Thursday 27 February 2020

Your Engagement Ring Probably Has A Hidden Serial Number You Didn't Know About

If you've ever gone through the process of shopping for an engagement ring, you'll know there can be an overwhelming number of things to consider.

Aside from the look and style of your ring, you quickly start to learn an awful lot about diamonds, from the cut, to the colour and clarity.
What you may not know is most diamonds in Australia over the last 10 years have been laser inscribed with a serial number likened to a 'fingerprint' -- which makes it easier to trace should the unfortunate event that your engagement ring is lost or stolen ever take place.
This code in turn makes your ring a 'low risk' theft item because it's easy for police to trace it. But don't go pulling your ring off your finger to check for that little serial number just yet.
The code is inscribed directly onto the girdle of the diamond which is quite difficult to get to when it's in a setting and it can't be seen with the naked eye either, having to be checked under a microscope instead.
The laser inscription can only be seen under a microscope. Image: Supplied
Speaking to 10 daily, Roy Cohen, a diamond expert from Certified Diamond Insurance, said this spot was specifically chosen instead of on the engagement ring band as this could be lost if it was melted down. Yet removing the code from the diamond itself is near impossible.
"It cannot be removed unless the diamond goes back to a diamond polishing factory where it is put back on the wheel and polished off. I mean, there are very few diamond polishing factories in Australia so the chances of that happening are very remote," Cohen said.
"It’s even harder than for example, the engine number of a motor car. They could just machine it off. I mean, anyone could do that. But with a diamond? No. Only diamond cuts diamond."
A close up of a laser inscription code. Image: Supplied
This process of inscription is completed by Certified Diamond Insurance (CDI) who are in partnership with a Australia’s leading diamond certifier, Diamond Certification Laboratory of Australia (DCLA), as well as the Woodina Underwiting Agency.
Together they're working towards driving the costs associated with insuring diamonds down for Australians, with new research finding almost half of Australia diamond engagement rings aren't insured. If they are, 70 percent of these have inadequate insurance as they're usually lumped with other items as part of home contents insurance.
"If you go and get household insurance, you’ll be paying a standard kind of rate and because they cover everything, you’ll be paying slightly higher premiums," Cohen said.
"What we’ve done is we’ve pulled out all certified diamonds that are laser inscribed and we only ensure those diamonds. These are the lowest risk diamonds."
Laser inscribed diamonds are considered 'low risk' diamonds. Image: Supplied
According to Cohen, these diamonds are a 'thief's worst nightmare' because they often aren't able to tell if it has been laser inscribed or not.
"Thieves can get caught so much easier with this type of diamond. If they go and sell that to a hock shop and it has the laser inscription on it, it is very easy to identify that that diamond has been stolen," he told 10 daily.
So how can you check if your diamond has the laser inscription on it or not? According to Cohen, it's as easy as checking your diamond certification certificate.
"Most diamonds that are of value are sold with diamond grading certificates in Australia and most of those are laser inscribed," he said.The certificate will make note that the diamond has been laser inscribed and it will have the number that’s on the actual diamond.
Yet while most diamonds now have the laser inscribed code on them, if your engagement ring happens to be an heirloom or has been passed down through the family, it likely doesn't. The upside is CDI are offering complementary diamond grading and laser inscription for diamonds owners in this situation.
"So if anybody wants take advantage of the lower premiums that CDI is offering and the diamond is not certified and not laser inscribed, we will actually do that for them," he said.
"The diamond gets removed from the setting, the diamond is graded, laser inscribed and then set back in the setting. Then it is eligible for CDI insurance."
Roy Cohen. Image: Supplied
CDI are further working on establishing a nation wide data base where individuals can register their ring along with it's details and pictures. Should the ring ever be lost or stolen, it can then be flagged in this system, making it easier to locate.
"Then wherever it ends up or if it’s ever checked against that data base or it ends up at a diamond grading laboratory, it will be identified," Cohen said.
"So the benefit is, let's say it was a heritage diamond from your grandma or something like that, you actually have a chance of getting the diamond back."

Valentina Todoroska

10 daily Lifestyle Editor

Your Engagement Ring Probably Has A Hidden Serial Number You Didn't Know About

If you've ever gone through the process of shopping for an engagement ring, you'll know there can be an overwhelming number of things to consider.

