Editor’s Note
Christie’s recent sale of the “Mellon Blue” diamond for $25.6 million set a house record for jewelry this year, yet still sparked debate over whether the result met expectations.

On Nov. 9, Christie’s Geneva sold the Mellon Blue, a 9.51 ct. internally flawless fancy blue pear-shape diamond, for $25.6 million—an impressive number that some still considered disappointing.
That final price landed right in the middle of the auction house’s presale $20 million to $30 million estimate, and is the most Christie’s has scored for a jewelry piece this year.
Yet in 2014, when the auction market was far frothier, Sotheby’s sold the Mellon Blue for $32.6 million—setting a per-carat record for a colored diamond of $3.3 million. The buyer was later identified as fugitive Hong Kong billionaire Joseph Lau, who renamed it the “Zoe Diamond” after his younger daughter.
Although the latest sale means the value of the gemstone has dropped by some $7 million since then, Rahul Kadakia, president of Christie’s Asia Pacific and chairman of its global luxury group, tells JCK:
While the Mellon Blue auction attracted “frenzied bidding,” the result was far from “dazzling,” according to Tobias Kormind, managing director of online jeweler 77 Diamonds.
The fancy vivid blue diamond was named after its onetime owner, the late Rachel Lambert “Bunny” Mellon, a philanthropist and friend of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Bunny’s husband Paul was heir to the Mellon banking fortune.
Overall, Christie’s Geneva Luxury Week sale fetched $102 million, a 24% increase over last year.
(Photo courtesy of Christie’s)