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‘Pink Star’ diamond set to fetch record price in Hong Kong

HONG KONG — A plum-sized pink diamond is expected to break the world record for a gemstone early next month when it goes under the hammer in Hong Kong, Sotheby’s auction house said on Wednesday (March 29).

A model posing with a 59.60-carat oval mixed-cut pink diamond during a Sotheby's media preview in Hong Kong on March 29, 2017. Photo: AFP

A model posing with a 59.60-carat oval mixed-cut pink diamond during a Sotheby's media preview in Hong Kong on March 29, 2017. Photo: AFP

HONG KONG — A plum-sized pink diamond is expected to break the world record for a gemstone early next month when it goes under the hammer in Hong Kong, Sotheby’s auction house said on Wednesday (March 29).

The 59.60-carat “Pink Star” is the largest in its class ever graded by the Gemological Institute of America (GIA). But Sotheby’s was been forced to buy back the flawless diamond after a previous buyer defaulted on what was then a record sale in 2013.

That sale in Geneva saw a New York-based diamond cutter secure the stone for US$83 million (S$115 million).

Sotheby’s is confident the “Pink Star” will again sell for a record price on April 4, somewhere above US$60 million.

“I think when it’s sold, it will be the new world record price anywhere in the world for a jewel at auction, and I think that’s quite remarkable,” its deputy chairman for Asia Quek Chin Yeow told AFP on Wednesday.

The sparkling oval-cut rock measures 2.69 by 2.06 centimetres and weighs 11.92 grammes.

Mr Quek said Hong Kong is the right place for the sale, with Asian buyers breaking records in other categories for diamond sales in the past few years.

A 12.03-carat “Blue Moon of Josephine” was bought for the then-record price of US$48 million in Geneva by Hong Kong property tycoon Joseph Lau in 2015, a day after he had spent US$28.5 million on a rare 16.08-carat pink diamond.

Mr Quek said there was still much interest in the “Pink Star” since the abortive sale in 2013.

“Four years is a good time period since the last time it sold in Geneva... there are a lot of new billionaires on the market,”

The Pink Star was discovered in a mine in Africa by De Beers in 1999. AFP

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