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True Understanding of Jewelry
Amanda Triossi – an expert of Sotheby's, the registrar and curator of the BVLGARY anniversary exhibition, collector of jewelry and author of some books about jewelry art - intends to visit Russia in the near future with an authorial workshop, “Understanding jewelry.”

Modernization is Impossible without Innovations
Arthur Androsov, Doctor of Engineering, Professor, a diamond industry veteran and inventor, gave this interview to Rough&Polished.

Varda Shine: 2010-2020 will be a Diamond Decade
Varda Shine, Managing Director of Diamond Trading Company (DTC), met our correspondent in London shortly before the World Diamond Congress in Moscow for this interview where she shared some of her views on the current state of affairs in the diamond industry.

Sergey Oulin: We Need a Platform for Serious Dialogue
On the final day of the 34th Congress of the World Federation of Diamond Bourses (WFDB) Sergey Oulin, President of the Diamond Chamber of Russia and Vice President of ALROSA, answered the questions filed by Rough&Polished.



News

29.07.2010
Angola now the world’s fourth largest diamond producer by value
Production figures released by the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS) for 2009 shows that Angola was the world’s fourth largest diamond producing country by value for the year.

29.07.2010
Diamond junior Tawana completes 660 000 AUD placement
Diamond exploration company Tawana Resources, which has interests in Botswana, South Africa and Australia recently said that it had completed the placement of 66 million shares at 1 cent per share to raise 660 000 AUD (593 000 USD).

29.07.2010
Zim produced about 1m ct of diamonds last year - report
Zimbabwe produced 963 000 carats of diamonds last year worth over 20 million USD.



Speculative Potential of Long-Term Contracts

10.03.2010

In early 2009, ALROSA tied up long-term (mainly three-year) contracts for selling rough diamonds with 15 large Belgian and Israeli diamond dealers. The pattern for selecting clients to this pool included such pronounced criteria as a stable need in rough diamonds to an amount of $200 million a year; available own free funds; absence of problems with specialized banks; and a rather low leverage (up to 20%).
 
The content of these contracts is confidential, but reports mentioned that pricing within them was formulated as “the price-list of the Russian Ministry of Finance +17%” and that as a whole under these contracts ALROSA would deliver diamonds from its entire annual output range, their total amount in July 2009 being around $800 million. These contracts were viewed first of all as a facility to hedge ALROSA’s risks against violent fluctuations in prices for rough diamonds caused by crisis.
 
Certainly, it is impossible to assume that these long-term contracts impose any restrictions on how dealers will use the rough they buy. Any buyer is free to turn his rough into polished diamonds or make a diamond stock or re-sell it on the spot market: what will be done exactly depends on the rate of return. Therefore, if rough prices on the spot market will exceed the cost based on “the price-list of the Ministry of Finance +17%” formula at least by 10-15%, it is hardly any use to doubt that rough diamonds bought from ALROSA under long-term contracts will be released into speculative circulation instead of turning into polished goods.
 
Right now, many people voice their fears over a virtual misbalance between the rough and polished diamond markets: while the first enjoys a notable rise in prices the second is hibernated by stagnation. Such a threat is assumed to stem from the excessive liquidity leaked to the diamond market as a part of the liquidity injected into economies within national anti-recessionary programs. Once again easy credits along with the promulgated axiom about depleted diamond fields and a forthcoming slump in diamond output provoke investments into rough diamonds and rev up the speculative potential of this asset. Thus, “first-hand” contracts with a diamond-mining company based on fixed prices become a bonanza for their owners in case their profit from rough resale on the spot market turns out to be essentially higher than their margin from polished sales.
 
Moreover, since any significant price rise on the spot market is fairly gainful for holders of long-term contracts at fixed prices, it is impossible to exclude a chance of their purposeful actions to accelerate this growth. For instance, on the stock market coordinated actions of heavyweight players permit to manipulate asset prices within a rather wide range – these are well-known cases. Taking into account the criteria used to make a pool of ALROSA’s exclusive clients and their weight on the sufficiently narrow diamond market, such an opportunity is to be considered quite real. And this is not the case of some malicious intent – the point is that under these circumstances any dealings for a rise may seriously boost profits of such companies.
 
Of course, pacta sunt servanda (Latin for “pacts must be respected”) and ALROSA’s missed profit in case of further rapid growth in prices for rough diamonds is not the worst evil for the diamond market as a whole. However, an annual speculative injection of almost $800 million will obviously be not beneficial for the market’s highly fickle health. In early March, the experts of Leader Short-Term Bond Fund published their data on real unemployment in the United States (i.e. taking into account those people who stopped to receive their welfare payments but still did not find jobs) which will reach 16% in the middle of 2010. This estimate is close to the data released by The Marker Publishing House evaluating the real unemployment in the United States in February at 16.8%. This kind of background makes premature any talk of significant recovery on the largest diamond jewelry market, and even dramatic success of China and India can hardly sweeten this bitter pill.
 
At this conjuncture, hedging ALROSA’s risks by long-term contracts based on fixed prices brings about a new risk - the threat to make the amplitude of speculative tsunami much higher. It seems that the paradoxical situation when rough diamonds will cost more than polished diamonds is looming on the horizon again. Eighteen months ago all of us saw what it added up to.
 
Sergey Goryainov, Rough&Polished

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