Showing posts with label A rough diamond under analysis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A rough diamond under analysis. Show all posts

Monday, 25 May 2026

Diamond Shapes and the Impact of Rough Recovery on Pricing

 

Round Brilliant Cut: The Lowest Yield but Highest Demand

Insights from the Diamond Certification Laboratory of Australia (DCLA)

In the diamond industry, shape is far more than an aesthetic choice. It plays a direct role in value, pricing structure, and how efficiently a rough diamond can be transformed into a polished stone. At the Diamond Certification Laboratory of Australia Diamond Certification Laboratory of Australia (DCLA), one of the key considerations in diamond assessment is how much of the original rough crystal is recovered during polishing.

This recovery rate, often referred to as yield, is one of the hidden drivers behind diamond pricing and helps explain why different shapes are priced differently in the wholesale and retail markets.


Understanding Rough Diamond Recovery

When a rough diamond is cut and polished, a significant portion of the original crystal is lost. This loss is unavoidable due to the need to remove inclusions, shape the stone, and maximise brilliance.

Different shapes produce different recovery percentages:

  • Higher yield shapes retain more of the original rough
  • Lower yield shapes sacrifice more material to achieve optical performance and symmetry

This difference directly impacts cost efficiency for cutters and ultimately influences market pricing.


Round Brilliant Cut: The Lowest Yield but Highest Demand

The round brilliant cut remains the most popular diamond shape globally due to its unmatched brilliance and light performance. However, it also has the lowest average recovery rate, typically ranging from 40 percent to 45 percent of the original rough diamond.

This means that more than half of the rough stone is lost during cutting. As a result, cutters must allocate more rough carat weight to produce a finished round brilliant diamond.

Because of this inefficiency, round diamonds carry a distinct pricing structure. They are often listed on a separate price sheet compared to fancy shapes, reflecting their lower yield and consistently strong market demand.

In practice, this means:

  • Higher cost per polished carat
  • Separate pricing benchmarks in global diamond trading
  • Strong liquidity due to consumer preference

Fancy Shapes and Higher Recovery Efficiency

Fancy shaped diamonds generally achieve higher recovery rates, often between 50 percent and 70 percent depending on the specific shape and quality of the rough stone.

Common fancy shapes include:

  • Oval
  • Cushion
  • Princess
  • Emerald
  • Pear
  • Marquise
  • Radiant
  • Asscher

These shapes allow cutters to follow the natural structure of the rough diamond more efficiently, reducing waste and improving yield.

Because more of the rough diamond is preserved, fancy shapes are generally more cost efficient to produce. This efficiency is reflected in their pricing, which is typically lower per carat compared to round brilliant diamonds of equivalent quality.


Why Shape Drives Price Differences

The difference in pricing between round and fancy shapes is not simply a matter of popularity. It is fundamentally linked to manufacturing economics.

Key factors include:

1. Rough Utilisation

Round diamonds require significantly more rough material per finished carat, increasing production cost.

2. Cutting Strategy

Fancy shapes are often designed to maximise retention of weight from irregular rough crystals, improving overall yield.

3. Market Demand

Round brilliant diamonds remain the most in demand, which further strengthens their premium pricing structure.

4. Inventory and Supply Chain

Because fewer polished carats are produced from the same amount of rough, round diamonds are less efficient to supply, reinforcing their separate pricing benchmarks.


Separate Pricing Structure for Round Brilliant Diamonds

Due to their unique combination of high demand and low recovery efficiency, round brilliant diamonds are typically priced using a dedicated pricing list in the wholesale market.

This separation reflects:

  • Higher manufacturing loss during cutting
  • Consistent global demand for round brilliance
  • Different valuation dynamics compared to fancy shapes

Fancy shapes, by contrast, are generally grouped within broader pricing frameworks that account for their higher yield and more flexible cutting outcomes.


Diamond shape is not only a design choice but a critical economic factor in the diamond industry. Recovery rates from rough stone directly influence pricing structures, with round brilliant diamonds standing apart due to their lower yield and strong consumer demand.

At DCLA, understanding these differences is essential for accurate valuation, certification, and market analysis. As the diamond trade continues to evolve, the relationship between rough recovery and polished pricing remains one of the most important principles shaping global diamond values.

Source: DCLA

Wednesday, 26 October 2022

De Beers Eases Buyer Terms Amid Market Slowdown

 

A rough diamond under analysis

De Beers will offer widened concessions to purchasers of larger rough diamonds at its upcoming sight as trading has slowed amid difficult market conditions.


The miner will increase its “buyback” allowance to 20% for 1-carat goods and up at the sale, which begins later this month, industry insiders told Rapaport News this week.


Buybacks are a mechanism enabling sightholders to sell 10% of stones back to De Beers after making their purchases. They are popular among clients when markets are weak, as customers can handpick the least profitable items and hope the miner will offer a good price. For De Beers, they provide a way of promoting sales without reducing prices.


Lockdowns in China and global economic uncertainty have spooked sections of the industry, with De Beers’ move reflecting a split in the market. Companies that usually buy 1-carat and larger rough destined for the Far East have reduced their purchasing, while top US and European brands continue to buy melee, supporting the trade in rough under 0.75 carats, dealers explained. In that context, the miner will maintain its usual 10% buyback allowance for rough under 1 carat.


“People actually did buy a lot [of the larger items] up till June [or] July this year, when they thought China would slowly start opening up again,” a market participant said. “That clearly hasn’t happened, and there are people now sitting on those goods.”


Sightholders are expecting De Beers’ next sales cycle — its ninth of the year — to bring the miner around $400 million after buybacks, compared with $500 million in September. The sight will run from October 31 to November 4. The December sight is also likely to be relatively small as southern African cutting factories shut for the holidays.


The October sight will take place amid the Diwali season in India, for which manufacturers are expected to implement extended production pauses of up to three weeks because of the sluggish market. Many of them have been trying to slash their inventories ahead of the holiday.


“De Beers is not too eager to reduce prices at this stage. I think they want to wait till early 2023 for that,” a sightholder predicted.

Source: DCLA

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