Tuesday, January 21, 2014

If you're looking for safety, security, physical possession, minimal risk and long term growth...............

According to Sotheby’s Diamonds, since record keeping began in the 1970′s, Rare Color Diamonds have appreciated at about 10 to 15 percent per year.  ”Yellow diamonds have doubled in value every 7 years,” they said.  ”Reds, blues, and greens have seen the greatest appreciation, having quadrupled within the last decade.”



My number one priority is to make sure that any solution I suggest for you protects your principal. Rare Color Diamonds are historically one of the best performing assets in the world.  That is why I have partnered with The Diamond Market.



I strongly believe that every one of my clients ought to allocate a portion of their portfolio towards Rare Color Diamonds.  By doing this, you will add diversity to your existing portfolio with a proven hard tangible asset that you will acquire in a completely private transaction.



All of the Rare Color Diamonds from The Diamond Market are graded and certified by the Gemological Institute of America to assure their intrinsic value. In addition, they come with a 7 day money back guarantee. By having physical possession of these magnificent rarities you will have the comfort of knowing that you are storing your wealth in one of the worlds most concentrated and portable forms of wealth.

A 29.6 carat Natural Blue Diamond Found at Cullunan Mine

A 29.6 carat Natural Blue Diamond Found at Cullunan Mine

By: Gino Di Geso
LONDON: A 29.6 carat blue diamond, one of the rarest and exciting  has been discovered at a South African mine by Petra Diamonds. The miner said the “exceptional” acorn-sized diamond, small enough to fit into the palm of a hand, was unearthed at the Cullinan mine near Pretoria.
The mine, owned by the firm since 2008, was also where the Cullinan Diamond was found in 1905 — described as the largest rough gem diamond ever recovered and weighing 3,106 carats. Other notable diamonds found in the mine include a 25.5 carat Cullinan blue diamond, found in 2013 and sold for $16.9 million, and a diamond found in 2008, known as the Star of Josephine, which was sold for $9.49 million.
The vast majority of Blue Diamonds owe their color to the presence of Boron. The bonding of Boron to Carbon causes absorption in red, yellow and green parts of the spectrum producing blue color. Blue Diamonds may contain Grey , Violet and Greenish modifying color.
“An amazing find. The Cullinan mine (formerly Premier mine) continues to be the only consistent source of natural color type IIb diamonds in the world.” - Thomas Gelb, NCDIA Educational Director
In my opinion, this piece of blue diamond rough, based on its projected color yield, is the birth of a stone for the history books. The winning bid, based on potential yield and clarity could easily break the world record for price per carat for a rough diamond. - Alan Bronstein – NCDIA VP (Aurora Gems)
Petra Diamonds is due to release figures on production and sales for the six months to Dec. 31 on Thursday, but these will not take into account the find which occurred in January.
The mine, owned by the firm since 2008, was also where the Cullinan Diamond was found in 1905 — described as the largest rough gem diamond ever recovered and weighing 3,106 carats.
Other notable diamonds found in the mine include a 25.5 carat Cullinan blue diamond, found in 2013 and sold for $16.9 million

Sunday, January 19, 2014

This Is What An $83 Million Pink Diamond Looks Like


This Is What An $83 Million Pink Diamond Looks Like


sotheby's pink star
Image Courtesy of Sotheby's
The Pink Star, the world's largest cut diamond of its class, sold at Sotheby's evening auction in Geneva for a record $82 million, Sky News reports.

That's well above the estimated $60 million sale price, and does not include Sotheby's commission, according to AFP.


The 59.6-carat diamond was expected to command a record price, both because of its size and color.
It is the largest internally flawless or flawless, fancy vivid pink diamond that the Gemological Institute of American (GIA) has ever graded, according to Sotheby's.


As for its uniquely vivid hue, The Telegraph explained: "The 'Pink Star' gets its intense pink colour due to changes to the electron structure, known as 'plastic deformation' during its journey to the earth's surface."


The previous record price for a diamond was $46.2 million. That diamond, also a pink stone, was purchased by London jeweler Lawrence Graff at a 2010 Sotheby's auction.


Here's another look at the Pink Star. The identity of the buyer remains under wraps.


SDG_Pink_v3aaFIN_Background

The Clarity

The Clarity

 
Clarity refers to the number of tiny imperfections, called “inclusions,” present in a diamond. The fewer and smaller the inclusions, the more rare and valuable the stone, which makes clarity a key factor for valuing colorless diamonds. But clarity plays a less important role determining value of a natural color diamond than it does with colorless diamonds. The rarity of color is paramount in determining the stone’s value, and the color within the diamond frequently makes masks the inclusions invisible to the naked eye.…
 
 
 
In a white diamond, clarity can make or break the stone. The image above shows a VS quality stone on the left (more valuable), compared to a visibly included, lesser-valued stone on the right.
 
 
 
Now notice the stone on the right, graded as SI1 for clarity, meaning it does have inclusions. But just see what a rich, deep color it displays. A clarity grade of SI1 or SI2 would significantly lower the value of a colorless diamond, but the intensity of color makes this lower clarity stone more valuable and desirable—and far outweighs the fact that the stone has inclusions.

PINK DIAMONDS

PINK DIAMONDS

 
Pink diamonds range from delicate pastel to deep raspberry, Pink Diamonds are the most feminine of colors and are typically associated with romance. These extremely rare diamonds have long been revered by Hollywood stars and today are the hot favorite of collectors and connoisseurs.
 
 
PINK ORIGIN
Pink diamonds have only been found in a few mines across the world. The rich Golconda region in India and the Minas Gerais region of Brazil produced notable diamonds in the 17th and 18th centuries. Today, the Argyle mine in Western Australia is the source of the vast majority of the worlds supply. It is famous for generating the hugely coveted full-bodied hot pink diamonds.
 
 
Color Formation
Diamonds become pink when heat and pressure deep within the earth cause the crystal lattice to distort. These distortions cause Pink Diamonds to absorb green light and hence impart a pink color. This can often be seen as in parallel bands within the diamond. Pink Diamonds may be modified by an orange, brown or purplish color.
 
 
 
strength of color
The strength of color is one of the most important factors in determining the value of a natural color diamond. The value of a natural color diamond increases with the intensity of the most prominent color within the diamond.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday, January 16, 2014

The Diamond Investment Promise: Are Diamonds Finally A Commodity?

The Diamond Investment Promise: Are Diamonds Finally A Commodity?

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“Investment” is the word du jour of the diamond world and investment in diamonds is becoming a common discussion in financial circles. At the same time, a growing number of initiatives are in various stages of formation.

