Monday, 25 March 2019

Tiffany Weathers Slow 4Q for Record 2018




Tiffany & Co. reported record annual sales in 2018, despite the challenging economic environment that caused a slowdown in the fourth quarter.

“In 2018…net sales surpassed levels not seen since 2014,” said Tiffany CEO Alessandro Bogliolo. “Softer trends in the second half of the year reflected, in part, what we believe were external challenges and uncertainties.”

Group revenue grew 7% to $4.4 billion, the company said Friday. Sales increased 13% to $1.2 billion in the Asia-Pacific region, while revenue in the Americas climbed 5% to $2 billion. Sales in Japan rose 8% to $643 million, and proceeds in Europe went up 3% to $504 million.

The jewelry retailer’s new marketing strategy, including its “Believe in Love, Believe in Dreams” and holiday campaigns, buoyed sales, Bogliolo noted in a conference call with analysts last week, transcribed by Seeking Alpha.

Worldwide comparable-store sales — at branches open for at least a year — rose 4% at constant currency rates.
Profit for the year jumped 58% to $586 million, its highest in a decade, according to Rapaport records. Earnings were boosted by a lower income-tax rate, which included a $16 million benefit related to the enactment of the 2017 US Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Tiffany explained.

During the fourth quarter ending January 31, 2019, global sales declined 1% to $1.3 billion, due to softer demand from local customers and foreign tourists. The lower spending was attributable to market volatility and external uncertainties, the company observed.

Profit for the three-month period more than tripled to $205 million versus $62 million a year ago, also as a result of the lower tax payment.

The company expects net sales for 2019 to increase by a low-single-digit percentage over 2018, as the lower foreign-tourist spending it encountered in the fourth quarter continues into the new fiscal year, it said. Higher expenses relating to its six-point program to stimulate growth will also negatively impact earnings, Tiffany noted.
Among its 2019 initiatives, the jeweler is strengthening its message on diamonds via a campaign on social media, accelerating its product renewals and launches, as well as delivering a more exciting omni-channel experience, Bogliolo explained in the analyst call.

Tiffany will begin selling engagement rings on its US website, he added. Phone orders were previously the only outlet for purchasing outside its store locations. Additionally, the company will launch an e-commerce site in China later this year.

Tiffany’s stock rose 3.1% on Friday following the results.

Source: DCLA

Tiffany Weathers Slow 4Q for Record 2018




Tiffany & Co. reported record annual sales in 2018, despite the challenging economic environment that caused a slowdown in the fourth quarter.

“In 2018…net sales surpassed levels not seen since 2014,” said Tiffany CEO Alessandro Bogliolo. “Softer trends in the second half of the year reflected, in part, what we believe were external challenges and uncertainties.”

Group revenue grew 7% to $4.4 billion, the company said Friday. Sales increased 13% to $1.2 billion in the Asia-Pacific region, while revenue in the Americas climbed 5% to $2 billion. Sales in Japan rose 8% to $643 million, and proceeds in Europe went up 3% to $504 million.

The jewelry retailer’s new marketing strategy, including its “Believe in Love, Believe in Dreams” and holiday campaigns, buoyed sales, Bogliolo noted in a conference call with analysts last week, transcribed by Seeking Alpha.

Worldwide comparable-store sales — at branches open for at least a year — rose 4% at constant currency rates.
Profit for the year jumped 58% to $586 million, its highest in a decade, according to Rapaport records. Earnings were boosted by a lower income-tax rate, which included a $16 million benefit related to the enactment of the 2017 US Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Tiffany explained.

During the fourth quarter ending January 31, 2019, global sales declined 1% to $1.3 billion, due to softer demand from local customers and foreign tourists. The lower spending was attributable to market volatility and external uncertainties, the company observed.

Profit for the three-month period more than tripled to $205 million versus $62 million a year ago, also as a result of the lower tax payment.

The company expects net sales for 2019 to increase by a low-single-digit percentage over 2018, as the lower foreign-tourist spending it encountered in the fourth quarter continues into the new fiscal year, it said. Higher expenses relating to its six-point program to stimulate growth will also negatively impact earnings, Tiffany noted.
Among its 2019 initiatives, the jeweler is strengthening its message on diamonds via a campaign on social media, accelerating its product renewals and launches, as well as delivering a more exciting omni-channel experience, Bogliolo explained in the analyst call.

Tiffany will begin selling engagement rings on its US website, he added. Phone orders were previously the only outlet for purchasing outside its store locations. Additionally, the company will launch an e-commerce site in China later this year.

Tiffany’s stock rose 3.1% on Friday following the results.

Source: DCLA

Sunday, 24 March 2019

Graff breaks Letšeng record with pink diamond



London jeweller Graff has acquired what founder Laurence Graff, a man known by his moniker The King of Diamonds, has described as “the most vivid pink rough diamond I have ever seen”.