Aside from the look and style of your ring, you quickly start to learn an awful lot about diamonds, from the cut, to the colour and clarity.
What you may not know is most diamonds in Australia over the last 10 years have been laser inscribed with a serial number likened to a 'fingerprint' -- which makes it easier to trace should the unfortunate event that your engagement ring is lost or stolen ever take place.
This code in turn makes your ring a 'low risk' theft item because it's easy for police to trace it. But don't go pulling your ring off your finger to check for that little serial number just yet.
The code is inscribed directly onto the girdle of the diamond which is quite difficult to get to when it's in a setting and it can't be seen with the naked eye either, having to be checked under a microscope instead.
The laser inscription can only be seen under a microscope. Image: Supplied
Speaking to 10 daily, Roy Cohen, a diamond expert from Certified Diamond Insurance, said this spot was specifically chosen instead of on the engagement ring band as this could be lost if it was melted down. Yet removing the code from the diamond itself is near impossible.
"It cannot be removed unless the diamond goes back to a diamond polishing factory where it is put back on the wheel and polished off. I mean, there are very few diamond polishing factories in Australia so the chances of that happening are very remote," Cohen said.
"It’s even harder than for example, the engine number of a motor car. They could just machine it off. I mean, anyone could do that. But with a diamond? No. Only diamond cuts diamond."
A close up of a laser inscription code. Image: Supplied
This process of inscription is completed by Certified Diamond Insurance (CDI) who are in partnership with a Australia’s leading diamond certifier, Diamond Certification Laboratory of Australia (DCLA), as well as the Woodina Underwiting Agency.
Together they're working towards driving the costs associated with insuring diamonds down for Australians, with new research finding almost half of Australia diamond engagement rings aren't insured. If they are, 70 percent of these have inadequate insurance as they're usually lumped with other items as part of home contents insurance.
"If you go and get household insurance, you’ll be paying a standard kind of rate and because they cover everything, you’ll be paying slightly higher premiums," Cohen said.
"What we’ve done is we’ve pulled out all certified diamonds that are laser inscribed and we only ensure those diamonds. These are the lowest risk diamonds."
Laser inscribed diamonds are considered 'low risk' diamonds. Image: Supplied
According to Cohen, these diamonds are a 'thief's worst nightmare' because they often aren't able to tell if it has been laser inscribed or not.
"Thieves can get caught so much easier with this type of diamond. If they go and sell that to a hock shop and it has the laser inscription on it, it is very easy to identify that that diamond has been stolen," he told 10 daily.
So how can you check if your diamond has the laser inscription on it or not? According to Cohen, it's as easy as checking your diamond certification certificate.
"Most diamonds that are of value are sold with diamond grading certificates in Australia and most of those are laser inscribed," he said.The certificate will make note that the diamond has been laser inscribed and it will have the number that’s on the actual diamond.
Yet while most diamonds now have the laser inscribed code on them, if your engagement ring happens to be an heirloom or has been passed down through the family, it likely doesn't. The upside is CDI are offering complementary diamond grading and laser inscription for diamonds owners in this situation.
"So if anybody wants take advantage of the lower premiums that CDI is offering and the diamond is not certified and not laser inscribed, we will actually do that for them," he said.
"The diamond gets removed from the setting, the diamond is graded, laser inscribed and then set back in the setting. Then it is eligible for CDI insurance."
Roy Cohen. Image: Supplied
CDI are further working on establishing a nation wide data base where individuals can register their ring along with it's details and pictures. Should the ring ever be lost or stolen, it can then be flagged in this system, making it easier to locate.
"Then wherever it ends up or if it’s ever checked against that data base or it ends up at a diamond grading laboratory, it will be identified," Cohen said.
"So the benefit is, let's say it was a heritage diamond from your grandma or something like that, you actually have a chance of getting the diamond back."

Valentina Todoroska

10 daily Lifestyle Editor

De Beers Lets Sightholders Defer Chinese Goods


De Beers has allowed clients to forgo buying certain rough diamonds at this week’s sight, as the coronavirus outbreak has raised concerns about a polished glut.
The miner has let sightholders defer purchases of goods that produce the types of polished popular in the Chinese retail market, a source at the sight told Rapaport News Wednesday. The concessions apply to 1- to 2-carat rough diamonds that can make polished under a carat, as Chinese demand is highly focused on that size category, especially the 0.30- to 0.50-carat range.
Instead of taking up those allocations at this sale, the second of the year, customers will be able push them back to sights 3, 4 and 5. Those who already deferred their supply from the last two sales of 2019 will only be able to delay their purchases to sight 3, which begins March 30.
“People are very afraid of the market, and stocks are building because there are no sales to the Far East,” the source said on condition of anonymity. De Beers declined to comment on the move.
De Beers apportions rough supply to sightholders based mainly on their purchase history, and divides those allocations across the 10 sights that take place during the year. Clients can usually defer only a limited proportion of the goods earmarked from them, but the miner has provided more flexibility of late because of the weak market.
In the second half of last year, De Beers offered unprecedented measures, such as letting customers refuse half of the goods in a box or sell up to 30% of their rough purchases back to the miner.
It ended the special rules at the December sight, as an oversupply of polished in the midstream started to ease. However, the coronavirus epidemic has lowered jewelry demand in China, where the outbreak started, creating uncertainty about manufacturers’ ability to sell their polished. Concerns escalated this week when it emerged the disease had spread beyond the Far East to Europe and Iran.
“The virus has the potential to badly damage the market for the next few months, but we don’t know [the extent of the impact],” an executive at a Mumbai-based sightholder commented. “If it goes on for a long time, it will be a problem not only for De Beers, but for many, many companies in India.”
Source: DCLA

