Verified Public Data · Every Figure Cited

The Gemstone Dashboard

Public-source market intelligence — coloured gemstones.
Market · Origin · Pricing · Treatment.
Data Quality Notice · Read First

Coloured-Gem Data Is Fragmented and Often Unauditable

Unlike diamonds — where De Beers, the Kimberley Process, USGS, and Rapaport publish independently verifiable data — the coloured-gemstone industry is structurally opaque. Gemfields is the only major publicly-listed pure-play miner; everything else is private, state-owned, or artisanal. The Kimberley Process does not cover coloured stones. There is no industry-standard price list. Paid market-report estimates for the same year vary by 2–10× depending on whether the analyst measures rough trade, wholesale polished, retail jewellery, or "all gem jewellery ex-diamond" — and these definitions are rarely stated clearly.

Every quantitative claim on this dashboard now carries a confidence rating, indicating how much you can trust the underlying source. Market values are also separated by definition (rough mine-gate · wholesale polished · retail jewellery · auction records · US import & consumption) rather than collapsed into a single "market size" figure, which would be misleading.

High — issuer filings, USGS, Kimberley Process Med — GIA, trade bodies (GJEPC, GIT, CBSL), major press Low — paid market-report estimates (Data Bridge, IMARC, Precedence et al.) Hyp — analyst hypothesis or forecast, not yet observed
I
Market at a Glance
Sources · USGS · GIA · Gemfields · Industry estimates
Section 01 / 07Last updated · Feb 2026
Rough coloured gem trade (mine-gate)
~$1.9bn2025eMed
Wholesale at mine-gate · Future Market Insights estimate · projected $5.7bn by 2035 at 11.3% CAGR.2
Coloured gem jewellery retail
$2–10bn2024eLow
Wide range across paid market reports — see methodology note below. Single-figure estimates should be treated with caution.12
Ruby + Sapphire + Emerald share
~58%est. by valueMed
The "Big Three" dominate value; semi-precious stones split the rest. GIA & industry estimate, no audited primary source.3
2025–2035 CAGR (rough trade)
~11%forecastHyp
Future Market Insights projection · rough trade only. Forecast not observed — actual growth highly dependent on China demand recovery and US import trajectory.2

US Gemstone Imports & Consumption — 2021–2025

USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries 2026 · Released Feb 2026 High

The freshest USGS data tells a structurally different story than this dashboard reported in earlier iterations. 2025 saw a dramatic reversal: US gemstone imports fell 44% year-on-year, and apparent consumption fell 47%. The earlier "▲136% 2020–2024" framing for coloured gem imports has been overtaken by the sharp 2025 contraction.30

Note: USGS reports total gemstones (diamond + coloured). Diamond accounted for ~79% of 2025 import value (down from the 2018–22 average of ~89%) — suggesting coloured stones held up relatively better than diamonds, but the overall market still contracted sharply.30

Year Imports for consumption ($M) Apparent consumption ($M) YoY change (imports)
2021 24,600 23,700 baseline
2022 28,700 26,900 ▲17%
2023 24,200 21,300 ▼16%
2024 19,600 17,600 ▼19%
2025e 11,000 9,300 ▼44%
Source: USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries 2026, Gemstones data sheet (released 6 February 2026).30 Figures are total gemstone trade (diamond + coloured). The 2025 figure is USGS's estimate, not yet finalised. The dramatic 2025 decline appears to reflect tariff-related front-loading of imports into 2022–2024, US consumer caution on discretionary luxury, and softer Asia-driven demand. This is the most important data correction since the previous version of this dashboard.

