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$ 64b Diamond Industry World of Opportunities

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Title: $ 64b Diamond Industry World of Opportunities


1
64b Diamond Industry World of Opportunities
  • Dr Rajesh Khajuria, Director
  • TEAMPro Limited
  • London (UK) / Vadodara (India)
  • January 3, 2006

2
Can You Make Diamonds? Yes
  • Put pure carbon under enough heat and pressure -
    say, 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit and 50,000
    atmospheres - and it will crystallize into the
    hardest material known. Those were the conditions
    that first forged diamonds deep in Earth's mantle
    3.3 billion years ago.
  • http//www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.09/diamond.h
    tml

3
Part I Industry Growth
4
For 1,000 years, starting in 4th century BCE,
India was only source of diamonds
Source Emporia State University, USA
5
IT or Diamond Revolution?
  • Indias diamond industry handles 80 per cent of
    the global polished diamond market, and earned 8
    billion last year (compared to softwares 10
    billion).
  • Someone writes 92/100 diamonds are processed in
    India.
  • So why do we hear so much about IT and so little
    about the diamond business?
  • What took the Hasidim centuries to accomplish was
    overturned by the Jains in only two decades. They
    did so using tactics that the software industry
    replicated some years later. (Source Times of
    India).

6
Outsourcing Diamonds first
  • Next, they outsourced the finishing jobs to
    India (where incidentally, the diamond industry
    employs more people than the IT industry), while
    working their way up the value chain
  • The remarkable thing is, like with the software
    industry, India does not produce much original or
    branded diamond products

7
  • Diamond's origin may have finally been revealed
    in the twentieth century, but an appreciation of
    its beauty has been known since its discovery in
    India, prior to 400 (Harlow, 1998, p. 118).
  • Historically, diamond has been referred to as the
    essence of purity and invincibility, a symbol of
    royalty, and token of everlasting love. Diamond
    is the birthstone for April.

8
Fashion of Industrial Product?
  • Today, 75-80 of the world's natural diamonds are
    used for industrial purposes
  • And 20-25 for gemstones,
  • which are further used in Jewellery making.

9
South Africa w/w/o Diamonds
10
SA Ocean gt diamonds / Land
  • Over the past 100 million years up to 1,400
    meters have been eroded from the land's surface,
    releasing billions of carats of diamonds on a
    trip to the sea. An estimate of diamonds eroded
    from the Kimberley mine -- the "Big Hole" --
    alone is 500,000 carats. The rivers carried most
    of the eroded diamonds to the Atlantic Ocean.
  • Because powerful ocean waves break the poorer
    quality diamonds, 90-95 percent of marine
    diamonds are of gem quality.

11
80 find Industrial Use
  • 80 of the diamonds mined annually are used in
    industry
  • 4 times that production is grown synthetically
    for industry - that's a total of over 500 million
    carats or 100 metric tons.
  • Diamond is a fundamental industrial material that
    affects our daily lives.

12
Venice to Paris and Antwerp
  • Diamonds begin appearing in European regalia and
    jewellery in the 13th and 14th centuries.
  • The early diamond trading capital was Venice,
    where diamond cutting probably originated
    sometime after 1330.
  • By the late 14th century, the diamond trade route
    went to Bruges and Paris, and later to Antwerp.

13
Goa as 1st Trading Centre
  • By 1499, the Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama
    discovered the sea route to the Orient around the
    Cape of Good Hope, providing Europeans an end-run
    around the Arabic impediment to the trade of
    diamonds coming from India.
  • Goa, on India's Malabar Coast, was set up as the
    Portuguese trading centre, and a diamond route
    developed from Goa to Lisbon to Antwerp.

14
Koh-i-Noor in London Museum
  • Mogul rule of India (1526--1857), when diamond
    production increased, is notable for the creation
    of lavish objects like the Peacock Throne of Shah
    Jahan (1592--1666), which may have held the
    Koh-i-Noor diamond as a dangling bauble always in
    view of the shah's eyes.
  • Many of the great riches of Persia were obtained
    by Nadir Shah when he sacked Delhi in 1739,
    taking the jewels and Peacock Throne back to
    Teheran, where most of the looted objects reside
    today among the Iranian Crown Jewels.
  • Sadly, the Peacock Throne was apparently
    destroyed soon after Nadir Shah's death.

