg LP

    Bruce Cleaver De Beers top
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleDFA looks to expand into data centres, towers
    Next Article Help shape Xerox support with your feedback

    Related Posts

    Goodbye, Internet Explorer – you really won’t be missed

    19 June 2022

    Oracle’s database dominance threatened by rise of cloud-first rivals

    13 June 2022

    Everything Apple announced at WWDC – in less than 500 words

    7 June 2022
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Promoted

    More than card machines – iKhokha diversifies to reach more SMEs

    22 June 2022

    What does it cost to be a student in 2022?

    22 June 2022

    Rugged PCs bring AI to the edge in industrial settings

    21 June 2022
    Opinion

    Has South Africa’s advertising industry lost its way?

    21 June 2022

    Rob Lith: What Icasa’s spectrum auction means for SA companies

    13 June 2022

    A proposed solution to crypto’s stablecoin problem

    19 May 2022

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the best South African technology news and analysis delivered to your e-mail inbox every morning.

    © 2009 - 2022 NewsCentral Media

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.