Coloured Gemstones vs Diamonds — Why It Matters

A structurally different market High

Coloured gemstones operate on fundamentally different structural foundations than diamonds. There is no equivalent of De Beers, no Kimberley Process, no Rapaport price list. Supply is dominated by artisanal and small-scale mining (~80% of global supply), with fewer than 10 commercially significant producers worldwide.3

Gemfields is the only major publicly-listed pure-play coloured gemstone miner; everything else is private, state-owned, or artisanal. Pricing is opaque — origin (Burmese vs Mozambican ruby), treatment (heated vs unheated), and certification (GIA, Gübelin, SSEF) drive price differentials of 2,000% or more for stones of identical apparent quality.5

This dashboard reports verified figures where available and labels estimates as estimates. Auction data from Sotheby's, Christie's, and Bonhams is the most reliable pricing benchmark; Gemfields filings the most reliable supply data; USGS the most reliable trade-flow data. Paid market-report figures for total market size are unreliable and should be read as order-of-magnitude estimates only.

Market Size Definitions — Why Single Figures Mislead

Distinct value layers · do not interchange High
Value definition Estimate Year Source Confidence
Rough coloured-gem trade (mine-gate, wholesale) ~$1.9bn 2025e Future Market Insights Med
Coloured gem retail jewellery (paid reports — wide range) $2.0–9.7bn 2024 RM, Dataintelo, MarketIntelo Low
"All gemstones" market (incl. diamond) — common confusion ~$36bn 2025 MarketDataForecast Low
US apparent gemstone consumption $9.3bn 2025e USGS MCS 2026 High
Per-carat auction records (e.g. Sunrise Ruby) $1.27M/ct 2015 Sotheby's Geneva High
Read this before comparing. Each row above measures something structurally different: rough mine-gate is what miners earn before cutting; retail is what jewellery sells at consumer level; auction records are headline trophy-stone prices for individual pieces. Paid market reports' "retail jewellery" estimates vary 5× across reputable firms — this dashboard previously used a $33bn figure that was likely an "all gemstones" number mislabelled as "coloured gem retail." We have removed that figure. The honest answer is: the coloured-gem retail jewellery market is somewhere between $2bn and $10bn globally, but no figure in that range has the methodological transparency to be cited as authoritative.
II
The Big Three
Ruby · Sapphire · Emerald — origin, value, hallmark
Section 02 / 07Last updated · Nov 2025

The Big Three in Detail

Origin defines price; treatment determines transparency
Ruby
Corundum · Red
Premier originMogok, Myanmar5
Modern volume leaderMozambique (Montepuez)7
Auction record$30.3M · Sunrise Ruby 25.59 ct (2015)8
Per-carat record$1,266,901/ct · Sunrise Ruby8
Hallmark colour"Pigeon's blood" — pure red, faint blue undertone5
Common treatmentHeat (standard); lead glass filling (controversial)9
Premium for unheated2–5× over heated equivalent9
Sapphire
Corundum · Blue (and other colours)
Premier origin (rarest)Kashmir, India5
Volume originsSri Lanka, Madagascar, Myanmar, Australia5
Auction record (total)$17.3M · Blue Belle of Asia 392.52 ct (2014)8
Per-carat record$243,703/ct · Jewel of Kashmir 27.68 ct (2015)8
Hallmark colourKashmir: velvety "cornflower blue"5
Common treatmentHeat (industry standard since 1970s)10
Colour rangeBlue, pink, yellow, padparadscha (pink-orange)10
Emerald
Beryl · Green
Premier origin (historic)Muzo, Colombia5
Modern volume leaderZambia (Kagem mine, Gemfields)7
Auction record$5.5M · Rockefeller Emerald (2017)8
Hallmark colourColombian: pure spring green, slight blue5
Common treatmentOiling (cedar oil) — fills natural fractures11
"Jardin"Emeralds typically have visible inclusions11
Premium for Colombian~30–60% over equivalent Zambian9