The wide range of formats and ways of going about it reflect that this is a budding endeavor with the initiatives testing new, mostly uncharted, ground.

At the heart of all of the offerings is the expectation that the price of diamonds from one-carat whites to high-end fancies, are set to increase steadily; some will appreciate slowly, beating inflation, while others are expected to appreciate 15 percent annually.

The expectation that the price of diamonds are set to increase stands on two legs – decreasing diamond reserves and increasing demand. The global diamond mining industry produces, on average, about 120-130 million carat of gem and industrial grade diamonds. Of this production, 28 million carats are gem and near gem quality rough diamonds that is fit for the global jewelry industry.

Thismay seem like a plentiful supply, but diamond production is declining, down from the 168 million carats mined in 2006 and far below the +176 million carats per year mined prior to that. In addition, there is no certainty that the current quality of production is sustainable.

With the exception of Alrosa – the world’s largest producer by volume – all of the other diamond miners are decreasing production.
finger communication
At the same time, the established diamond miners and many prospective miners are constantly exploring for new diamond sources. Currently there is no known high quality, high-yield rich diamond source that is not mined. Without any new mines coming online, the global diamond industry is facing an increasing shortage of natural diamonds.

It takes some 10 years from the discovery of a new resource to commercial production of a diamond mine. This means that if a new pipe is found today, it won’t be before 2022 when its production will be made available to the market.

In practical terms, there is no expectation that global diamond production will increase in the next ten year – at best.

On the other side of the equation is demand. The leading consumer demand – by price point and growth – is bridal jewelry. In India, bridal jewelry is switching from gold to diamond jewelry, in China diamond wedding rings are spreading from the trend setting Shanghai and Beijing to other urban areas and in the U.S. bridal jewelry continues to be a must have.

GDP per capita, a reliable predictor of diamond jewelry demand, is set to grow, mainly in the BRIC countries – Brazil, Russia, India and China. These growing economies are witnessing more people becoming wealthy, and much more joining the middle class. With this new found financial ability comes growing discretionary income, spent on luxury goods.

Chinaand India posted a real GDP growth of 9.2 percent and 6.9 percent respectively, in 2011. The World Bank pins global GDP growth in 2011 at 2.7 percent.

While GDP growth is expected to slow down in 2012,ChinaandIndiaare expected to continue their above average growth and provide the two economic engines of the diamond industry. Global GDP growth is expected to slow to 2.5 percent in 2012, China’s GDP is forecasted to grow by 8.2 percent, and in India GDP is projected to grow by 6.6 percent, according to the World Bank.

Aided by continued marketing efforts, this growth is backing the increased demand in diamond jewelry.
Global consumer demand for diamond jewelry is growing and shifting. If in the past more than 50 percent of global diamond jewelry consumptions was in theU.S., today consumers from growing economies are buying diamond jewelry at increasing levels.

By 2015,ChinaandIndia, together withHong Kong,Taiwanand the Gulf countries are expected to consume about 40 percent of diamond jewelry globally, rising from the current 31 percent market share.
Demand for diamond jewelry inChinaandIndiaincreased by an estimated 10 percent and 9 percent respectively in 2010 and by another 9 percent and 8 percent in 2011. This year, the forecast is for continued steady growth, the same as in 2011.

The forecasted rise in consumer demand, taking place when supply will be steady at best and declining in the more likely scenario, is expected to provide the backing to rising diamond prices in the consumer markets and fuel rising prices in years to come.

There are two main diamond categories of interest as an investment. Generally, they are high-end diamonds, and “bread and butter” white goods.

The first category is comprised of fancy color diamonds, mainly those with VS clarities and better, preferably with at least a ‘Fancy’ color grading. Fancy color diamonds that have only one color without a secondary color (pink vs purplish pink, for example) are favored. This category also includes diamonds larger than 10 carats with a DEF color and FL-VVS clarity.
the diamond investment promise 2
This category is not a new venue for investment. However, with the growing understanding of the potential diamonds have has an investment venue, more are considering it today.

The second category of goods is often referred to as “standard,” “ABC” or “bread and butter” goods. Broadly defined, these goods consist of one carat, D-J color, IF-SI1, round GIA certified diamonds. Some companies are looking at a broader range of size, ranging from 0.50 carats to 3 carats.

A Collapse Paves the Road
The event that fueled this swell of projects was the 2008 financial collapse that crushed the value of many investors’ savings and the fall of a number of leading financial institutions. In that time, the value of shares on the stock markets dropped, housing and real estate prices declined sharply mired by over-reliance on poorly offered mortgages, commodities traded around the world and used by industry and consumer in a variety of applications fell out of favor and the lost demand brought the prices sharply down. Investors saw the value of their portfolios plummet.

In response, many investors started seeking ways to add to their portfolios a component that will remain stable in times of economic calamity, a venue that at the very least will protect some of the portfolio and remain liquid. The desire is that such a component will provide an option to put cash in the hand of an investor without – or at least hardly without – loss to the value of saved capital.

This of course is the very minimum requirement. Ideally, just as with any other investment, appreciation is desirable.

As prices of colored diamonds at auctions kept grabbing attention, financial institutes and wealth mangers started considering diamonds as the possible missing component they were seeking. Simultaneously, diamond traders realized that the precious gem they have has performed better than most other investments during the financial crisis. Thus, the initial ideas of investing in diamonds started to come alive.

Consequently, it was not long before these two groups, sometimes jointly, started looking for ways to commoditize diamonds, something that happened a few times before, but never to the extent that diamonds have become a bona fide commodity akin to precious metals, wheat and coffee.

Why Now?
The 2008 crash was an unusually deep one, but not the only recession or difficult economic period in recent memory. Other changes are making this point in time attractive to invest in diamonds, specifically, four changes that are taking place in the diamond sector.

First, until recently De Beers was the monopolistic supplier of rough diamonds to the world. Its rough pricing policies had a great influence on polished prices. The firm sought to maintain prices by regulating the availability of rough diamonds. To do so, the company held to a very large stock of rough diamonds of an estimated $5 billion, well above its annual sells. By deciding what to offer and when, it could maintain prices in the market – not completely, but enough to raise worries in the investment community that one player can rather easily effect prices.

The decline of De Beers’ market share from +80 percent to about 38 percent today while selling off its huge inventory, leaving it with a working inventory of a few hundred million dollars, relieves this issue.

