Sales from Africa-focused Gem Diamonds’ (LON:GEMD) iconic Letšeng mine increased sharply in the third quarter as improved demand for high-value rough precious rocks boosted prices, the company said Tuesday.
The Lesotho-based mine’s sales jumped by 19% year on year to $48.1 million in the three months to September 30, Gem Diamonds said. While sales volume dropped by 3% to 25,909 carats, average price rose 23% to $1,858.
The miner recovered 30,774 carats during the quarter, up 23% from the 24,999 carats in the second quarter. It achieved an average price of almost $2,400 per carat for the July sales, making it the highest reached for a tender since September 2015.
Chief executive Clifford Elphick said that together with demand for high-quality diamonds remaining firm, the company’s benefitted from a group-wide efficiency and cost reduction review. So far, Gem Diamonds has identified annual and once off cost savings of $20 million, which is an increase of $5 million over the figure announced at the time of its interim results.
During the period, Gem Diamonds sold a 7.87-carat pink diamond for $202,222 per carat, the second-highest average price in the Lesotho mine’s history. A 55.58-carat, white diamond went for $61,778 per carat, the highest average price for a white diamond from the mine this year, the company said. Other sales in the quarter included a 126-carat stone, which fetched $56,402 per carat.
The company also saw an increase in availability of high-end stones, with the Letšeng mine yielding six 100-carat-plus diamonds in the first nine months of the year, compared with just four in the whole of 2016. Total production from the mine jumped 26% to 30,774 carats.
Since acquiring Letšeng in 2006, Gem Diamonds has found four of the 20 largest white gem quality diamonds ever recovered, which makes the mine the world’s highest dollar per carat kimberlite diamond operation.
At an average elevation of 3,100 metres (10,000 feet) above sea level, Letšeng is also one of the world’s highest diamond mines.
Comments
Altaf
The 1100 carat (Lesli something) went without being sold for long time. I remember it was sold for 60mil+.
I reasoned that 100+ carats can be worn with pride and comfort by any one worth a billion dollars or less, while 1100 carats will be difficult to wear (I am talking about the biggest diamond coming out of it, may be 300-400 carats) and will be a display item in houses of super wealthy and that may be the reason (less buyers) it went unsold for so long. Initially the miner rejected a auction highest bid value. Finally they realized the practical problem and accepted a lesser value later.
Moral of the story : Big stones fetch big ‘per carat’ price but toooooooo big stones fetch ordinary value (less than 50K per carat)