Major Coloured-Gem Mining Companies

Two listed pure-plays + two of the world's largest private emerald producers
Gemfields Group
LSE: GEM · JSE: GML · Founded 2008
Emerald · Zambia (Kagem 75%) · Ruby · Mozambique (Montepuez 75%)
Auction revenue 2024
$196Mtotal
Down from $242M (2023) — challenging year.7
Auction revenue 2025
$129Mtotal
▼ 34% YoY · Kagem paused Jan→May 2025 (Zambian export duty)7
Kagem cumulative
~$1.15bnsince '09
53 emerald auctions held since July 2009.12
G-Factor (Mozambique 2024)
24%of rev
Revenue paid to host gov in taxes/dividends.13
Fura Gems
TSXV: FURA · OTC: FUGMF · Founded Jan 2017
Only miner exploring all three Big Three categories · Emerald · Ruby · Sapphire
Coscuez Emerald Mine
76%interest
Boyacá, Colombia · acquired Oct 201716
Montepuez ruby licences
7licences
80% effective interest in 4 (4392L · 3868L · 3869L · 6811L), 100% in 5572L16
Queensland sapphire mines
2mines
Great Northern + Capricorn Sapphire · acquired 202016
Estrela de Fura
$35Mat auction
55.22 ct polished (from 101 ct rough) · Sotheby's NY June 2023 · most expensive ruby ever sold at auction17
Founder Dev Shetty (former Gemfields executive) · HQ Dubai (Fura Gems Inc. DMCC) · ~1,650 employees worldwide. First auctions: Colombian emerald April 2021, Mozambique ruby Sept 2021, Australian sapphire Nov 2021. 2021 production estimate: 5.5M ct Australian sapphires, 6M ct Mozambican rubies, 300,000 ct Colombian emeralds. Self-positions on transparency, ethical sourcing, blockchain provenance.16
June 2024 leadership change: Dev Shetty stepped down as CEO to pursue other opportunities. Board of directors assumed primary decision-making role pending new CEO. Senior leadership team continues daily operations in collaboration with the board.25
Ownership chain — verified. Fura was acquired and taken private by Lord of Seven Hills Holdings FZE ("L7H") — a Fujairah Free Zone Authority-registered UAE holding company — for ~$40.8M total equity value in October 2020. L7H built its stake from ~8.5% (pre-2019) → 39.2% (Oct 2019 placement at C$0.25/share) → 51.5% (mid-2020) → 100% (Oct 2020 buyout at C$0.15/share). L7H originally a marketing agent for high-grade manganese ore with a diversified investment portfolio. Per public filings, L7H is controlled jointly by Gagan Gupta (named "controller of L7H" in the 2019 Newswire disclosure) and Michael Kuan (Chairman of Kuan Capital, Shanghai). Gaurav Gupta sits on Fura's board as a director representing the controlling shareholder and has signing authority for L7H. Fortuna Holdings (fortunaholdings.net) is a Dubai-based, MAS-registered single-family office that appears to be a parallel/successor investment vehicle within the same family-office grouping.25
Grizzly Mining
Private · Founded 1997 · Kitwe, Zambia
Emerald · 100% owned flagship Grizzly Mine · Lufwanyama region · Copperbelt Province
Annual production
~60Mct/year
From 100% owned flagship mine · Lufwanyama, Zambia23
Lifetime production
170M+ct to date
Over 27 years of operation · founded 199723
Employees
~4,000jobs
Built clinic, three high schools, two primary schools in community23
Nov 2024 auction
$22.4Mrevenue
Medium-to-high grade emerald auction · Almas Tower Dubai23
Founder & Chairman Abdoulaye Ndiaye (the "Emerald King") — Senegalese-born, began trading emeralds in Lufwanyama in 1972, acquired the Grizzly mine in 1997. Now qualified gemologist. ~90% of revenue from high-quality emeralds, which constitute only a small fraction of physical output. Quarterly auctions held in-country and internationally (Dubai). Together with Gemfields' Kagem, makes Zambia the world's largest emerald producer by volume (overtaking Colombia). Zambian emeralds have a distinctive blue-grey cast and are typically harder and larger than other origins, requiring no enhancement.23
Belmont Emeralds
Private · Operational since 1978 · Itabira, Minas Gerais, Brazil
Emerald · Largest independent emerald miner in Brazil · Ribeiro family-owned
Annual rough production
250,000g/year
From 350,000 tonnes soil (1g per 280kg ore)24
Employees
250people
Largest independent emerald miner in Brazil24
Years operational
47since 1978
Discovered on Ribeiro family cattle ranch24
Rough cut at source
80%vertical
Cut at Belmont's Itabira sorting facility24
Director Marcelo Ribeiro (Ribeiro family). Operational since 1978 when emeralds were first discovered on the family's rural property. Mix of open-pit and underground mining (75m vertical shaft sunk 1998; 50% of production still open-cast). Optical sorting replaced hand-picking from 2004. "Only mine in the world that is able to sustainably increase production every year" per Ribeiro. Markets: US, Europe, Asia, Brazil. Brazilian emeralds known for blue-grey cast — typically harder and larger than other emeralds, requiring no enhancement. Strong mine-to-market provenance positioning. Celebrated 40th anniversary 2018; verified by GIA field-research visit April 2014.24
A note on private dominance. Gemfields (LSE/JSE listed) is the only major coloured-gem miner with continuous quarterly public reporting; Fura traded briefly as TSXV: FURA but is now effectively private. Grizzly Mining and Belmont Emeralds — together with Gemfields and Fura — represent four of the world's most significant coloured-gem miners by formal organisation. Yet only Gemfields publishes audited financial detail; the others release production estimates and auction figures voluntarily. The rest of global supply (Mogok rubies, Colombian Muzo emeralds, Sri Lankan sapphires, etc.) is dominated by artisanal and small-scale mining — making any "global production" figure for coloured gemstones unavoidably an estimate.

