Monday 30 March 2020

Truth ! coronavirus COVIDー19

Image may contain: possible text that says 'hate to break worldwide lockdown is 100% going to kill far people than the virus ever could. people are about to everything due to lack of work and business. paranoia needs to end and we need to unlock the before chaos won't to afford of should really be of next when can't feed their children or earn money What it going to take before you people demand different approach. If in charge of the would only people Shutting down businesses or there back this. start seeking and demanding alternatives before its too late. You have been warned. -Don Freeman'

#coronavirus #COVIDー19

Truth ! coronavirus COVIDー19

Image may contain: possible text that says 'hate to break worldwide lockdown is 100% going to kill far people than the virus ever could. people are about to everything due to lack of work and business. paranoia needs to end and we need to unlock the before chaos won't to afford of should really be of next when can't feed their children or earn money What it going to take before you people demand different approach. If in charge of the would only people Shutting down businesses or there back this. start seeking and demanding alternatives before its too late. You have been warned. -Don Freeman'

#coronavirus #COVIDー19

De Beers Cancels Upcoming Sight


De Beers has called off this week’s sight in Botswana, citing restrictions resulting from measures to contain the coronavirus.
Lockdowns in Botswana, South Africa and India are prohibiting sightholders from traveling and preventing the shipment of merchandise to clients’ international operations, De Beers said in a statement Monday. The company is letting sightholders defer 100% of their supply allocations to later in the year, as reported by Rapaport News on Thursday.
The miner “will continue to seek innovative ways to meet sightholders’ rough-diamond supply needs in the coming weeks,” it continued.
The sale was due to run from March 30 to April 3 in Gaborone. However, on March 16, Botswana banned entry to visitors from 18 countries, including US, China, India and Belgium — making attendance impossible for most sightholders.
Customers can usually buy De Beers’ rough remotely due to the consistency of the diamond assortments. However, demand is extremely weak as the manufacturing sector in Surat, India, has closed and the US retail market has largely shut down. In addition, the ability to transport goods around the world is limited. Sales were likely to be extremely low, rough-market sources told Rapaport News.
The unprecedented conditions prompted the World Diamond Council (WDC) and six major trade organizations to ask the CEOs of De Beers and Alrosa to consider offering complete flexibility on purchasing obligations. In a March 20 letter, bourses and trade groups in India, Belgium and Israel joined the WDC in urging the miners to treat the situation as a “force majeure” — an unforeseeable circumstance that prevents the fulfilment of a contract.
“With so many companies now down to a fraction of sales, it is imperative to keep the right balance to secure their short-term viability,” the organizations wrote.
Alrosa allowed more flexibility than normal at its March rough sale, enabling customers to defer 60% of their allocations. However, responding to the letter, it emphasized the importance of all industry participants supporting each other.
“COVID-19 is a new challenge for all of us, and it requires the industry from mine to retail to stand together and take joint innovative steps, not avoid them at the expense of others,” Alrosa CEO Sergey Ivanov wrote. “Walking away from mutual obligations is shortsighted.”
Source: DCLA

De Beers Cancels Upcoming Sight


De Beers has called off this week’s sight in Botswana, citing restrictions resulting from measures to contain the coronavirus.
Lockdowns in Botswana, South Africa and India are prohibiting sightholders from traveling and preventing the shipment of merchandise to clients’ international operations, De Beers said in a statement Monday. The company is letting sightholders defer 100% of their supply allocations to later in the year, as reported by Rapaport News on Thursday.
The miner “will continue to seek innovative ways to meet sightholders’ rough-diamond supply needs in the coming weeks,” it continued.
The sale was due to run from March 30 to April 3 in Gaborone. However, on March 16, Botswana banned entry to visitors from 18 countries, including US, China, India and Belgium — making attendance impossible for most sightholders.
Customers can usually buy De Beers’ rough remotely due to the consistency of the diamond assortments. However, demand is extremely weak as the manufacturing sector in Surat, India, has closed and the US retail market has largely shut down. In addition, the ability to transport goods around the world is limited. Sales were likely to be extremely low, rough-market sources told Rapaport News.
The unprecedented conditions prompted the World Diamond Council (WDC) and six major trade organizations to ask the CEOs of De Beers and Alrosa to consider offering complete flexibility on purchasing obligations. In a March 20 letter, bourses and trade groups in India, Belgium and Israel joined the WDC in urging the miners to treat the situation as a “force majeure” — an unforeseeable circumstance that prevents the fulfilment of a contract.
“With so many companies now down to a fraction of sales, it is imperative to keep the right balance to secure their short-term viability,” the organizations wrote.
Alrosa allowed more flexibility than normal at its March rough sale, enabling customers to defer 60% of their allocations. However, responding to the letter, it emphasized the importance of all industry participants supporting each other.
“COVID-19 is a new challenge for all of us, and it requires the industry from mine to retail to stand together and take joint innovative steps, not avoid them at the expense of others,” Alrosa CEO Sergey Ivanov wrote. “Walking away from mutual obligations is shortsighted.”
Source: DCLA

