【法国】Trends: Colored Diamonds See Their Prices Soar

Editor’s Note

This article examines the frenzied market for rare colored diamonds, highlighting recent record-breaking sales at major auction houses. The extraordinary prices reflect extreme rarity, yet they prompt questions about the valuations driving this niche luxury sector.

Le Figaro
Auction Hysteria and Record Prices

At every auction, they trigger a real hysteria. Colored diamonds are breaking records one after another, as auction houses Sotheby’s and Christie’s consistently experience. Just last week, the former sold a pink diamond for $83 million, making the “Pink Star” the most expensive precious stone in history, while the latter sold “The Orange”, an orange diamond, for $35.54 million. These staggering sums are justified by the rarity of these stones but also by a genuine fashion effect.

The Argument of Rarity

First, rarity. This is the argument used by auction houses to justify these staggering prices.

“The two diamonds sold last week are indeed exceptional for their color and their weight. The fancy vivid color category they belong to is extremely rare, it’s the purest. These diamonds are stunning!”

confirms Bruno Pozzera, gemologist and founder of the website diamants-infos.com, who notes that their certification was established by the Gemological Institute of America (GIA), “the Rolls-Royce of certification.”

“The more intense the color, the rarer these diamonds are,”

adds David Warren, head of the jewelry division at Christie’s. And

“when they reach 59.60 carats like the Pink Star, these diamonds can only be elevated to the rank of natural treasures,”

adds David Bennett, gemology expert at Sotheby’s.
The color palette of these diamonds is wide – red, blue, yellow, pink, orange – but their presence on the Earth’s surface is just as exceptional. For example, the Australian Argyle mine, owned by Rio Tinto, is the only place in the world that contains pink diamonds. Other colored stones are scattered in Africa, like “The Orange” unearthed in South Africa.
The color of the few “vivid” quality diamonds, whose weight is generally less than 4 carats, is often explained by the presence of a coloring agent that penetrates the earth and changes the normally white color of the stone, Christie’s specifies. This “accident of nature” would explain why the price per carat of a colored diamond can reach 50 times that of a white stone.

Beyond Rarity: Speculation and Fashion
“But rarity alone does not justify these astronomical prices. In my opinion, there is also speculation, overbidding,”

asserts Bruno Pozzera.

“20 or 30 years ago, these diamonds were neglected. Today, everyone is fighting over them. It’s a question of fashion. It’s the stars who brought these colored diamonds to the forefront and made sales take off,”

says the expert.

“These stones are certainly exceptional but these are not their real prices. Moreover, even this real price is difficult to estimate because the diamond market is very opaque,”

he adds.
The very divergent profiles of the buyers tend to confirm this hypothesis. If the buyer of the Pink Star was identified as a New York lapidary, that of “The Orange” was simply described as a “major collector.” That of the “Sun Drop”, a 110.3-carat yellow diamond sold for 8 million euros in 2011, was “an anonymous private individual”… One thing is certain: these buyers come from traditional markets like Australia, the United States, Japan, and Europe, but increasingly from emerging powers such as India and China.

“International demand for exceptional diamonds continues to grow.”

Sotheby’s assures. The rain of records is therefore far from over.

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⏰ Published on: November 19, 2013