Paragon International Wealth Management: Higher Demand for Colored Diamonds Not a Surprise
It has almost been a year since the
spectacular 14.6-carat Oppenheimer Blue diamond sold for a record-setting $57.5 million.
The rare blue diamond, the sale of which was managed by auction house
Christie’s for almost $4 million dollars a carat, is the most expensive blue
diamond ever sold.
Since the sale in May 2016, demand
for rare fancy colored diamonds has steadily increased, creating what many have
called the year of the colored diamond. With that said, colored diamonds
have been progressively gaining value over the last decade and are considered
one of the best hard assets a robust investment portfolio can have.
While Fancy Light Blue and Fancy
Vivid Pink diamonds have made international headlines over the last two years
for the amounts they have sold for, looking at historic data, the value of rare
diamonds could potentially climb higher over the next five years.
Between 2009 and 2016, the price of
pink diamonds has increased nearly 180 percent
and currently sits at a record high. Blue and yellow diamonds have also gained
value, with the price of both rising 70 percent and 90 percent, respectively.
The allure and luxury of fancy
colored diamonds is universal, which makes them a coveted asset in a range of
countries and cultures. In addition to being a status symbol, these exclusive
fancy colored diamonds are easily portable and of high-value making them an
ideal hard asset.
Demand for rare colored diamonds is
expected to strengthen over the next decade as supply of the exquisite fancy
colored diamonds becomes scarcer. Only 0.001 percent of diamonds mined each
year qualify as "fancy" and even fewer earn the distinction of
"vivid", which refers to a highly saturated hue.
The Pink Star Diamond - an example
of a rare fancy vivid pink diamond.
There are also very few mines that
produce fancy colored diamonds, notes Paragon
International Wealth Management,
a Toronto-based firm
that specializes in the acquisition and investment management of fancy colored diamonds, particularly pink diamonds.
The scarcity and rareness of these
fancy colored diamonds makes them more precious and sought-after than their
less illustrious white diamond counterparts.
“For every 10,000 white diamonds
mined only one natural colored diamond will be found,” notes Paragon International Wealth
Management. “This makes natural colored diamonds extremely rare and ideal for
investment purposes.”
When you consider that only one
fancy blue diamond is mined each year, and there are only 20 to 30 fancy reds
known to exist, it is easy to understand why fancy colored diamonds are such a
hot commodity.
This will be further compounded if
the famous Argyle diamond mine, located in East Kimberley, Australia, closes in
the next 24 months. The Argyle mine is the only known substantial source of
pink diamonds, responsible for roughly 90 to 95 percent of the
global supply. Due to a rapid depletion in supply and escalating mining
costs, the Argyle mine is expected to close in 2018, making the rare pink
diamonds that have been mined there even more precious.
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