15
Ukraine
  • KIEV - Ukraine announced the discovery of a large
    diamond field in the centre of the country.
  • A statement from the president's office quoting
    Ecology and Natural Resources Minister Pavlo
    Igantenko said the quality of the diamonds found
    in the Kirovograd region matched those produced
    by world leaders South Africa and Russia.
  • Ukraine has a thriving industry in cutting small
    and medium-size diamonds.
  • Source newsdesk_at_afxnews.com

16
Top 7 Diamond Countries
  • The top seven producing countries, that account
    for 80 percent of the world's rough diamond
    supply, are Australia, Botswana, Zaire, South
    Africa, Russia, Angola, and Namibia.
  • http//www.emporia.edu/earthsci/amber/go340/diamon
    d.htm

17
Diamond India to Global base
  • Extensive mining of diamonds shifted from
  • India (17th century),
  • to Brazil (18th century),
  • to the African continent (19th century), and
    finally
  • Australia and Canada (20th century).
  • Today diamonds are mined in some 25 countries on
    every continent but Europe and Antarctica.

18
Global Diamond Production
19
Diamond Production
  • India's maximum production, perhaps 50,000 to
    100,000 carats annually in the 16th century, is
    very small by modern standards.
  • Brazil and Venezuela are barely discernible
    compared to South African production following
    discoveries in 1867.
  • For the most part, except for major wars and
    economic recessions, diamond production has been
    steadily increasing, with non-African sources
    growing in relative proportion.

20
Diamond Dominant Countries
  • Major production is now dominated by Australia,
    Botswana, Russia, and Congo Republic (Zaire),
  • but South Africa is still a major producer, in
    both volume and value.

21
Sorting
22
Sorting
  • There are two aspects of moving diamonds from
    mine to dealer.
  • The first is the fairly straightforward but
    important task of separating diamonds into
    gem-quality, near gem-quality, and
    industrial-grade diamonds.
  • The second is the more intriguing aspect the
    primary diamond marketing, which has been and
    still is largely controlled by De Beers
    Consolidated Mines, Ltd. through its majority
    control of Central Selling Organization (CSO).

23
Sorting
  • The CSO sells a large percentage of mine
    production to diamond dealers
  • independent mines sell by closed bids and through
    private transactions.
  • Diamonds are grouped into "sizes"
  • -- more than one carat
  • "smalls" -- between 1 carat and 1/10th carat
  • and "sand," -- less than 1/10th carat,
  • with some leeway for market pressures.

24
Sorting
  • Diamonds larger than about 15 carats are handled
    individually.
  • Shape groups comprise "stones," "shapes,"
    "cleavages," "macles," and "flats," describing
    characteristics familiar to the market.
  • The ultimate purpose of sorting is to estimate an
    asking price for the rough diamonds.

25
Diamond Pricing
  • After great swings in diamond prices, the Diamond
    Trading Corporation (DTC) was set up by De Beers
    in 1934 to handle the actual sales of diamonds.
  • The DTC and the Diamond Producers' Association
    (the mine operators) form the nucleus of the
    Central Selling Organization.
  • The CSO stabilizes prices in hard times and
    raises them in accord with inflation and demand
    during good times.

26
Diamond Pricing
  • It needs considerable wealth and stockpiles of
    diamonds to maintain this position, but this
    "single channel marketing" system has been an
    effective cartel.
  • In the United States cartels are illegal, so De
    Beers cannot operate here. However, the company's
    interests are represented by a public relations
    office, the Diamond Information Center, and
    indirectly by the diamond dealers and jewellers
    who sell gems.