Where the Big Three Come From

Origin geography drives price
Stone Premier origin Volume leader Other meaningful sources Premier premium
Ruby Mogok, Myanmar Mozambique (Montepuez) Madagascar · Tanzania · Thailand · Sri Lanka14 2–5× for Mogok unheated9
Sapphire Kashmir (depleted ~1930s) Sri Lanka · Madagascar Myanmar · Australia · Thailand · Montana (US)14 5–20× for Kashmir8
Emerald Muzo & Chivor, Colombia Zambia (Kagem) Brazil · Ethiopia · Afghanistan · Russia14 ~30–60% for Colombian9
III
Supply Chain · Manufacturing & Cutting Centres
Where rough becomes finished gem · Thailand · India · Sri Lanka · Germany
Section 03 / 07Last updated · Feb 2025

The Coloured-Gem Midstream

Why cutting centres matter as much as mines

Unlike diamonds — where Surat dominates ~80%+ of global cutting in a single geographic concentration — the coloured-gem cutting industry is structurally fragmented across four specialised centres, each with deep historical, cultural, and technical specialism.26

Thailand (Bangkok/Chanthaburi) dominates ruby and sapphire treatment, cutting and trading — particularly the heat-treatment of corundum which transformed lower-grade material into premium product from the 1970s onward.26 India (Jaipur) dominates emerald cutting and small-stone calibrated coloured-gem manufacture.27 Sri Lanka (Ratnapura) retains the cutting of large, top-quality sapphires (where Bangkok specialises in smaller stones).28 Idar-Oberstein, Germany survives as the world's premier centre for high-end carving, fantasy cuts, and one-of-a-kind objets d'art — a niche but valuable corner of the trade.29

The midstream is where rough gemstones gain most of their value. A piece of rough corundum worth $100/ct uncut can become a $1,000+/ct heated, cut, certified stone — meaning cutting centres capture more value than mines in many cases.

