Rap Net to vote on providing lab-grown diamond services

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RapNet to vote on providing lab-grown diamond services
Winter 2013 visit to the Diamond Trading Company (DTC Botswana) in Gaborone. Visiting the diamond sorting and valuing room, where diamonds from all over Botswana's mines, as well as De Beers Canadian mines are aggregated, for later sale to sightholders. A DTC Botswana rough grader examines parcels of diamonds ahead of a diamond "sight."

RapNet, the world’s largest diamond trading network with daily listings of over $7.4 billion, will be voting on whether it should provide diamond listing and pricing services for synthetic diamonds.

Voting will be limited to registered RapNet members who log in to RapNet.com and will take place from Sunday May 26 through Friday May 31, 2019.

The results of the vote will be announced at the Rapaport Breakfast on Sunday June 2, 2019, at the JCK jewellery show in Las Vegas, Nevada. The keynote address at the breakfast entitled ‘Synthetic Ethics’ will be presented by Martin Rapaport.

The issue of synthetic diamonds is hotly debated in the diamond and jewellery trade. Recent decisions by the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) have removed the word natural from the definition of a diamond. The FTC believes that diamonds need not be natural to be described as diamonds, although they require disclosure when a diamond is “man-made” or “laboratory-created.”

The vote will provide RapNet and the jewellery industry with important input as to the role of synthetic diamonds in the diamond trade. The final decision regarding the matter will be made by the RapNet management team.

“Synthetic diamonds present significant challenges and opportunities to the diamond trade. The role of natural diamonds is threatened as synthetic diamonds offer consumers lower prices and provide retailers with higher profit margins. The problem with synthetic diamonds is that they are not a store of value as they have no natural scarcity and can be manufactured with unlimited supply,” says the Rapaport Group’s chairman.

He adds: “Their prices are expected to decline over the long term as their cost of manufacturing falls. The diamond trade must decide if they want to trade in long-term integrity for short-term profits.”

News Source : professionaljeweller

Disclaimer: This information has been collected through secondary research and TJM Media Pvt Ltd. is not responsible for any errors in the same.