27
South Africa Story
28
South Africa Story
  • The story of diamonds in South Africa begins
    between December 1866 and February 1867, when
    15-year-old Erasmus Jacobs found a transparent
    stone on his father's farm, on the south bank of
    the Orange River. Over the next 15 years, South
    Africa yielded more diamonds than India had in
    over 2,000 years.

29
South Africa Story
  • In the 1870s and 1880s Kimberley, encompassing
    the mines that produced 95 of the world's
    diamonds, was home to great wealth and fierce
    rivalries, most notably that between Rhodes and
    Barnato, English immigrants who consolidated
    early 31-foot-square prospects into ever larger
    holdings and mining companies.

30
South Africa Story
  • In 1888, Rhodes prevailed and merged the holdings
    of both men into De Beers Consolidated Mines
    Ltd., a company that is still synonymous with
    diamonds.
  • Today South Africa is third in production in
    terms of value and is likely to stay that way for
    the foreseeable future.

31
AfricaThe Jwaneng mine, in
Botswana
32
Africa - Botswana
  • The Jwaneng mine, in Botswana, is the most
    valuable diamond mine in the world.
  • Its 1995 production of about 10.5 million carats
    had a value of about 1.2 billion.

33
Africa
  • Africa is the richest continent for diamond
    mining, accounting for roughly 49 of world
    production.
  • The major sources are in the south with lesser
    concentrations in the west-central part of the
    continent.
  • The major producing countries are Congo Republic
    (Zaire), Botswana, South Africa, Angola, Namibia,
    Ghana, Central African Republic, Guinea, Sierra
    Leone, and Zimbabwe.

34
Africa - Congo
  • Congo Republic (Zaire) With 18 of world
    production, this is the second largest producer
    of diamonds by weight (20 million carats in 1995)
    after Australia. Only 6 is of high gem quality
    another 40 consists of small stones, called
    near-gem, that are cut in India. Mbuji-Mayi is
    one of the world's most prolific mines. In recent
    years production has been about 5 million carats
    per year.

35
Other African Share
  • Other significant African producers and their
    percentage of world production in 1996
  • Angola 1.8
  • Ghana 0.7
  • Central African Republic 0.6
  • Guinea 0.5
  • Sierra Leone 0.3
  • Zimbabwe 0.2

36
China Threat
  • "If there is any place in the world where we can
    speak optimistically about the diamond industry,
    it is China," said Shmuel Schnitzer, president of
    the World Federation of Diamond Bourses.
  • http//www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2003-11/19/con
    tent_282793.htm

37
Diamond industry sparkles in China?
  • According to Guo Zhiyue, chairman of the China
    Diamond Manufacturers' Association, over 20,000
    workers in China manufacture 3 million karats of
    diamonds every year, making it the second biggest
    diamond manufacturing centre in the world, next
    to India.
  • (2003-11-19, China Daily)
  • However, most diamonds processed in China are
    small and sold cheaply, meaning it is less
    profitable than processing the bigger gems.

38
Diamond industry sparkles in China?
  • In terms of the revenue gained from diamond
    manufacturing, China still lags behind India,
    Israel, South Africa and Belgium.
  • Schnitzer estimated China will become the second
    largest diamond manufacturing centre measured in
    US dollars in five years.
  • Shanghai is the fourth city in the world to be
    both home to a diamond bourse and manufacturing
    base, together with Antwerp in Belgium, Bangkok
    in Thailand and Israel's Tel Aviv.

39
Diamond industry sparkles in China?
  • Trade on the three-year-old Shanghai Diamond
    Exchange Co Ltd (SDE) received a boost last year
    when the government announced a substantial tax
    cut within the exchange.
  • The trade volume has amounted to US370,000 since
    June (2003), according to Kang Huijun, chairman
    of the board of SDE.
  • He said the SDE aims to achieve a trade volume of
    up to US5 billion by 2010 and became a major
    trading centre in Asia by 2015.

