The largest white diamond ever to come to auction will hit the block at Christie’s in Geneva on May 11. The 228-carat, pear-shaped diamond carries a presale estimate of $20 million to $30 million. The stone, which is about the size of a chicken’s egg, was mined about 20 years ago in South Africa but is only now coming up for public sale.
“Right now there is a great appetite in the market for diamonds,” says Rahul Kadakia, the international head of jewelry at Christie’s. The firm also brokered the gem’s initial private sale to a collector, who held on to it for most of the past two decades. “With the market the way it is—in 2021 there was a huge resurgence both in the art market and the jewelry market—the second owner approached us and said, ‘How would you feel about marketing this for us at public auction?’”
Unsurprisingly, Kadakia felt just fine with an assignment to sell a record-breaking gem. “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” he says. “If, after the sale, you come up to me and say, ‘Can you find me another 230-carat diamond?’—well, I can’t.”
Investment Potential
Should the stone sell for its high estimate, it would immediately become one of the most expensive white diamonds in the world. Yet Kadakia says the estimate’s comparatively modest price per carat—just shy of $88,000—makes the gem an attractive investment. “It’s quite appealing to collectors from all areas of the market,” he says, “ranging from pure investors who just want to buy a big portable asset and put it away to someone who wants to buy it to enjoy it as a set piece of jewelry and, at the same time, put their money into something quite portable.”
Christie’s is eager to compare the stone’s estimate to white diamonds it’s sold previously, including a 102-carat stone that sold in 2013 for $26.7 million and an emerald and diamond de Grisogono necklace featuring a 163-carat centerpiece, which sold for $33.7 million in 2017. The former diamond’s price per carat was around $262,000; the latter’s was about $206,000.
Both of those diamonds were designated as “D” color, meaning they were truly colorless; this 228-carat diamond, in contrast, is graded G, meaning that it is “near colorless,” three steps below on the Gemological Institute of America’s color scale.
Kadakia acknowledges that this grade impacts the price, but says it should do nothing to alter its desirability. “So, with diamonds it’s the four Cs: cut, color, clarity, and carat weight,” he says. “And that determines the price for three-, five-, 10-, 50-carat stones, maybe even the 163-carat stone which we sold in 2017.”
But here, he argues, “you have a stone which weighs almost 230 carats. Is there really a price per carat, or are you looking differently at it, like a work of art?” He urges people to hold the stone in the palm of their hand. “It feels like $100 million.”
‘Nothing Is Impossible’
Diamond prices have risen precipitously in recent months. De Beers yanked prices up by nearly 10% at its sale in January, with cheaper diamonds jumping as much as 20%.
Kadakia anticipates strong interest from the Middle East and is accordingly commencing the diamond’s world tour in Dubai. After that, the stone will visit Taipei and New York, and then it goes to Switzerland for auction.