In this process, De Beers also lost its marketing contracts with other large diamond miners, such as Alrosa, giving other firms a stab at rising – or declining prices – as the market demanded.
the diamond investment promise 3
Today there are a number of large diamonds miners, Alrosa, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto, as well as several mid-sized companies such as Petra and Gem Diamonds. All of them market their rough diamonds independently, via tenders, contracted selling agreements and one off sells, resulting in a wide range of prices, leading to a shift from a supply driven market to a demand driven market.

The second reason is a lack of pricing transparency. Without knowing at how much polished diamonds are sold, an open trading market is not possible. The rise of platforms such as IDEX Online and a number of other such operations are changing this, bringing transparency to the market. Today price discovery of polished diamonds is much easier, allowing traders to have a better understanding at what price a diamond is sold.

Price discovery is a fundamental requirement for investment. Without knowing the price, investors cannot asses and investment or make an informed decision on buying or selling. Great efforts are put by the forming diamond investment entities into providing price information in a transparent and objective way.
A third issue is a need for a marketplace open to the financial community, a place where diamonds can be bought and sold easily and at market prices. This, just like transparent pricing, is now ready and available. Some of the new entities are forming their own platforms where investors will be able to buy and sell diamonds. Others intend to employ a more traditional method, using experienced buyers that will facilitate the transactions.

However, while using a buyer is a good option in many instances, the need is for an automatic platform where buying and selling is quick, efficient and trackable (See details on the Guaranteed Diamond Transactions™ (GDT™) spot market platform for an example of such trading arena).

Finally, because of the afro mentioned three reasons, the investment community was reluctant to enter into diamond investments. With the growing fragmentation of the mining sector, the availability of transparent pricing and creation of a trading platform, these barriers are being removed, creating new opportunities for the financial sector to invest in diamonds.

Friday, January 10, 2014

The Growing Trend of Colored Diamonds


At $14m, diamond is investor’s best friend

At $14m, diamond is investor’s best friend

NEW YORK — A rare pink diamond once owned by Indian royalty has sold for $39.3 million at auction in New York City.

The price for the 34.65-carat diamond that sold at Christie’s on Tuesday was the second-highest ever for a jewel sold at auction. The seller and buyer were anonymous.bolg-image-6

The gem nicknamed the Princie Diamond was discovered 300 years ago in the Golconda mines in India.
It once belonged to the Nizam of Hyderabad, an Indian prince.

In 1960, the diamond was purchased at auction by the London branch of the jeweler Van Cleef & Arpels.
Its name was bestowed at a party at the firm’s Paris store. It was called Princie in honor of the 14-year-old prince of Baroda, who attended the party with his mother, Maharani Sita Devi.

Rare Blue Diamond Unveiled by One and Only One

Rare Blue Diamond Unveiled by

One and Only One

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A rare Long Oval-Shaped Fancy Vivid Blue Diamond of nearly 3.5 carats will be unveiled by The One and Only One on May 3 at the company’s select locations nationwide. The Natural Blue Diamond, the center stone of a custom-designed ring featuring a pair of Fancy Intense Argyle Pink Diamonds (.93 carats), is accompanied by a certification from the Gemological Institute of America.
The Fancy Vivid Blue Diamond Ring is available for viewing by appointment only, price upon request.

“This vibrant Sky Blue stone is one of only three Fancy Vivid Blue Diamonds over three carats on the world market today,” said Joe Padulo, CEO of Padulo Prive, an adviser to elite jewelers and luxury brands. “Considering that a Fancy Deep Blue Diamond just broke the world auction record at $1.8 million per carat, this Long Oval Fancy Vivid Blue is a tremendous investment. Fancy Vivid is the most valuable color saturation designated by the GIA,” he added.
On April 24, at Bonhams Fine Jewelry sale in central London, a 5.3-carat Fancy Deep Blue Diamond


bolg-image-5



“Trombino” ring designed by Bulgari in the 1960s fetched $9.5 million. The $1.8 million per carat price broke the previous blue diamond record of $1.68 million per carat.
According to the GIA, of the millions of diamonds mined each year, only .0001% can qualify as Fancy Color Diamonds, and only a handful of these can achieve the top grade of Vivid. An even smaller percent are larger than one carat.


Less than 0.1% of all Fancy Color Diamonds are blue diamonds, and nearly all come from one source the Cullinan mine owned by Petra Diamonds Limited in South Africa. The mine produces blue diamonds only periodically, and fewer than five a year weigh over one carat.


Speaking of the performance of colored diamonds at auction, Rahul Kadakia, Head of Jewelry for Christie’s Americas and Switzerland, recently reported: “Over the past ten years, Fancy Color Diamonds have jumped ten-fold. What was $100,000, $200,000 or $300,000 per carat can now be worth $1.7 to $1.8 to $2 million per carat, and more.”

Thursday, January 9, 2014

CNBC - Diamonds a 'Safe Haven' Investment


Yellow Diamond Ring Standing 1080p


Fox Business - Diamonds a Bright Spot in Investments


World’s largest orange diamond fetches record $35.5 million

World’s largest orange diamond fetches record $35.5 million

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Big O
Geneva (AFP) – A spectacular and rare orange diamond, the largest known gem of its kind, was auctioned for a record $35.54 million in Geneva.

“It’s a world record price for an orange diamond, it’s a world record price per carat for any colored diamond,” the Christie’s auction house said of the sale, on Tuesday. ”It’s a tremendous price, a magnificent price,” it added, likening the purchase of such a prized colored diamond to buying a Picasso or Van Gogh painting. The price works out at $2.4 million per carat, beating the previous record of $2.15 million for the Vivid Pink Diamond sold in Hong Kong in 2009.

“At the back of the hall, 29 million francs ($31.5 million, 23 million euros). Sold!” the Christie’s auctioneer said as the fiery almond-shaped gem was snapped up in a room of about 200 people in a luxury Geneva hotel. The total sale price was boosted by another $4.04 million in taxes and commission.

35mO
A model shows “the Orange” a 14.82-carat pear-shaped, vivid orange diamond during a press preview on …

The man who made the purchase swiftly got up and left the room to a round of applause. Christie’s did not reveal his identity. The deep orange gemstone, found in South Africa, weighs a whopping 14.82 carats. The Gemological Institute of America (GIA) has handed it the top rating for colored diamonds: “fancy vivid”.

Pure orange diamonds, also known as “fire diamonds”, are extremely uncommon and few have been auctioned, with the largest never more than six carats. ”To have one that’s over 14 carats is exceptional,” Christie’s international jewelry director David Warren told AFP. He said “The Orange” was “the largest recorded vivid orange diamond in the world”. In 1990, the 4.77-carat yellow-orange Graff Orange diamond was sold for $3.92 million and in 1997 the vivid orange Pumpkin diamond of 5.54 carats was sold for $1.32 million.

