A fancy 8.41 carat, pear-shaped, flawless pink diamond sold for a record $17.8 million in Hong Kong this week, over $3m more than what Sotheby’s was expecting to fetch, setting a world auction record on a per-carat basis for this kind of gems.
The auction house did not reveal the buyer’s identity, but said than 200 people attended the bidding at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Center in Wan Chai.
Internally flawless clarity is extremely rare in pink diamonds, and the auction house said this, in combination with its “fancy vivid” colour grading, made the stone “amongst the rarest and most desirable of coloured diamonds ever seen at auction”.
Pink diamonds are rare, and only one in 10,000 of mined diamonds qualifies as the sought-after “fancy” or “intense” grade, according to GIA, the jewels institute.
Coloured diamonds shortage has helped push diamond prices up, to the point that these rocks are now the world’s most expensive stones. A 14.82-carat orange diamond sold for $36 million at Christie’s International in Geneva in November, setting a record $2.4 million a carat. The same month, Sotheby’s sold the Pink Dream, a 59.6-carat pink stone, for $83 million.
5 Comments
Bolokang Pema
Where was this incredible gem mined?
mokhali chopho
where does this beauty come from?
Keith
Mined in which country?
Eric Kinyua
Pink diamonds must be very rare. Where are they commonly mined?
Jane E Williams
These pink diamonds seem to keep on appreciating in value. Your more recent article about pink diamonds selling for a new world record of US$581k / carat boggles the mind as to how far pink diamonds could appreciate in price.