Editor’s Note
This article highlights a significant downturn in India’s diamond exports, driven by weak demand in key markets. The data underscores the sector’s vulnerability to global economic shifts.
MUMBAI (Reuters) – India’s exports of cut and polished diamonds plummeted to their lowest level in nearly two decades in the 2024/25 fiscal year, which ended in March, on sluggish demand from the United States and China, a leading trade body said on Monday.
India is the world’s largest cutting and polishing hub, handling nine out of every 10 diamonds processed globally. But it is sensitive to economic uncertainty – particularly in the U.S., its biggest market.
Cut and polished diamond exports, which usually account for nearly half of overall gem and jewellery shipments, fell 16.8% to $13.3 billion year-on-year, the Gems and Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC) said in a statement.
The slump dragged down overall gem and jewellery exports by 11.7% to $28.5 billion – a four-year low – from $32.28 billion the previous year.
The lower demand for polished diamonds also prompted Indian processors to reduce imports of rough diamonds by 24.3% to $10.8 billion, the trade body said.
Gems and jewellery exports rose by 1% year-on-year in March, however, to $2.56 billion, the GJEPC said, as exporters ramped up shipments ahead of announced U.S. tariffs.
U.S. President Donald Trump initially planned to place a 27% tariff on imported Indian goods from April 9 as part of duties targeting dozens of countries, but then declared a 90-day pause on the measure.
said Shaunak Parikh, vice-chairman of GJEPC.
India’s gems and jewellery exports are unlikely to recover this year, one major Mumbai-based exporter told Reuters, as the U.S. tariffs have roiled global markets and shaken buyer confidence.
(Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav; Editing by Joe Bavier)