Plum size pink pic
A model presents a 59.6-carat pink diamond on September 25, 2013 that was auctioned in Geneva Wednesday …

Christie’s had estimated “The Orange” would rake in $17 million to $20 million.

Colored diamonds, once considered a curiosity, are rarer than white diamonds and today attract higher prices per carat than even the most flawless, translucent stone. That, Warren explained, was because, “colored diamonds are real freaks of nature. They begin as white diamonds, and it’s some accidental coloring agent in the ground that will turn it a particular color”. Green diamonds, for instance, are colored by radioactivity in the ground, blue diamonds get their color from boron, and yellow diamonds, which in rare cases turn orange, are colored by nitrogen. Pink diamonds get their color from a distortion in the crystal lattice as the stone is taking shape.

Colored diamonds “are extraordinarily rare stones,” agreed David Bennett, who heads the European jewelry division at Sotheby’s. Christie’s rival is set to auction a flawless 59.60-carat vivid pink diamond, called “The Pink Star”, in Geneva on Wednesday, with an asking price of $60 million. Like “The Orange”, the plum-sized shimmering “Pink Star” has received the highest possible color rating from GIA, as well as top marks for clarity. It is also the largest of its kind, Bennett said, insisting the anonymous seller was not asking too much.

“Very, very few of these stones have ever appeared at auction and three years ago, a five-carat vivid pink made over $10 million. So the estimate on this stone of $60 million would appear to be very reasonable,” he told AFP. For those who cannot cough up that kind of money, both Christie’s and Sotheby’s “Magnificent Jewels” auctions also offer a range of other items of historic importance but with lighter price-tags. A shimmering emerald and diamond necklace by Cartier that has been in the collection of Bolivian tycoon Simon Iturri Patino since he bought it for his wife in 1938 raked in almost $10 million on Tuesday evening.

‘Pink Star’ diamond auctioned for record $83 million

‘Pink Star’ diamond auctioned for record $83 million

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Pink Star pic
Geneva (AFP) – A plum-sized diamond known as the “Pink Star” was auctioned in Geneva Wednesday for $83 million, a world record for a gemstone.

David Bennett, chairman of Sotheby’s jewelry division in Europe and the Middle East, brought down the hammer in a Geneva hotel after an intense, five-minute bidding race between four contenders.

The winner, a bearded man apparently in his sixties sporting a Jewish skullcap, ended pitted in a one-on-race against a telephone competitor to whom Patty Wong, chair of Sotheby’s in Asia, spoke in Mandarin from the auction room.The bearded man declined to identify himself to AFP but confirmed that he had been representing another individual. Sotheby’s later said the buyer was Isaac Wolf, a New York diamond cutter, who was going to rename the stone “The Pink Dream”.

The diamond was the star of a high-end jewelry auction in the upscale Beau Rivage Hotel on the shore of Lake Geneva. The “Pink Star” was the penultimate lot, and there were gasps of awe as a model stood next to Bennett on the auction podium wearing the diamond, which is mounted on a ring. ”And now for something different. One of the most remarkable gemstones ever to appear at auction,” Bennett said as the bidding opened. The auction was conducted in Swiss francs, starting at 48 million and working its way upwards million-by-million.

Sotheby's Auctioneer
Chairman of auctioneers Sotheby’s jewelry division in Europe and the Middle East, David Bennett

There was a long silence as the price reached 67 million Swiss francs, before the in-room bidder came back with the winning 68 million. The final Swiss franc price, including Sotheby’s premium, was 76.32 million — the equivalent of $83.2 million. The some 150 people in the auction room erupted into applause as the theme tune from the “Pink Panther” was played in a tongue-in-cheek gesture and staff handed out glasses of pink champagne.

The diamond had been estimated at $60 million. Three years ago, Sotheby’s set an auction record of $46.2 million for a diamond when it sold the “Graff Pink” gemstone. The Sotheby’s auction came a day after rival house Christie’s sold an almond-shaped diamond dubbed “The Orange” for $35.5 million, also a record in its category.

‘A truly royal stone’
The 59.60-carat “Pink Star” is the largest in its class ever graded by the Gemological Institute of America (GIA), with the second biggest less than half its size.

Plum size pink pic
A model displays the “Pink Star,” a 59.6-carat pink diamond that was auctioned in Geneva on November …

The sparkling oval-cut rock measures 2.69 by 2.06 centimeters (1.06 by 0.81 inches), and weighs 11.92 grams (0.026 pounds). In addition to its top color and clarity ratings, it falls into a rare subgroup with the purest diamond crystals and extraordinary optical transparency, comprising less than two percent of all gem diamonds, according to the GIA. ”The pink diamond, I have no hesitation in saying, is a truly amazing, royal stone. There is no stone of that size and colour known,” said Bennett.

The “Pink Star” was 132.5 carats in the rough when it was mined by De Beers in Africa in 1999, according to Sotheby’s, which has not said which country it came from. It was cut and polished over two years by Steinmetz Diamonds, and unveiled to the public in 2003 under the title of the “Steinmetz Pink”. The near-translucent rock was renamed after it was first sold four years later for an undisclosed sum to an unidentified buyer. Sotheby’s declined to name the seller in Wednesday’s auction, nor would it say whether the gemstone had been bought and sold again since 2007.

Best known for shimmering white translucence, diamonds in fact come in all sorts of colors. Green diamonds, for instance, are colored by radioactivity in the ground, blue diamonds get their color from boron, and yellow diamonds, which in very rare cases turn orange, are colored by nitrogen. ”I think colored diamonds have finally come of age. They are amongst the rarest of all stones, and they are finally reaching levels where the price is matching the rarity,” said Bennett.

A vivid blue, 5.04-carat diamond ring fetched 6.1 million francs ($6.6 million) — a million francs over its estimate.
And the final lot, the “Wasilewska Briolette Diamond” — a yellow diamond brooch once owned by opera singer Ganna Wasilewska — sold for 9.7 million francs ($10.5 million).
Beyond the diamonds, a 114.74-carat sapphire hit 7.6 million francs ($7.1 million), almost double its upper estimate.

Analysts note that investors have often turned to jewels in uncertain economic times. They also carry prestige for growing global elites. ”In the last 30 years, the market has become completely international,” said Bennett.