The Four Major Cutting Centres

Specialism · scale · employment · global market share
Bangkok & Chanthaburi · Thailand
Ruby · sapphire · heat treatment hub
Industry employment~700,000+ people (GIT estimate)26
Chanthaburi share80%+ of internationally traded gemstones have undergone enhancement in Chanthaburi (GIT)26
Thailand export share80% of Thailand's coloured-gem exports cut/treated in Chanthaburi (Chanthaburi Gem & Jewelry Traders Association)26
SpecialismHeat treatment of corundum · cutting small to medium sapphires & rubies · world's largest coloured-stone trading hub26
Rough imports fromMozambique, Madagascar, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Tanzania, Myanmar, Colombia, Brazil, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Cambodia26
Trade convention"Bangkok handles much of world's rubies for treatment, cutting and polishing" — Philippe Ressigeac, GemCloud26
Jaipur · India
"Pink City" · world's leading emerald cutting centre
Coloured-stone cutting factories100+ formal factories plus huge artisan cottage industry (GIA Winter 2016 G&G)27
Tanzanite cutting shareJaipur cuts 90% of all tanzanites ≤1 gram (Nirmal Bardiya, RMC)27
India gemstone exports 2021-22$311.45M coloured gemstones (GJEPC)27
Stones processed300+ varieties of precious & semi-precious gemstones27
Sitapura SEZ Jaipur110.8 acres · 154 units · 11,217 employees27
Rough imports for emeraldPrimarily from Zambia (Gemfields/Grizzly), also Brazil (Bahia)27
India market projectionUSD $2,180M (2025) → $3,287M (2034) · 4.53% CAGR · emerald 34.7% share (IMARC Group)27
Ratnapura · Sri Lanka
"City of Gems" · large sapphires · padparadscha specialist
Annual export earningsUSD $400M+ · 0.45% of GDP (Ministry of Industries 2024)28
Total gem & jewellery trade~Rs.55bn (~USD $550M) annually at export and retail28
Manufacturing units~3,000 across the country28
Sapphire share of exports~85% · exports 75+ kinds of stones28
SpecialismLarger sapphires (over Bangkok), padparadscha, star sapphires, cat's eye chrysoberyl28
Trade policyExport of rough uncut stones prohibited — mandatory value-add cutting in country28
Notable find"Star of Adam" 1,404 ct blue star sapphire (2015) · valued $300M+28
Idar-Oberstein · Germany
500+ years · high-end carving · fantasy cuts
Historical peakLate 19th century: processed 80% of world's gemstones29
DeclineTwo world wars + Asian competition ended "second golden age" by mid-1940s29
Today's specialismHigh-end precious-stone cutting · cameos · intaglios · sculptures · objets d'art · custom orders29
Innovation legacyBernd Munsteiner's "Fantasy Cut" (1960s); Tom Munsteiner's 196.17-ct "Apollo" Paraiba — Guinness World Record largest cut Paraíba (2022)29
Lost segmentsAgate lapidary largely moved to China; quartz cutting moved to Jaipur29
Trade respect"Recut in Germany" / "Made in Germany" remain highly respected labels at top end29
Notable ateliersAtelier Munsteiner · C.F. Arnoldi (est. 1919) · Emil Weis · Henn29

Cutting Centre Comparison

Like-for-like positioning across the four centres
Centre Core specialism Employment Position in value chain
Bangkok / Chanthaburi Ruby & sapphire heat treatment + cutting ~700,000+ Largest coloured-stone hub by volume26
Jaipur Emerald cutting · calibrated stones · 300+ varieties 11,000+ in Sitapura SEZ alone Largest emerald cutting hub globally27
Ratnapura Large sapphires · padparadscha · star sapphires Tens of thousands across ~3,000 units Premium-quality sapphire finishing28
Idar-Oberstein High-end carving · fantasy cuts · objets d'art Small-scale ateliers · highly specialised Top-end fine-art & collector niche29
Trade flow synthesis. A typical "Mozambican ruby" journey: mined in Cabo Delgado (Gemfields/Fura) → sold at auction (Singapore/Dubai/Bangkok) → heated & cut in Chanthaburi → certified in Switzerland (Gübelin/SSEF) → set by maison in Geneva/Paris/Rome → retailed in Hong Kong, New York, or the Gulf. A "Zambian emerald" journey: mined at Kagem/Grizzly → auctioned Singapore/Dubai → cut in Jaipur → certified by GIA/Gübelin → set by Bulgari/Cartier → retailed globally. Four geographies, four specialisms, one continuous value chain.