Wednesday 25 March 2020

Surat Diamond Manufacturing Shuts Down


The entire polishing industry in Surat has shut until March 31 after Indian authorities introduced tight restrictions to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
Activities stopped on Tuesday in line with a lockdown enforced by the Gujarat state government. The Bharat Diamond Bourse in Mumbai also closed from Friday until the end of the month following similar measures in Maharashtra state.
“In this panic situation, all are requested to stay at home, [stay] healthy, and spend time with family,” the Surat Diamond Association and the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC) said in a joint letter to the Surat trade on Saturday. The organizations urged companies to shut their offices and manufacturing units in the city, the world’s largest center for polishing. Safe-deposit vaults will remain open for two hours each day, they noted.
The GJEPC said it had closed its head office in Mumbai until March 31, with all employees working from home.
Source: DCLA

Surat Diamond Manufacturing Shuts Down


The entire polishing industry in Surat has shut until March 31 after Indian authorities introduced tight restrictions to slow the spread of the coronavirus.
Activities stopped on Tuesday in line with a lockdown enforced by the Gujarat state government. The Bharat Diamond Bourse in Mumbai also closed from Friday until the end of the month following similar measures in Maharashtra state.
“In this panic situation, all are requested to stay at home, [stay] healthy, and spend time with family,” the Surat Diamond Association and the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC) said in a joint letter to the Surat trade on Saturday. The organizations urged companies to shut their offices and manufacturing units in the city, the world’s largest center for polishing. Safe-deposit vaults will remain open for two hours each day, they noted.
The GJEPC said it had closed its head office in Mumbai until March 31, with all employees working from home.
Source: DCLA

Tuesday 24 March 2020

Michael Hill to Close Stores in Canada



Michael Hill will temporarily close all its Canadian stores amid the coronavirus pandemic, while locations in Australia and New Zealand currently remain open.
The jeweler’s Canadian stores are set to shut for a two-week period, but the company will reevaluate and may lift or extend the shutdown as necessary based on the health situation, it said last week. During the closure, most of the jeweler’s workforce will either be given leave without pay, or may take unused vacation time.
Additionally, the company will not provide revenue guidance for the fiscal year ending June 30, as it has not fully assessed the impact of the virus on its sales.
“In the last two weeks there has been a significant drop off in foot traffic in each of our trading markets and we are seeing a corresponding impact on sales,” the jeweler said. “The company will provide further details when they are available as part of our regular [third-quarter] trading update in early April. [We] have not provided guidance on earnings for the current financial year, and are not in a position to [give] a reliable forecast.”
Any existing analyst forecasts are also not reliable, as they were prepared without taking into account the current trading environment, Michael Hill observed.
The retailer plans to reduce any non-essential spending during this time, and will implement a hiring and travel freeze, it said. It is also speaking with its landlords about temporary rent relief during the shutdowns.
“During these challenging times, the health and safety of our people and customers are foremost in our minds,” said Michael Hill CEO Daniel Bracken. “The board and management team are confident that the business will be able to continue to work constructively with all of its stakeholders to navigate the uncertainties presented by the COVID-19 public-health crisis. We are focused on taking all necessary actions to reduce our costs and cash outflows so that they better match the very subdued demand in all our markets.”
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...