Rio Tinto puts largest ‘red’ diamond on market

Rio Tinto puts largest ‘red’ diamond on market

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red-diamond
Rio Tinto said on Friday it was putting up for sale the biggest “red” diamond ever produced by its Australian mine amid an “explosion” in demand from Asia for the rare pink-hued stones.The Argyle Phoenix, a 1.56 carat gem, is one of three red diamonds on offer at the annual Argyle Pink Diamonds Tender – the first time in the 30-year history of the exclusive sale that it has included three red stones.”This is the largest red that has ever come from the Argyle diamond mine,” Argyle Pink Diamonds manager Josephine Johnson told AFP as she held the stone.”Never seen before, likely never seen again.”The diamond world will be talking about this diamond for the next few months intensely. And there will be lots of discussion about the rarity of it, the value of it.”

The 2013 pink diamond tender comprises 64 diamonds, including 58 pink stones, three blue ones and the three fancy reds.Such jewels routinely fetch over £1 million a carat. As a basic rule of thumb, a pink diamond is worth about 50 times more than a white diamond.

After previews in Sydney, New York and Tokyo, there will be tender viewings in Hong Kong and Perth, to allow clients and experts to see the gems and make offers for individual stones.”The tender every year has great interest – when you think there’s only 60 stones each year, that’s about 12 grams of diamond weight – we tour it around the world because each one is like selling a Picasso,” Johnson said.”Each one is unique”. They will find different markets.”With a red diamond the colour itself is extraordinary, but what really transcends the appeal of the colour is just the outrageous rarity of something like this.”

The Argyle mine in Western Australia produces virtually the entire world’s supply of pink diamonds, with the red seen as the pinnacle of the colour scale.It is not known how the diamonds acquire their pink tinge but it is thought to come from a molecular structure distortion as the jewel forms in the earth’s crust or makes its way to the surface.

Japan is the largest consumer of pink diamonds, with the lighter “Cherry Blossom” shades in strong demand, but Johnson said Argyle diamonds were growing in popularity in other markets.”There’s an explosion of interest in China and India. We’re certainly seeing that in the rare diamond world,” she said.”I am quite surprised at how quickly they have moved from a desire for large, white clean goods to an appreciation for the value of rarity and fancy coloured diamonds.”

With the Phoenix, she said: “It being red is very interesting because that’s a highly symbolic colour in Asia.” But she said with few reference points and increasing interest in coloured diamonds, particularly rare pinks and reds, it was impossible to know where the stone would end up.”Our last diamond that came anywhere near close to this actually ended up in the US, so it’s hard to say,” she said.
 

Chinese, Indians Buy Pink Diamonds as Rarity Clicks, Rio Says

Chinese, Indians Buy Pink Diamonds as Rarity Clicks, Rio Says

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bloombergimageCustomers from emerging markets are buying more pink diamonds from Rio Tinto Group, the world’s third-largest producer of rough diamonds, as the colored gems begin to be appreciated for their rarity.

“Five years ago, we may have had one or two diamonds go to China and India, but now we’ll have more than 20 percent of the diamonds going to the developing markets,” said Josephine Johnson, business manager at Rio Tinto’s Argyle Pink Diamonds, at a private sale of 75 colored diamonds in Hong Kong. “China is particularly interesting because of the rapid growth in the appreciation and understanding of pink diamonds.”

The Argyle mine in Western Australia supplies 90 percent of the world’s pink diamonds. The mine is scheduled to stop production by 2020, which will leave less than 500 pink diamonds for global distribution and make the colored gems a compelling investment, Johnson said.
The U.S. accounted for about 38 percent of the global diamond market in 2011, while China had an 11 percent share followed by Japan and India with 10 percent each, according to De Beers (AAL), the world’s biggest producer of the gems. China may overtake the U.S. as the biggest consumer of diamonds by 2015, according to Antwerp World Diamond Center.

“Over the next 10 years, with plateauing stocks and increasing demand, you can only be bullish on diamonds,” said Dylan Dix, a Vancouver-based executive at HRA Group and a customer at the diamond sale in Hong Kong.

Rio, the world’s second-biggest mining company, is planning to cut jobs at the Argyle mine to reduce costs and improve efficiency, the company said earlier this month. The miner said in March it’s considering selling its diamond mines because they no longer fit its strategy.

Building and Protecting Wealth with Rare Color Diamonds

Building and Protecting Wealth with Rare Color Diamonds

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In today’s complex and modern world there is an unlimited range of options for individuals to consider putting their hard earned money into. Stocks, bonds, futures, mutual funds, REITS, SPDRS, TIPS, ETF’S, precious metals, oil, gas, real estate, partnerships and business opportunities are just a few of the most common ones. Each of these have their own unique advantages and disadvantages, but there is one very special type of vehicle that offers a distinct set of advantages that no other can match: rare color diamonds.

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One of the main advantages that set rare color diamonds apart from all other is the fact that not only do they encapsulate an incredible amount of wealth in a very small package, but that wealth is also highly portable and very easily concealed. Unlike real estate, gold or silver, rare color diamonds are small, light and easy to move around when needed. A rare color diamond owner could walk past you on the street with several million dollars of wealth stored in their pocket and you wouldn’t even know it. You can literally carry your entire wealth with you across borders, simply by putting a few small, high-value items in your pockets.

Unlike paper promises such as stocks and bonds, rare color diamonds have a very well established and long standing track record of doubling in value within a five to seven year term, which is even faster than precious metals. Paper promises are known to be very volatile and can drop dramatically in value in a single day if market conditions turn unfavorable for any number of reasons. This is especially true in the United States under the current unstable economic conditions.

What makes rare color diamonds so incredibly valuable is simply their scarcity. Out of every 10,000 carats of diamonds that are mined, only one of those will turn out to be what is called a natural fancy color diamond. Out of the 110 million total carats of diamonds that are mined each year, only about 2,000 of those will end up being cut and polished as natural fancy color diamonds. In addition, there are far fewer new fancy color diamonds available each year so they will generally command a substantially higher price per carat than the much more common and plentiful colorless diamonds.

Rare color diamonds currently range in price from $1,500 to millions of dollars each. Additionally, it is anticipated that these color diamonds will become even more valuable as supply dwindles and demand increases overtime. Several of the mines that produce rare color diamonds around the world will either be shutting down entirely or dramatically scaling back production over the next several years because their excavation is near complete. This will even further reduce the supply of a rarity that is already in very high demand. Another factor contributing to the rise in value of these rare color diamonds is the increased demand for them from individuals in India and China, twocountries with an exploding number of middle class to high net-worth individuals that are looking for ways to protect their generational net worth and store their wealth with the least amount of risk.

Rare color diamonds have a proven track record from 40 years of auction house & private dealer records that show an average appreciation of 12-15% per year.

