The stone, of a “vivid pink” hue and considered near perfect, but not quite
flawless, triggered brisk bidding in Christie’s autumn sales of Asian and
Chinese art in Hong Kong.
The price smashed the previous record, set 15 years ago in Geneva for a
19.66-carat stone that sold for $7.4 million. The pink gem’s per-carat price
of $2.2 million was also the highest ever paid for any diamond at auction,
Christie’s said.
“No stone has ever been sold for $2 million a carat, we were used to ... a
million dollars a carat for coloured diamonds but never 2 million,” said
Francois Curiel, Christie’s Europe chairman. “This is an absolute record
that is not going to be broken for a while I believe.”
The stone, set in a so-called “cushion-cut” ring by famed jewellers
Graff Diamonds, was just a quarter the size of the Geneva stone and not quite
flawless but the stone’s “vivid pink” is considered near perfect. Curiel
described it as a “fabulous pink diamond, probably one of the rarest stones I’ve
ever seen”.
While the South African-mined diamond isn’t quite rated flawless given
minor blemishes, Christie’s said that these could be removed by minor
repolishing.
Christie’s has a track-record of putting rare polished stones up for sale
in Asia, given its confidence in the depth of the Asian market for the world’s
top gemstones and artwork.
Last May, before the financial crisis began to hurt the global auction
market, Christie’s sold a squash-ball-sized, 101.27-carat diamond in Hong
Kong for $6.2 million.
Despite this, some major gems have disappointed in Asia, including a
72.22-carat “D” flawless white diamond that failed to hit its reserve price
in a Sotheby’s Hong Kong sale last April, falling short of its $10-12 million
pre-sale estimate.
While the world’s most expensive jewel ever sold at auction is the “Wittelsbach”
blue diamond, a 17th-century deep greyish-blue stone that fetched $24 million
last year, top red and pink gemstones are also known for stratospheric
valuations.
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