Tuesday 11 June 2019

Bluerock Diamonds’ shares jump on record find


BlueRock Diamonds shares were up 15% on the London Stock Exchange Friday after the miner announced it had recovered its largest diamond to date, a 24.9 carat gem quality stone.
BlueRock owns and operates the Kareevlei Diamond Mine in the Kimberley region of South Africa. The miner’s largest diamond prior was 16.28 carats, which sold for $78,947.
“This record recovery of such a high-quality diamond is an exciting milestone and underpins why we are so confident about the potential of the Kareevlei mine. We have a comprehensive development plan to increase production and look forward to providing further updates as we progress,” executive chairman Mike Houston said in a media statement.
The diamond will be put to tender, the results of which will be announced June 17, the company said.
BlueRock’s shares were priced at 11 pence on the LSE late Friday, on a day that saw trading volume at 61.9 million, mover six times the average daily trading volume is 9.5 million. The company has a £1.8 million market capitalization.
Source: DCLA

Bluerock Diamonds’ shares jump on record find


BlueRock Diamonds shares were up 15% on the London Stock Exchange Friday after the miner announced it had recovered its largest diamond to date, a 24.9 carat gem quality stone.
BlueRock owns and operates the Kareevlei Diamond Mine in the Kimberley region of South Africa. The miner’s largest diamond prior was 16.28 carats, which sold for $78,947.
“This record recovery of such a high-quality diamond is an exciting milestone and underpins why we are so confident about the potential of the Kareevlei mine. We have a comprehensive development plan to increase production and look forward to providing further updates as we progress,” executive chairman Mike Houston said in a media statement.
The diamond will be put to tender, the results of which will be announced June 17, the company said.
BlueRock’s shares were priced at 11 pence on the LSE late Friday, on a day that saw trading volume at 61.9 million, mover six times the average daily trading volume is 9.5 million. The company has a £1.8 million market capitalization.
Source: DCLA

Monday 10 June 2019

Russian Police Uncover Diamond Theft Gang Inside State Mining Firm Alrosa


Russian police uncovered around $3 million worth of stolen diamonds, and over $2.5 million in cash, at the homes of a criminal ring operating inside state-controlled diamond producer Alrosa, authorities said on Monday.
Alrosa, the world’s largest producer of rough diamonds in carat terms, confirmed that security services had uncovered an ongoing diamond theft ring in its sorting and grading department.
Russia’s Investigative Committee said in a statement that three suspects, one of whom is an Alrosa employee, have been placed in custody by a Russian court.
“Alrosa completely confirms information from Russia’s FSB (security service) about the interception of an extensive scheme to steal rough diamonds in the company’s United Selling Organisation,” Alrosa said in a statement, referring to its valuation and sales department.
Alrosa competes with Anglo American’s De Beers, the biggest seller of rough diamonds by value.
The suspects were caught red-handed last Thursday attempting to steal another batch of diamonds worth over 22 million roubles ($340,000), investigators said.
During the course of their subsequent investigation, a bigger cache of diamonds and cash was found, as well as jewellery and dozens of diamond-encrusted watches.
A video shared by the Investigative Committee showed several opened safes filled with wads of $100 bills, Tiffany and Dior jewellery boxes, and multiple plastic bags of unpolished diamonds of different shapes and colours.
The court ordered that the three suspects be held in custody while the investigation continues.
“A few years ago the company announced its focus on rooting out corruption cases. This focus will be continued,” Alrosa said in its statement, adding its own security team had been involved in the investigation.
Alrosa produced 36.7 million carats of diamonds last year.
Source: themoscowtimes