February 2025 — India-Thailand Cooperation MOUs

Cutting-centre formalisation continues

At the Bangkok Gem and Jewelry Fair (February 2025), India and Thailand signed three Memorandums of Understanding promoting cooperation in the trade of coloured gemstones, silver jewellery, and gemstone standardisation:

  • Thai Silver Exporters Association ↔ SGJIA
  • Jewelers Association Jaipur ↔ Chanthaburi Gem & Jewelry Traders Association — formalising the Jaipur–Chanthaburi axis that already moves billions of dollars of stones bilaterally
  • GJEPC's IIGJ-RLC ↔ GIT Thailand — cooperation on gemstone standardisation and testing

These signal continued formal alignment between the world's two largest coloured-gem cutting jurisdictions, opening new bilateral trade corridors and shared standards work.27

IV
Stone Profiles · Beyond the Big Three
Specialist gems · Rising stars · Collector favourites
Section 04 / 07Last updated · Nov 2025

The Next Eight — Stones That Define the Rest of the Market

Each with distinct origin, value, and market story
Spinel
Spinel · Red & pink
OriginMogok (Myanmar), Tanzania (Mahenge)
Auction record$29,217/ct · Hope Spinel (2015)8
Hallmark"Hot pink" Mahenge — luminous neon
Trade noteHistorically mistaken for ruby; now collector favourite
Tanzanite
Zoisite · Blue-violet
OriginMerelani Hills, Tanzania (sole source globally)
Discovery1967 · marketed by Tiffany & Co.
HallmarkTrichroic: blue, violet, burgundy under light
ScarcitySingle ~10km² source · projected depletion in 20–30 yrs
Paraíba Tourmaline
Tourmaline · Neon blue-green
OriginParaíba (Brazil), Mozambique, Nigeria
Discovery1989, Brazil
HallmarkElectric "neon" blue (copper-bearing)
PriceBrazilian: $10,000–$50,000+/ct · world's most expensive tourmaline
Padparadscha
Corundum · Pink-orange sapphire
OriginSri Lanka (classic), Madagascar, Tanzania
Auction record$97,478/ct · 8.01 ct (Sotheby's 2017)8
Hallmark"Lotus flower" — pink fading to orange
RarityOne of rarest sapphire varieties
Jadeite
Pyroxene · Green
OriginMyanmar (Uru Valley — world's only commercial source)15
Hallmark"Imperial jade" — translucent emerald green
Auction record$27M · Hutton-Mdivani necklace (2014)
Cultural valueMost valuable stone in Chinese cultural tradition
Opal
Hydrated silica · Colour play
OriginAustralia (~95% of black opal), Ethiopia (Welo)
Hallmark"Play of colour" — internal spectral flashes
Top varietyBlack opal (Lightning Ridge, NSW): $10,000+/ct
Trade noteEthiopian Welo opals popularised 2010s — much cheaper
Aquamarine
Beryl · Pale blue
OriginBrazil (Minas Gerais), Pakistan, Madagascar, Mozambique
Hallmark"Santa Maria" deep blue — most prized colour
PriceFine: $300–1,000/ct · large clean stones common
Trade noteHeat-treated to remove green undertones
Amethyst
Quartz · Purple
OriginBrazil, Uruguay, Zambia, Russia (Siberian historic)
Hallmark"Siberian" deep purple with red flashes — premium
Price$10–100/ct typical · large clean stones widely available
Trade noteOnce "precious"; now affordable due to Brazilian abundance

The Treatment & Certification Question

What separates a fine stone from a great one

For coloured stones, treatment disclosure is the single largest pricing variable after origin. Heat treatment of ruby and sapphire is standard and widely accepted; lead-glass filling of low-grade ruby is widely disclosed but heavily discounted; oiling of emeralds is universally accepted; resin-filled emerald is materially less valuable.

