TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Romancing the stone: Louis Vuitton shows off huge rough diamond

Katia Dolmadjian (Agence France-Presse)
Paris, France
Wed, January 22, 2020

Share This Article

Change Size

Romancing the stone: Louis Vuitton shows off huge rough diamond This picture taken on January 21, 2020, shows the second world biggest rough diamond named 'Sewelo' displayed at place Vendome's Louis Vuitton luxury shop in Paris. (AFP/Stephane de Sakutin)

T

he biggest rough diamond discovered in over a century was shown to private clients Tuesday by French luxury handbag-maker Louis Vuitton, which acquired the 1,758-carat gem to make a big splash in the high-end jewelry market.

The stone named "Sewelo", meaning "rare find" in the tswana tongue of Botswana where it was discovered, is the size of a tennis ball.

It is the second-biggest diamond ever found, after the 3,100-carat "Cullinan" mined in neighboring South Africa in 1905, which went on to adorn Britain's crown jewels.

Canadian mining company Lucara Diamond, which recovered the stone, last week announced a deal with Louis Vuitton and the Antwerp-based diamond manufacturer HB Company to have it carved up and polished. 

Louis Vuitton, part of the LVMH luxury conglomerate, created surprise in the jewelry sector by pipping high-end houses such as Cartier and Graff to acquire the bragging rights to what could be the diamond deal of the century.

It comes after LVMH successfully wooed New York jewelry house Tiffany, agreeing to fork out $16.2 billion (14.6 billion euros) for the fabled maker of wedding rings and diamonds that come in blue boxes.

"It's the biggest potential we have right now," Louis Vuitton chief executive Michael Burke told the Financial Times recently of the company's gem business.

By showing clients the rough diamond, LVMH also aims to set itself apart in the rarefied world of high jewelry, which is centered on Paris's ritzy Place Vendome.

"No jeweler has done that (show the rough stone) — that is not the way high-end jewelry functions, it does not show what happens behind the scenes," Burke told the FT, adding that Louis Vuitton's goal was to be "utterly transparent in what mine it came from and associating the final client in the creation of the final stone".

While its has a glittering destiny, "Sewelo" currently resembles a lump of coal, still coated in the black carbon in which it was mined.

Lucara, which said it will receive 50 percent of the proceeds of the resulting diamonds with a further five percent going towards community projects in Botswana, said the "full potential of this special stone" would be revealed only when polished.

Louis Vuitton has not said how much it paid for the stone nor how much it could eventually be worth.

Read also: Louis Vuitton owner bid $14.5 billion for Tiffany

Buffing its image

Raluca Anghel, head of external affairs of the global Diamond Producers Association, said that experts who enjoyed a close look believed it to have "true potential".

"You can already imagine everything you can create from this unique diamond," she said.

For Arnaud Cadart, portfolio manager at the French asset management firm Flornoy & Associes, the acquisition allows Louis Vuitton to "boost its aura and position itself in an increasingly high-end market by seeking out very big clients for exclusive products."

Louis Vuitton made its first foray into the world of ultra-luxury jewels a decade ago, seeking to imbue the brand with a touch of extra glamour and tap into possible cross-selling -- handbag-plus-jewels -- opportunities.

In 2012, it joined the creme de la creme of high jewelry, including Van Cleef & Arpels, Cartier and Boucheron, by opening a store on Place Vendome.

After the Paris showing, the "Sewelo" will be taken on a tour of prospective foreign clients.

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.