Rapaport Press Release: Diamond Prices Firm Amid Market Optimism

Polished diamond prices rose in November amid steady demand and shortages of larger sizes. Dealers were busy filling US orders for retail jewelers as the holiday season got off to a strong start. The improving Chinese market helped buoy smaller certified goods.

The RapNet Diamond Index (RAPI) for 1-carat polished diamonds rose 0.9% during the month and was up 14% year on year as of December 1.

RapNet Diamond Index (RAPI)

November

YTD
Jan. 1 to Dec. 1

Y2Y
Dec. 1, 2020, to Dec. 1, 2021

RAPI 0.30 ct.

0.4%

-2.0%

-1.6%

RAPI 0.50 ct.

0.5%

-0.4%

0.4%

RAPI 1 ct.

0.9%

11.4%

14.0%

RAPI 3 ct.

4.8%

12.9%

15.8%

© Copyright 2021 by Rapaport USA Inc.

Jewelry outperformed most product categories at the start of the holiday period. Thanksgiving weekend sales were up 78% compared to last year, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse. Overall e-commerce sales slid 1.4%, reported Adobe, as many consumers started their holiday shopping earlier this year.

The strong retail performance lifted sentiment in the diamond trade. Dealers were looking for inventory to fill ongoing orders and also because they expect the positive momentum to continue into the first half of 2022. However, higher prices made it difficult for dealers to buy and restock at reasonable profit margins.

Polished inventory levels increased as Indian manufacturers shipped large volumes before the Diwali break. The country’s polished exports rose 45% year on year to $2.56 billion in October. While the number of diamonds on RapNet jumped sharply in recent months, the spike consisted mainly of 0.30- to 0.40-carat goods. 1-carat and larger are in short supply.

Rough trading remains robust. Manufacturers are raising production again after Diwali to provide goods for the first quarter, when jewelers typically replenish inventory they’ve sold during the holidays. Rough prices are firm; they have increased approximately 20% so far in 2021, according to Rapaport estimates.

The diamond market is optimistic for the next few months despite concerns about the Covid-19 Omicron variant and the effects of inflation on US consumer spending. The trade begins the final month of the year with the supply-demand dynamic working in its favor.