40
Diamond industry sparkles in India
  • The diamond market in India is now estimated to
    be 1.4bn or Rs 6,600 Crore annually and is
    expected to top Rs 7,500 Crore next year.
  • India has emerged as the fastest growing market
    in terms of consumption.
  • However, in terms of value, US still leads the
    pack with a 52 market share, followed by Japan.
  • India and the gulf region approximately consume
    the same quantity of diamonds.
  • http//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/13
    44370.cms

41
Part II Jewellery and Branded Diamonds
42
Export of Gold Jewellery
  • Indias export has increased from Rs 5,000 Crore
    in Y 2000 to Rs 17,000 Crore in 2005 (USD 1.1b to
    3.8b).
  • The fastest growing export segment in Gems and
    Jewellery industry.
  • http//www.iijs.org/gjepc/gjepc.aspx?inclpageUinf
    o_St_Statisticssection_id6/

43
Indias Gold Jewellery ExportMajor Destinations
in 2004-05
Rs Cr USD Mil.
USA 6,063.07 1,348.7
UAE 8,773.27 1,956.19
UK 700.71 155.80
Singapore 570.07 127.22
Total India 17,112.00 3,812.88
44
Indias Precious Metals Jewellery Export
Destinations in 2004-05
Rs Cr USD Mil.
USA 317.65 70.77
Italy 36.65 8.18
UAE 11.02 2.46
UK 43.83 9.75
Total India 588.56 131.19
45
Retail Malls in India
  • This is Vijay Shah's temporary abode for his stay
    in Delhi. The Antwerp-based diamond giant,
    chairman of the 400 million Vijay Diamond Group,
    is in town to launch Signet, his company's first
    retail store in November 2004.
  • Mumbai-based DiA boutique is owned by Devaunshi
    Mehta, whose family have been DTC sight holders
    (under the company Mohanlal Raichand Sons) for
    over half a century.

46
Retail Malls in India
  • Vijay Jain, CEO, Orra says Orra comes from Rosy
    Blue, one of the biggest diamond companies in the
    business, worth approximately 1.5 billion and
    present in 15 countries.
  • The trend globally is pointing towards a movement
    away from cloak-and-dagger secrecy in the diamond
    industry.
  • Source The Economic Times

47
Reducing Concentration
  • De Beers, from owning 80 per cent of the
    production of diamonds globally, has now reached
    a plateau of about 60 per cent, thanks to mines
    found in Russia and Australia, far from Africa
    and De Beers' control.
  • Diamond industry is getting under better control
    of Non-De Beer People.

48
Reducing Taxes, Attracting FDI
  • GoM (Group of Ministers) of India is meeting on
    4th January 2006 to discuss replacing income
    based tax to turnover based tax like the world
    over in Diamond industry.
  • If done, this will attract more FDI than ever
    before in Diamond Industry in India.

49
Part III Strategic Options?
  • Management of Growth

50
Strategic Options to You
  • Set up processing centres in China / x place?
  • Cheaper cost, Closer to market, Needs more
    security
  • Buy Diamond Mines or Partnerships in Non-DB
    countries?
  • Up your value chain?
  • Diamond Processing to Branding
  • Diamonds to Jewellery
  • Spread geographically to UK, France, Germany,
    USA, UAE ?

51
Strategic Options to You
  • Whole range of Marketing issues?
  • Branding, Advertising, Sales and Distribution.
  • Finance Issue?
  • Fund Raising Globally in multi-currency
  • Taking advantage of London as the largest
    Financial Centre of the world
  • Financial Management

52
Can TEAM Help?
  • Conducting Market Research
  • Devising Growth Strategies
  • Implementation Advise
  • Fund-raising from India, UK etc based on Project
    Viability studies
  • Management
  • 100 Confidentiality Assured.

53
Thank You!
  • Dr Rajesh Khajuria, Director
  • MBA (Finance), PhD (Management), CMC, FIMC, MIoD
    (London)
  • TEAMPro Limited
  • London (UK) / Vadodara (India)
  • rajesh_at_teampro.org
  • www.TeamPro.org
  • India M 94260 75402, T. 0265-2 750 752
  • London T 44-20-8866 4345 (Sunil Vaghani)
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