The incredibly rare 13.33ct pink diamond was unearthed at the Letšeng mine in Lesotho, Africa, by miner Gem Diamonds in February. The Letšeng mine is famed for its high yield of very valuable and large rough diamonds.

While the diamonds to emerge from Letšeng consistently achieve the highest price per carat of any rough diamonds in the world, Graff has set a new record with the acquisition of the 13.33ct pink diamond.

The stone, which has since been named the Graff Lesotho Pink, was purchased by Graff for US$8.75 million, making it the most expensive diamond on a dollar per carat basis to ever have emerged from the mine.

“This is the most vivid pink rough diamond I have ever seen, and it is an exceptionally rare treasure,” said Mr Graff. “We are renowned for cutting and polishing exceptional diamonds, and I am sure the polished diamond that comes from this rough will be an auspicious addition to our roll call of famous gems. It is an enormous privilege to own this natural miracle. We may never see anything like it again.”

The Graff Lesotho Pink diamond is now in the hands of Graff’s master diamond cutters, who will assess the rough stone’s potential and decide what are the optimum cut to make out of the rough will be.

Source:jewellerycut

Graff breaks Letšeng record with pink diamond



London jeweller Graff has acquired what founder Laurence Graff, a man known by his moniker The King of Diamonds, has described as “the most vivid pink rough diamond I have ever seen”.

The incredibly rare 13.33ct pink diamond was unearthed at the Letšeng mine in Lesotho, Africa, by miner Gem Diamonds in February. The Letšeng mine is famed for its high yield of very valuable and large rough diamonds.

While the diamonds to emerge from Letšeng consistently achieve the highest price per carat of any rough diamonds in the world, Graff has set a new record with the acquisition of the 13.33ct pink diamond.

The stone, which has since been named the Graff Lesotho Pink, was purchased by Graff for US$8.75 million, making it the most expensive diamond on a dollar per carat basis to ever have emerged from the mine.

“This is the most vivid pink rough diamond I have ever seen, and it is an exceptionally rare treasure,” said Mr Graff. “We are renowned for cutting and polishing exceptional diamonds, and I am sure the polished diamond that comes from this rough will be an auspicious addition to our roll call of famous gems. It is an enormous privilege to own this natural miracle. We may never see anything like it again.”

The Graff Lesotho Pink diamond is now in the hands of Graff’s master diamond cutters, who will assess the rough stone’s potential and decide what are the optimum cut to make out of the rough will be.

Source:jewellerycut

Gem Diamonds Unearths 161ct. Rough



Gem Diamonds has recovered a 161 carat rough stone, the first over 100 carats it has reported this year.

It found the high quality, white, type IIa diamond on March 21 at its Letšeng mine in Lesotho, the company said Friday.

Last year, Gem Diamonds found 15 stones weighing more than 100 carats, a record for the company.

That haul included the 910 carat Lesotho Legend, which sold for $40 million.

In February, the miner also found a 13.33 carat pink diamond, which it sold to Graff for $8.8 million, or $656,933 per carat.

Image: The 161 carat diamond Gem Diamonds

Source: DCLA

Gem Diamonds Unearths 161ct. Rough



Gem Diamonds has recovered a 161 carat rough stone, the first over 100 carats it has reported this year.

It found the high quality, white, type IIa diamond on March 21 at its Letšeng mine in Lesotho, the company said Friday.

Last year, Gem Diamonds found 15 stones weighing more than 100 carats, a record for the company.

That haul included the 910 carat Lesotho Legend, which sold for $40 million.

In February, the miner also found a 13.33 carat pink diamond, which it sold to Graff for $8.8 million, or $656,933 per carat.

Image: The 161 carat diamond Gem Diamonds

Source: DCLA

Thursday, 21 March 2019

Lucapa Diamond announced a 90% upsurge in Diamond Resource Carats at Lulo



The international diamond group, Lucapa Diamond Company Limited has high valued mines in Angola and Lesotho, with exploration projects in Australia, Botswana, and Angola.

The company on 21 March 2019, provided an update on Alluvial Diamond Resource for the Lulo diamond mine in Angola Lulo Diamond Resource. LOM is under the partnership with Rosas & Petalas and Empresa Nacional de Diamantes E.P.

Z Star Mineral Resource Consultants Limited, an External consultant of Cape Town, South Africa, independently estimated and reconciled The Lulo Diamond Resource, on a depletion and addition basis as on December 31, 2018.

The resource estimation comprised of 19 months of mining depletion at Lulo from May 31, 2017, to December 31, 2018. During, 19 months, more than 30,000 carats of diamonds were recovered and sold for approximately US$ 62 Mn.

This extensive ongoing resource definition, drilling and sampling program included an additional 4,200 auger holes 36,000 meters drilled.

The current sale of Diamond was estimated at prices above the previous resource estimation on May 31, 2017.

Source:DCLA

Tiffany Buys Back Titanic Watch for Record $1.97m

Tiffany & Co paid a record $1.97m for a gold pocket watch it made in 1912, and which was gifted to the captain of a ship that rescued mo...