Jasmine Birtles
Your money-making expert. Financial journalist, TV and radio personality.
Investing in diamonds can be a great way to make money and wear your investment at the same time! As with investing in gold jewellery, investing in diamonds is a win-win, so long as you’re careful to protect your investments when you’re wearing and storing them.
Diamonds can be a great alternative investment. In fact, recently diamonds have quietly been rising in price faster than most traditional investments.
Quite a lot. In fact…
Remember, there are no guarantees when it comes to investing, but at the moment the diamonds market outlook is very positive. There’s increasing demand around the world together with a lack of new discoveries which is limiting the supply. It’s likely that future demand for diamonds won’t be matched by supply so prices are predicted to go up.
London diamond dealer Vashi Dominguez of Vashi.com says: “There are several reasons why diamonds make a good investment. For a start, they are more likely to increase in value even in times of deflation. While many segments of the marketplace may start to lose money, diamonds will typically retain their value and continue to increase. In particular large diamonds provide consistent returns and have proven resilient in a recession.”
He says that the last ten years have seen more demand for diamonds than ever and that the next decade is likely to be the most positive in history for diamond prices.
You can buy and sell actual diamonds or you can invest in diamond mines.
Here are the main ways:
Find out 5 easy ways to invest in gold here.
This is the probably the most fun way to invest in diamonds! Imagine – you’re wearing something you love and it’s going up in value. If you’re not wedded to them, you can wear them for a few years and then sell them and buy better ones… and so on, rather like trading up with property.
Celebrities and wealthy socialites all wear diamonds as a symbol of status and wealth. Diamond jewellers often provide diamond-studded jewellery to celebrities when they attend popular events such as the Oscars.
According to Vashi Dominguez, it’s best to spend at least £5,000 on good diamonds to wear and to keep them for around five years. A good dealer will also let you know when other diamonds are on the market which could rise in price quicker than your current ones. That way you can trade in diamonds you currently own for better investments at any time.
It goes without saying that you should buy diamonds, and settings, that you love so that you (or your partner) really enjoy wearing them either as earrings, bracelets, rings, or necklaces.
Keep your diamonds safe when you’re not wearing them. Some people store them in a safe at home and others in a bank safe, although that’s harder to use and will cost you a monthly fee. You should also make sure that they’re mentioned on your home insurance.
Diamond trading is an unregulated market and the price of cut diamonds is still tightly controlled by De Beers, the most famous diamond company in the world, which invites buyers for the jewellery trade to make sealed bids for parcels of gemstones.
However, you can buy diamonds and have them stored with a diamond dealer like Vashi.com. They’ll help you buy the right ones and then store them for you in their vaults until you want to sell them and buy different ones. They can also advise you on which ones to buy and when.
It’s far too easy to get the wrong diamonds, so any amateur investor should go to a reputable diamond merchant to buy ethical and genuine ones.
“You need to go to a reputable diamond dealer in order to have a written guarantee that the diamonds have come from an ethical source,” says Dominguez. Normal jewellers don’t generally know where their diamonds have come from, so you need to be sure that you have a genuine, quality diamond that hasn’t been mined by a company that’ll use the money to fund wars and terrorism. To do this, go to a proper dealer in London – usually found in Hatton Garden – or one of the main cities in the UK, like Marlow’s in Birmingham.
Dominguez also suggests that you buy at least three or four-carat diamonds as they’re going up in price by around 3% a month.
Trends in diamonds vary so if you buy a type or cut that’s popular now, in two or three years you could find that another shape is more fashionable, and therefore going up in price, so you can sell your current ones and buy new through your dealer.
The majority of diamonds – over 80% in fact – are cut in the ’round brilliant’ shape. This tends to be the most popular for jewellery. Other popular cuts include the ‘Princess’ and ‘Marquise’ shapes.
Colour matters, too. White diamonds are always going to hold their value, but coloured diamonds like blue, pink, and yellow ones are growing in popularity. Remember: the more demand for a limited supply, the higher a price you can command! Coloured diamonds grew an average of 154.7% between 2006 and 2014, compared to the average growth of white diamonds of around 60% in the same period.
However, classic cuts and colours will always stand the test of time compared to fashion trends – so if you want a long-term investment, opt for the classics.
Investing in individual companies is always risky so you really need to do a lot of research, not only into the companies themselves but also in the sector generally. Before you put any money into any of these companies, make sure you know the history of them, how they’ve performed generally, how the mining sector – and particularly the diamond-mining sector – has performed and what the possibilities are for the future.
Reputable companies to consider include:
• Anglo American own about 85% of De Beers which is one of the biggest diamond companies in the world.
• Petra Diamonds is on the London Stock Exchange and has interests in diamond mining.
• Gem Diamonds is another one quoted on the LSE.
If you do decide to invest in a mining company, try to go for one of the big ones that has a few different mines. The ones that only have a single mine can be a bit precarious as if that mine suddenly goes wrong (maybe there’s a local war or there’s an accident) then their income will totally drop.
Not sure diamonds are the way to go for your investment plans? Not to worry! Check out our other investment guides to find the best solution for your financial circumstances.
*This is not financial or investment advice. Remember to do your own research and speak to a professional advisor before parting with any money.
Intriguing! Will look further into this.
am a partner in a diamond mine in Angola. we have done all the necessary work . We want to start production now. We are looking for people to invest in the mine.
What are you looking for investing?
Yes, but it seems to be so difficult to tell which are from conflict zones and which aren’t right now. I would like to see more regulation of this somehow.
Hi Jasmine, very good point about avoiding blood diamonds. In the future this will become more and more important and diamonds which cannot be proven to be conflict free may become very difficult to sell.