Russian Police Uncover Diamond Theft Gang Inside State Mining Firm Alrosa


Russian police uncovered around $3 million worth of stolen diamonds, and over $2.5 million in cash, at the homes of a criminal ring operating inside state-controlled diamond producer Alrosa, authorities said on Monday.
Alrosa, the world’s largest producer of rough diamonds in carat terms, confirmed that security services had uncovered an ongoing diamond theft ring in its sorting and grading department.
Russia’s Investigative Committee said in a statement that three suspects, one of whom is an Alrosa employee, have been placed in custody by a Russian court.
“Alrosa completely confirms information from Russia’s FSB (security service) about the interception of an extensive scheme to steal rough diamonds in the company’s United Selling Organisation,” Alrosa said in a statement, referring to its valuation and sales department.
Alrosa competes with Anglo American’s De Beers, the biggest seller of rough diamonds by value.
The suspects were caught red-handed last Thursday attempting to steal another batch of diamonds worth over 22 million roubles ($340,000), investigators said.
During the course of their subsequent investigation, a bigger cache of diamonds and cash was found, as well as jewellery and dozens of diamond-encrusted watches.
A video shared by the Investigative Committee showed several opened safes filled with wads of $100 bills, Tiffany and Dior jewellery boxes, and multiple plastic bags of unpolished diamonds of different shapes and colours.
The court ordered that the three suspects be held in custody while the investigation continues.
“A few years ago the company announced its focus on rooting out corruption cases. This focus will be continued,” Alrosa said in its statement, adding its own security team had been involved in the investigation.
Alrosa produced 36.7 million carats of diamonds last year.
Source: themoscowtimes

Wednesday 5 June 2019

Charlotte Casiraghi of Monaco


princess grace monaco
princess grace monaco
Royal bride Charlotte Casiraghi of Monaco channeled her grandmother Grace Kelly as she celebrated her marriage with glittering evening reception.
Charlotte, 32, donned a stunning diamond necklace once owned by the actress as she joined new husband Dimitri Rassam, 37, for the gala dinner at a private mansion on Saturday night.
The couple, who tied the knot in a civil ceremony in Monaco that afternoon, delighted royal fans by releasing a photo from the event yesterday.



Source: DCLA

Charlotte Casiraghi of Monaco


princess grace monaco
princess grace monaco
Royal bride Charlotte Casiraghi of Monaco channeled her grandmother Grace Kelly as she celebrated her marriage with glittering evening reception.
Charlotte, 32, donned a stunning diamond necklace once owned by the actress as she joined new husband Dimitri Rassam, 37, for the gala dinner at a private mansion on Saturday night.
The couple, who tied the knot in a civil ceremony in Monaco that afternoon, delighted royal fans by releasing a photo from the event yesterday.



Source: DCLA

Sales slide at Tiffany & Co as tourists tighten their purses


Sales performed below expectations for Tiffany & Co during the first quarter of 2019.
For the three months ended April 30, worldwide net sales fell by 3% to $1bn compared to the previous year, and comparable sales declined by 5%. On a constant exchange rate basis, net sales were equal to the prior year and comparable sales declined 2%.
Net earnings came in at $125 million, 12% lower than the prior year’s $142 million.
These results reflect mixed performance across regions and product categories.
During the quarter engagement rings sales decline by 6%, while jewellery collections saw a 1% increase.
Totally net sales declined in the major markets, with Europe and the Americas both reported a 4% decline, with the latter being impacted by lower spending from foreign tourists. In Asia Pacific total net sales fell by 1%, something the brand attributes to the effect of foreign currency translation.
As a result of Q1, Tiffany has trimmed its earnings outlook, now expecting earnings in the 2019 financial year to increase by a low to mid single digit percentage, compared with its previous forecast for a mid single digit percentage increase.
Tiffany’s chief executive officer, Alessandro Bogliolo, reports: “Our first quarter results reflect significant foreign exchange headwinds and dramatically lower worldwide spending attributed to foreign tourists. That said, we were pleased that, at the core of our business, global sales attributed to local customers, led by sales in China, grew over last year’s very strong sales results.
“We believe this growth in sales to local customers reflects progress in executing our strategic priorities, including innovations across products, communications and the customer experience, and that Tiffany is positioned for improving trends in the second half of 2019.”
Tiffany opened two company operated stores in the first quarter, closed two stores and relocated two.
At April 30, 2019, the Company operated 321 stores (124 in the Americas, 89 in Asia-Pacific, 56 in Japan, 47 in Europe and five in the UAE), versus 314 stores a year ago (123 in the Americas, 87 in Asia Pacific, 54 in Japan, 46 in Europe and four in the UAE).
Source: DCLA

Lightbox Launches New Campaigns – Despite Ending Production

Lightbox has just launched new campaigns for its lab grown diamonds – despite its announcement in June that it was halting production. The w...