De Beers Lets Sightholders Defer Chinese Goods


De Beers has allowed clients to forgo buying certain rough diamonds at this week’s sight, as the coronavirus outbreak has raised concerns about a polished glut.
The miner has let sightholders defer purchases of goods that produce the types of polished popular in the Chinese retail market, a source at the sight told Rapaport News Wednesday. The concessions apply to 1- to 2-carat rough diamonds that can make polished under a carat, as Chinese demand is highly focused on that size category, especially the 0.30- to 0.50-carat range.
Instead of taking up those allocations at this sale, the second of the year, customers will be able push them back to sights 3, 4 and 5. Those who already deferred their supply from the last two sales of 2019 will only be able to delay their purchases to sight 3, which begins March 30.
“People are very afraid of the market, and stocks are building because there are no sales to the Far East,” the source said on condition of anonymity. De Beers declined to comment on the move.
De Beers apportions rough supply to sightholders based mainly on their purchase history, and divides those allocations across the 10 sights that take place during the year. Clients can usually defer only a limited proportion of the goods earmarked from them, but the miner has provided more flexibility of late because of the weak market.
In the second half of last year, De Beers offered unprecedented measures, such as letting customers refuse half of the goods in a box or sell up to 30% of their rough purchases back to the miner.
It ended the special rules at the December sight, as an oversupply of polished in the midstream started to ease. However, the coronavirus epidemic has lowered jewelry demand in China, where the outbreak started, creating uncertainty about manufacturers’ ability to sell their polished. Concerns escalated this week when it emerged the disease had spread beyond the Far East to Europe and Iran.
“The virus has the potential to badly damage the market for the next few months, but we don’t know [the extent of the impact],” an executive at a Mumbai-based sightholder commented. “If it goes on for a long time, it will be a problem not only for De Beers, but for many, many companies in India.”
Source: DCLA

Wednesday 26 February 2020

Angola Seizes 6,579 carats of Illegal Rough Diamonds


Authorities in Angola have seized 6,579 carats of rough diamonds in a crackdown on illegal mining and immigration.
Nineteen cars and $275,000 in cash were also confiscated, according to the government-run Angop news agency.
Operation Transparency was aimed at more than 700 small diamond prospectors in the country. Two thirds were found not to meet the interior ministry’s requirements and only 260 have been allowed to carry on prospecting.
The government also deported many migrant working in diamond mines from the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo, a move that attracted sharp criticism from the independent Human Rights Watch.
The operation was launched in the north-eastern Lunda Norte Province December 2018.  
Source: DCLA

Angola Seizes 6,579 carats of Illegal Rough Diamonds


Authorities in Angola have seized 6,579 carats of rough diamonds in a crackdown on illegal mining and immigration.
Nineteen cars and $275,000 in cash were also confiscated, according to the government-run Angop news agency.
Operation Transparency was aimed at more than 700 small diamond prospectors in the country. Two thirds were found not to meet the interior ministry’s requirements and only 260 have been allowed to carry on prospecting.
The government also deported many migrant working in diamond mines from the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo, a move that attracted sharp criticism from the independent Human Rights Watch.
The operation was launched in the north-eastern Lunda Norte Province December 2018.  
Source: DCLA

Tuesday 25 February 2020

Virus Likely to Impact Demand at De Beers Sight


De Beers and its clients expect a slowdown in rough-diamond sales at the company’s Botswana sight this week amid concerns about the coronavirus.
“It’s fair to say there will be an impact on rough demand in the short term,” De Beers chief financial officer Nimesh Patel said Thursday in an interview with Rapaport News. “I’d expect we’d see that at the [February] sight.”
The downturn in China’s retail market due to the virus outbreak has left manufacturers uncertain how long it will take them to sell diamonds they cut. Companies that supply to that region have been especially affected.
Rough that can produce polished with clarity above VS has shown weakness in recent tenders due to the lower Chinese demand, one sightholder said on condition of anonymity. Lower-clarity items destined for the American market have performed better, he added.
“It’s a mixed picture,” the sightholder explained. “People that are strongly focused on the Far East will be reluctant to buy, while those that work with the US and maybe Europe still seem to be going OK.”
De Beers will hold back goods rather than lowering prices, the dealer added, predicting that the sight would be small in value. The miner has kept prices stable for the sale, which began Monday, two sightholders confirmed with Rapaport News.
Another De Beers client expected buyers would take up most of their allocations at this sight, but said the next sale beginning March 30 would be weak if the coronavirus difficulties were still going on.
“I’m hopeful this crisis might not last more than two or three weeks,” he said.
Meanwhile, Patel pointed out that some goods could be rerouted from China to other markets, while certain constant sources of demand, such as weddings, would be delayed rather than disappearing completely. In addition, the midstream has started the year with relatively low inventories due to a reasonably strong fourth-quarter holiday season, putting it in a good position to weather the difficulties, he said.
“We’ve been through periods like this before in the industry,” the executive said. “This is, hopefully, a one-off impact, and the sooner the virus can be contained, and the sooner we can get back to the normal operation of those economies, the better.”
Source: DCLA

Petra Sales Up, Prices Down

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