One of the main reasons why individuals turn to hard assets such as rare color diamonds today is because, much like gold and silver, they represent a significant hedge against inflation. Back in 1979 and 1980, a time when the US was experiencing substantial inflation, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates significantly to around 20% in an effort to constrict the money supply and fight off inflation. During that two-year time frame alone, the price of rare color diamonds increased by roughly 500%.
With countless financial land mines out there on the horizon like global political instability, impending inflation and massive looming government deficits, it’s important to build a financial firewall around yourself that will allow you to maintain your wealth over the long term, regardless of what occurs. Acquiring rare color diamonds, can provide the ultimate in stored wealth because they have never gone down in value. Remember, rare color diamonds are scarce and only becoming more rare each year and paper currency is plentiful with more and more being printed each year. Which one do you trust to protect your net worth?

Rio Tinto sets a new record for the number of rare red diamonds from its Argyle Diamond Mine

Rio Tinto sets a new record for the number of rare red diamonds from it's

Argyle Diamond Mine

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rare-red-diamondFor the first time in the 30-year history of the Argyle Diamond Mine, Rio Tinto will be showcasing three Fancy Red diamonds at its annual Argyle Pink Diamonds Tender, the world’s most exclusive sale of rare diamonds.

Debuting at a world exclusive preview in Sydney, the three red diamonds from the Argyle mine represent the pinnacle of value and ultimate rarity in the diamond industry.

Argyle Pink Diamonds manager Josephine Johnson said,”Since mining began in 1983 only six diamonds certified as Fancy Red by the Gemmological Institute of America havebeen presented for sale at the annual Tender. To have three of these rare red diamonds in one Tender is a very special moment in time.”

The Argyle Pink Diamonds Tender showcases the best of a year’s production from the Argyle mine in Western Australia.The hero of the collection, a 1.56 carat round gem is Argyle Phoenix™ named in honour of the newly commissioned Argyle underground mine.”The intrinsic beauty and unrivalled colour intensity of this red diamond is symbolic of its East Kimberley birthplace and the treasures that lie within the depths of the new underground mine,” Ms Johnson said.

The 2013 Tender collection is notable for its unique combination of colours and sizes.For the first time in eight years there is a diamond greater than three carats – the 3.02 carat Radiant, Fancy Intense Orangy Pink diamond, named Argyle Imperial™.Equally unusual is the 0.71 carat blue heart-shaped diamond, Argyle Celestial™, which is expected to be sold with a matching heart-shaped fancy pink diamond from the collection.

The 2013 Argyle Pink Diamonds Tender comprises 64 diamonds, including 58 pink diamonds, three fancy red diamonds and three blue diamonds. All 64 diamonds in this year’s collection were cut and polished in Western Australia by Rio Tinto’s master craftsmen, acknowledged globally for their expertise, precision and artistic flare.This year’ s collection comprises six hero diamonds selected for their unsurpassed beauty and named to ensure there is a permanent record of their contribution to the history of world’s most important diamonds.Tender viewings will be held in Perth and Hong Kong with previews in Sydney, New York and Tokyo. Bids close on 8 October 2013.

About Argyle Pink Diamonds
Pink diamonds, produced at Rio Tinto’s Argyle Mine in Western Australia, are highly coveted as the world’s most sought after gems. The Argyle Diamond Mine produces more than 90 per cent of the world’s pink diamonds, which are sold in a broad range of colours and sizes to an international customer base.Pink diamonds’ value is directly related to their rarity. The market for pink diamonds is quite separate to white diamonds, and due to their rarity, pink diamonds typically command prices far in excess of white diamonds.The best diamonds are reserved for the annual Argyle Pink Diamonds Tender. Rio Tinto’s Argyle Pink Diamonds business is located in Perth, Western Australia, alongside its cutting and polishing factory. Website: www.argylepinkdiamonds.com.au

A summary of the heroes of the 2013 Argyle Pink Diamonds Tender
Argyle Phoenix™ 1.56 CARAT, ROUND BRILLIANT, Fancy Red, I2
Argyle Seraphina™ 2.02 CARAT, PRINCESS, Fancy Intense Purple-Pink, SI2
Argyle Imperial™ 3.02 CARAT, RADIANT, Fancy Intense Orangy Pink, SI1
Argyle Aurelia™ 1.18 CARAT, OVAL, Fancy Intense Purplish Pink, SI2
Argyle Dauphine™ 2.51 CARAT, RADIANT, Fancy Deep Pink, SI2
Argyle Celestial ™ 0.71 CARAT, HEART, Fancy Dark Gray-Blue, VS1

Interview with Actress and Russian supermodel Gia Skova

Interview with Actress and Russian supermodel Gia Skova

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blog infoQuestions:

1. What is most Important for you in decorating? What is the first thing you look for?
Answer: The most important thing is great attention to detail, it is important to me that the time effort and energy come together and I look for style and class. I am fascinated as of late by Natural Fancy Color Diamonds they are natures art in its most sophisticated form.
GIA APHRODITE COLLECTION

2. Tell us about your favorite Jewelry, maybe they have their own history?
Answer: Funny you should mention that my favorite jewelry is of course Diamonds and yes they do have quite a history in fact it is said that the youngest diamond is a mere 9 Billion years old, now that’s history.

3. What precious metal do you prefer white gold, yellow, silver, platinum, palladium?
Answer: Palladium of course as it was named after the asteroid Pallas, which was itself named after the epithet of the Greek goddess Athena, acquired by her when she slew Pallas I love ancient mythology. Also Palladium is found in the Norilsk Complex in Russia another reason I like it.

4. Which gems do you have a special affinity for?
Answer: I am quite fond of Natural Blue and Red Diamonds they remind me of the depths of the earths core and the bright and beautiful blue sky above.

5. What do you look for in the first place when choosing a piece of Jewelry? I would buy jewelry if it was sold at a deep discount?
Answer: The right price is certainly nice however I understand the complexity and the rarity of the pieces of Jewelry that I am partial to and I prefer to own something truly one of a kind and unique over a mass produced commercial item.


6. Do you prefer to buy Jewelry abroad or in Russia?
Answer: I prefer to design and build my own Jewelry as of late I haven’t really made any formal announcements but I am working with a global Investment grade Diamond firm The Diamond Market.com and I am creating my own signature fine jewelry line titled “Tears of Aphrodite” it will be coming soon so I suppose I like my own Russian designed fine jewelry.

