Global giant De Beers says polished diamond sales are set to rise 4.5% this year, according to an Agence France-Presse report circulated by media
on June 11 and 12. In an interview CEO Philippe Mellier attributed
growing demand to a U.S. economic recovery and expanding markets in
China and India.
“The largest global market for diamond jewellery is the United States
and everyone knows they are taking off again,” AFP quoted him.
Together China, Hong Kong and Macau make up 13% of the global market,
the news agency stated. “More and more Chinese are achieving the buying
power to acquire jewellery and diamonds, especially when they get
married,” said Mellier.
As for India, it’s “a potentially large source of diamond demand.”
Mellier called new prime minister Narendra Modi a “fervent defender of
an industry which he knows well, the diamond industry, having been
governor of Gujarat state, which is known for its diamond polishers.”
The forecast echoes a May 27 report by Dundee Capital Markets, which
attributed the last two years of rising diamond prices to new demand in
China and India, as well as an American recovery.
Dundee credited De Beers, which controls about 40% of global trade,
with one of the “longest-running and most successful marketing campaigns
in history, built around the slogan A Diamond is Forever,” which began
in the U.S. during the 1940s. “The story was repeated in Japan in the
1950s, supplanting pearls as the romantic gift of choice, and is
repeating itself again in the emerging markets of China and India. Their
combined population of 2.6 billion people is expected to drive
significant growth off a well-established base in the West.”
The Global Diamond Report 2013 from Bain & Company forecast a
10-year period in which 2% supply growth would be overtaken by demand
growth of 5.1%.
Source: resourceclips.com
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