Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
International

Rare Blue Diamond Expected To Fetch Up To $55 Million In 2 Days Of Jewelry Auctions In Geneva

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2015 11:12 AM
    GENEVA — Two rare colored diamonds go under the auction hammer this week in Geneva, with one standout blue diamond discovered in a South African mine last year expected to fetch up to $55 million — which would set a world record for any gemstone.
     
    On Tuesday, Christie's starts off the two-day blitz of jewelry sales with an auction headlined by "The Pink," a 16.08-carat diamond billed as rare for pure colour. Its estimated pre-sale price is between 21 million and 27 million Swiss francs ($23-28 million).
     
    Sotheby's expects to fetch $35-$55 million a day later with the sale of the 12.03-carat Blue Moon Diamond, said to be among the largest known fancy vivid blue diamonds. The rare blue diamonds are formed when boron is mixed with carbon when the gem is created.
     
    At that top price, the Blue Moon — so-called in reference to its rarity, playing off the expression "once in a blue moon" — would eclipse the record for a diamond at auction: The Graff Pink sold for $46,158,674 at Sotheby's Geneva five years ago, the auction house said.
     
    The polished blue gem was cut from a 29.6-carat diamond discovered last year in South Africa's Cullinan mine, which also yielded the 530-carat Star of Africa blue diamond that's part of the British crown jewels and the Smithsonian Institution's "Blue Heart," discovered in 1908.
     
    David Bennett, chairman of Sotheby's international jewelry division, predicted the Blue Moon "will now take its place among the most famous gems in the world."
     
    The diamond market could use a boost.
     
    Spokeswoman Margaux Donckier of the Antwerp World Diamond Center said slower economic growth in China and elsewhere has softened the overall diamond market, but auctions of rare quality pieces was likely to defy market forces.
     
    "These are exceptional stones and will always be worth a lot of money," she said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    British-Indian Artist Anish Kapoor's 'Dirty' Sculpture At Versailles Vandalised Again

    British-Indian Artist Anish Kapoor's 'Dirty' Sculpture At Versailles Vandalised Again
    This is the second time the art creation, which the 61-year-old Indian-origin artist once described as "very sexual", has been vandalised.

    British-Indian Artist Anish Kapoor's 'Dirty' Sculpture At Versailles Vandalised Again

    New Polls Bring More Bad News For Hillary Clinton

    New Polls Bring More Bad News For Hillary Clinton
    Amid speculation that Joe Biden might enter the 2016 presidential race, the polls found that the vice president is more popular than Clinton - among both Democrats and the general electorate

    New Polls Bring More Bad News For Hillary Clinton

    Waiter Milan Dehal Wins $15,000 Compensation After Indian Hotelier Refused Him Proper Pay

    Waiter Milan Dehal Wins $15,000 Compensation After Indian Hotelier Refused Him Proper Pay
    The 29-year-old waiter had been fighting for almost 18 months to have AUS$1,640.06 ($1,137) of his pending salary paid back.

    Waiter Milan Dehal Wins $15,000 Compensation After Indian Hotelier Refused Him Proper Pay

    Indian-Origin Man Jailed For Stealing 61,000 Pounds From Employer In UK

    Indian-Origin Man Jailed For Stealing 61,000 Pounds From Employer In UK
     A court in Britain has sentenced an Indian-origin man to 18 months in prison after he was found guilt of stealing 61,000 pounds from his employer,

    Indian-Origin Man Jailed For Stealing 61,000 Pounds From Employer In UK

    Charity To Be Launched In Name Of Murdered Hotelier NRI Ranjit Singh Power

    The Ranjit Singh Power Foundation Trust will be launched on Monday in a ceremony at the Ramada Park Hall in Britain's Wolverhampton city to commemorate Power's 55th birthday

    Charity To Be Launched In Name Of Murdered Hotelier NRI Ranjit Singh Power

    Indian-Origin Physician Couple Convicted Of Health Care Fraud In US

    Indian-Origin Physician Couple Convicted Of Health Care Fraud In US
    Paramjit Singh Ajrawat, 60, and his wife Sukhveen Kaur Ajrawat, 57, who operated Washington Pain Management Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, were charged with engaging in a scheme to defraud federal health benefit programmes

    Indian-Origin Physician Couple Convicted Of Health Care Fraud In US