7.What was the most striking Jewelry gift in your life?
Answer: I am absolutely in love with a gorgeous embellished Natural Orange Diamond Ring given to me by the Owner of The Diamond Market.com it was that piece that inspired me to design my own personal line of high end Fancy Color Diamond Jewelry the firm was kind enough to review my concepts and we are now moving forward on the “Tears of Aphrodite” collection by Gia Skova.

8.What can you say about the fashion trends this season? In your opinion, what is the current style?
Answer: I am noticing a lot of White …seems as though summer brides aren’t the only one wearing white this season I love vivid colors but a blank canvas starts out white for a reason and once the paint is applied you have a master piece so I say wear what moves you from day to day and live and love life.

9.Which of the Russian and foreign celebrities might you call the highest standard of taste in terms of choosing jewelry accessories?
Answer: One word comes to mind Faberge’, in fact Peter Carl Faberge’ the famous Russian Jeweler would be 166 years old May 30th, I also loved Queen Elizabeth’s Diamond Jubilee last year it is safe to say she has a high standard of taste in choosing Jewelry.
Fancy Intense Blue Pear Shape

10. Do you think in Russia there are Jewelers who are able to represent Russian designs at the international level?
Answer: I do believe the next Faberge’ is just waiting to be found I also encourage you to see my personal fine jewelry designs in the months ahead at The Diamond Market.com through my signature collection “Tears of Aphrodite” I hope everyone enjoys my inspirational art through the medium of Natural Rare Fancy Color Diamonds.

11. What piece of Jewelry would you like to receive as a gift?
Answer: That is a loaded question…I would like to receive most all pieces of jewelry as a gift I wouldn’t turn away the gesture of a gift but if I was to give you a hint I love the pear shaped diamonds and use many of them in my new designs for the “Tears of Aphrodite” Collection.

India’s Love for Gold Turns to Diamonds

India’s Love for Gold Turns to Diamonds

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  • Need a Real Sponsor here
  • August 14, 2013, 2:00 PM HKT

India’s Love for Gold Turns to Diamonds

By Biman Mukherji and Debiprasad Nayak
Sam Panthaky/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
A woman tried diamond jewelry at a diamond exhibition in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, Feb. 16, 2012.
Diamonds, it has been said, are forever. But apparently not in India where growing demand and excellent rates of return are leading retailers to offer buy-backs on the gems.

More people are now opting for diamonds rather than plain gold jewelry, according to jewelers, because they offer a greater investment opportunity and are regarded by consumers as more on trend. Diamond solitaires outpaced gold in the stock index by over 10 percentage points in mid-July, further dimming India’s long-standing love affair with gold.

Profit margins on pure gold have shrunk after the government introduced a series of measures to cut dollars spent on imports of the precious metal, including higher import taxes and tougher import procedures, in an attempt to close the current account deficit. On Tuesday, India again raised import tax on gold to 10% from 8%.
India Real Time has more.

Collectors Focus on Jewels as Investments

Collectors Focus on Jewels as Investments

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  • The Wall Street Journal
  • ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
  • May 9, 2013, 7:02 p.m. ET

Collectors Focus on Jewels as Investments

Blue-chip paintings may be getting the most attention in this volatile art market, but jewels are quietly starting to shine as buyers seek alternative investments and portability.

    By
  • KELLY CROW
Jewels are commanding record prices, and men are the biggest buyers. Kelly Crow explains why on Lunch Break.
Last month, Christie’s sold a pink diamond the size of a thumbnail to an international collector for $39.3 million. Sotheby’s sold an even smaller pink diamond three years ago for $46 million—more than anyone has ever paid for a canvas by Camille Pissarro or Paul Gauguin. Next Wednesday in Geneva, Christie’s will offer up a pear-shape diamond dubbed the “Absolute Perfection” that’s about as big as a golf ball. Asking price: $20 million to $30 million.

Blue-chip paintings may be getting the most attention in this volatile art market, but jewels are quietly starting to shine. Withgold prices down and currency values roiling, some investors and collectors are scouring for creative alternatives where they can store cash—and move it around quickly in a pinch. Why else would investors sock $1 billion in a decentralized, online-only currency like Bitcoin that didn’t even exist six years ago? Alan Silbert, who last week launched a website accepting Bitcoins for its $2 million condominiums and $25,000 watches, said, “People are exploring ways to exercise more control over their money—they just want to diversify their assets.”

An Attracting Investment: Jewels

Take a look at top diamonds sold at auction.
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Sotheby’s‘Star of the Season’ sold for $16.5 million at Sotheby’s Geneva on May 17, 1995.
For this reason, diamonds—arguably the hardest asset around—are no longer just a girl’s best friend. Men are the ones primarily responsible for moving the $71 billion U.S. market for jewelry now, and not because they want to buy a few baubles for their wives on special occasions. Men, as well as some women, are increasingly shifting a portion of their assets into diamonds and colored gems as pure investments, attracted by jewelry’s portability and global appeal, experts say. Christie’s jewelry specialist Rahul Kadakia said several men have walked into his office lately, seeking advice on how to “invest $100 million in jewelry over the next five years—and they’ve done it.”

Martin Rapaport, a former diamond cleaver who built the industry’s biggest diamond-trading network RapNet, said a billionaire friend recently bought 100 single-carat diamonds and had them strung together in a Roaring Twenties-style strand. That way, if the man’s fortunes shifted, he could step on an airplane with his nest egg, worth roughly $1.1 million, looped safely around his wife’s neck. “If the world gets a computer virus and suddenly you need to move $10 million in 48 hours, gold will set off metal detectors and too much cash gets cumbersome,” Mr. Rapaport said, “but you slip on a $5 million ring and a $5 million necklace and you’ve got no problems.”

Judith Price, president of the National Jewelry Institute, said a “refugee mentality” has seeped into the entire jewelry field over the past decade, ratcheting values for everything from natural pearls to ornate brooches by Van Cleef & Arpels. “If there is a problem, people want to feel like they can escape,” Ms. Price said. “You can’t do that with a Rodin tucked under your arm, but think about how a tiny a jewel is—you can slip it in your pocket and walk away.”

Diamond prices often climb when stocks are falling and vice versa. But the long view on diamond values is reassuring, jewel and art experts say: Last month, the average asking price for a one-carat diamond among gem dealers was roughly $10,500, up 31% from a one carat’s going rate six years ago, according to the RapNet Diamond Index, which tracks diamond prices among 12,000 gem dealers around the world. During that same period, Standard & Poor’s 500 index increased 14%.

Jewelry has long served as a pretty way to store and display wealth, from King Tutankhamen, who was entombed with his collection, to Henry VIII, who instructed his jewelers to embed his initials in just about every bauble he wore. Today a few royals are still considered heavyweight buyers of jewelry, specifically the sultan of Brunei and the emir of Qatar.
[image]Sotheby’s will sell Gina Lollobrigida’s diamond necklace next week.
The difference is that investors dominate the jewelry market now, and their tastes and collecting habits are determining price levels for all sorts of gems. In China, industrial tycoons mainly covet D-flawless diamonds—defect-free gems. This preference for perfection revealed itself when Chinese investors even sidestepped larger but slightly clouded stones in favor of smaller, flawless varieties, said Sotheby’s specialist Lisa Hubbard. Elsewhere in the world, though, bigger still appears to sell better: Last month, Sotheby’s sold a 75-carat pear-shape white diamond for $14.2 million; the seller paid $4.3 million for it in 2001, earning a 230% return.
Collectors in China have also catapulted asking prices for colored diamonds—particularly in rare shades of pink and blue. Christie’s says the last time its $39 million “Princie” pink diamond came up for auction in 1960, it sold for $1.3 million.
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Sotheby’s will sell Gina Lollobrigida’s diamond-and-emerald earrings next week.
India and the Middle East, on the other hand, seem more smitten with natural pearls, a run-up that kicked off in 2007 when two strands of pearls that once belonged to the Maharajah of Baroda sold for $7.1 million, far above the $6 million estimate. Last May in Geneva, a man also paid Christie’s $4.5 million for an emerald-encrusted turban ornament, called a sarpej, that was estimated to sell for $800,000.

Across Europe and the U.S., the jewelry field is seeing an influx of contemporary art collectors who are buying tried-and-true gems partly as a way to offset the risk of their newer, untested art holdings. Peter Brant, the industrialist-publisher who collects Andy Warhol and Urs Fischer, buys whimsical pieces by Paris jewelry designer Joel Arthur Rosenthal, known as JAR, for his model wife, Stephanie Seymour—and he’s also bought a few investment-worthy diamonds from London jeweler Laurence Graff.
[image]ReutersChristie’s is selling sapphire, diamond and emerald rings next week.
Greek financier Dimitri Mavrommatis, who collects Sèvres porcelain, Impressionist paintings and contemporary art, said he started buying a “fantastic collection of stones” over the past decade including pink, blue and yellow diamonds and Kashmir sapphires. His “masterpiece” is an 8.6-carat ruby called the “Graff Ruby” because Mr. Graff paid Christie’s $3.6 million for it in 2006. Mr. Mavrommatis said he bought the ruby from Mr. Graff a year later for an undisclosed sum and could likely resell it now for almost $10 million. Although the same instinct for quality guides Mr. Mavrommatis’s collecting in both areas, his paintings hang in his Paris apartment and his gems remain out of sight, in a safe. “You can’t buy a painting or a jewel first because it’s an investment, especially when you pay through the roof,” he added. “I buy them firstly because I love them.”

Mr. Graff, who also collects contemporary art, said, “Diamonds are treasure, and the wealthy always want treasure.”
[image]Sotheby’s 100-carat pear-shaped diamond sold for $16.5 million in 1995.
Jewelers and auction houses are also reaping the benefits of their decadeslong campaign to position—and price—jewels as artworks rather than ornaments. When Christie’s specialist François Curiel started selling jewelry at Christie’s 40 years ago, he said its black-and-white catalogs rarely showed the pieces coming up for sale. Catalog descriptions never said more when less would suffice—say, “Ruby brooch, invisibly set, Van Cleef, 1930.”

Now, auction houses are doing whatever they can to appear accessible to novices. Anyone who stopped by Christie’s jewelry preview last month in New York could have bought a 297-page catalog with pages of descriptions devoted to its priciest pieces like the “Princie,” which had been mined in India 300 years earlier and carried a $30 million estimate.

Inside the crowded room, most of the jewels were arranged by color in velvet-lined cases, but the “Princie” got its own darkened room. Since one of the diamond’s selling points was its ability to change hues—from cotton-candy pink to fuchsia—under fluorescent light, a bulb was positioned over its case to flicker on and off. A video projected on a nearby wall traced its origin to the famous Golconda mine in India and its past owners like the Nizam of Hyderabad, who mentioned it in an inventory log in 1700. In 1960, the gem was resold and nicknamed the “Princie” after the 14-year-old Prince of Baroda.

When the “Princie” came up for bid a couple of days later, a model in a pink designer-ball gown held up the stone for one final glimpse in the saleroom. Minutes later, the gavel fell and a telephone bidder won it for $39.3 million, making it the second-priciest gem to ever sell at auction.

Over at rival Sotheby’s, the campaign is also paying off. Ms. Hubbard said the house auctioned off $460.5 million worth of jewelry last year, up 58% from its sales in 2007—the peak of its last market cycle.

In some cases, men who got started investing in jewels a few years ago have started branching out to collect other historic periods. Boston collector Fred Sharf collects 1950s “high style” pieces designed by Van Cleef, but he’s lately started buying “retro” pieces that were made with “ordinary stones” like citrine during the Depression and World War II.

Miami radiologist and design collector Al Eiber said he didn’t consider jewelry to be part of his net worth two decades ago when he and his wife, Kim, started buying $5,000 wiry necklaces designed by sculptor Alexander Calder. But now, Mr. Eiber sees similar pieces of Calder’s “miniature sculptures” trading at auctions for up to $500,000 apiece, and he said, “I wish I’d bought more. If I look back at what I’ve collected, the jewelry has probably done better than anything else I’ve bought.”

Because so much of the world’s jewelry is still made for, and marketed to, women, the collecting of it can prove a little isolating for men. Yvonne Markowitz, a jewelry curator at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, said men rarely talk about the pieces they’re collecting in the way they might show off a blue-chip painting. Investment jewels stay in the vault and rarely come out, even for parties. Mr. Sharf said he was pleased when the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum borrowed his ruby flower Van Cleef brooch called the “Command Special” to exhibit. His wife Jean doesn’t even put it on. “She never wears it—it never sees the light of day,” he said, laughing.

Michael Rotenberg, a Boston collector who manages apartment buildings, said he’s grown braver lately and started wearing the $200-$500 lapel pins he collects from studio jewelers. But he only tends to wear pieces created from manly materials like electrical tape and twigs, and he only wears them to arty events like museum openings, not the office.

His wife, Karen, collects jewelry as well, and she said she is happy to share the pursuit. She does have a rule of her own, though: “I told him he can do this so long as his brooches aren’t bigger than mine.”