Three labs dominate origin and treatment certification: GIA (Gemological Institute of America — broadest reach), Gübelin Gem Lab (Switzerland — premier reputation for ruby and sapphire origin), and SSEF (Swiss Gemmological Institute — coloured stone specialist). A high-value stone without one of these certificates typically trades at a meaningful discount.10

From January 2026, GIA expanded origin-determination services to include opal, peridot, and demantoid garnet — extending traceability into the wider coloured-stone market.6

V
Pricing & Treatment
Heat · Oil · Origin certification · Auction records
Section 05 / 07Last updated · May 2025

Why Treatment & Origin Define Price

Two stones of identical apparent quality can differ in price by 20×

Unlike diamonds — where the 4Cs (carat, clarity, colour, cut) drive ~80% of price — coloured gemstone valuation has three independent multipliers stacked on top of each other: origin, treatment status, and certification.

A 5-carat ruby with "Mogok unheated · Gübelin certificate" routinely sells for 5–10× the price of an apparently identical 5-carat ruby with "Mozambique heated · uncertificated." Same colour, same clarity, same cut. The certificate is the asset.9

Treatment Premiums & Discounts

Standard industry practice · Lotus Gemology · GIA · AGTA
Stone Treatment Trade status Price effect
Ruby Heat (only) Industry standard, disclosed Baseline9
Ruby Unheated Premium · highly sought after 2–5× premium9
Ruby Lead-glass filled ("composite") Disclosed but heavily discounted 10–30% of natural ruby price9
Sapphire Heat Industry standard since 1970s Baseline10
Sapphire Unheated, Kashmir origin Highest premium of any gemstone 5–20× premium8
Sapphire Beryllium-diffusion Heavily discounted, disclosed 25–40% of natural10
Emerald Cedar oil ("Insignificant" GIA grade) Premium · most natural-looking +20–40% over typical11
Emerald Cedar oil ("Moderate"/"Significant") Universal & accepted Baseline (most emeralds)11
Emerald Resin/epoxy fracture filling Disclosed, materially discounted 30–50% of natural-oiled11

The Three Major Certification Labs

GIA · Gübelin · SSEF — origin and treatment authority
GIA
Gemological Institute of America · Carlsbad CA
Founded1931
ReachBroadest globally · most certificates issued
Coloured stone scopeOrigin reports for ruby, sapphire, emerald, paraíba, alexandrite + (Jan 2026) opal, peridot, demantoid6
ReputationMost respected for diamond; coloured stone reach growing
Gübelin
Gübelin Gem Lab · Lucerne, Switzerland
Founded1923
SpecialismRuby and sapphire origin determination — premier worldwide
Trade weightA Gübelin "Kashmir sapphire" or "Mogok ruby" attestation is the gold standard at top auctions
Premium effectStones with Gübelin certificate command material premium vs uncertificated equivalent10
SSEF
Swiss Gemmological Institute · Basel
Founded1972
SpecialismColoured stones, pearls, advanced spectroscopy
Trade weightFrequently paired with Gübelin for highest-value stones
ReputationResearch-led · publishes treatment-detection methodology10
The trade convention. Top-tier auction lots typically carry certificates from at least two of these three labs — often all three. A stone without any of these certificates trades at a meaningful discount, regardless of apparent quality. For the highest-value stones (>$1M/ct), a Gübelin certificate alone is the de-facto requirement.

Coloured Gem Auction Records

Per-carat headline prices · the visible tip of the market
STONE · ORIGIN · YEAR RELATIVE VALUE USD / CARAT Sunrise Ruby 25.59 ct Burmese Sotheby's Geneva · 2015 $1,266,901 Estrela de Fura 55.22 ct Mozambique Sotheby's NY · 2023 ~$615,000 Jewel of Kashmir 27.68 ct Kashmir Sotheby's HK · 2015 $243,703 Padparadscha 8.01 ct Sri Lankan Sotheby's · 2017 $97,478 Hope Spinel 50.13 ct Mogok Bonhams · 2015 $29,217 $0 $250k $500k $750k $1M $1.27M Note: Sunrise Ruby (2015) remains the most expensive coloured gemstone ever sold by per-carat price. Estrela de Fura (2023) set the modern Mozambique record at $35M total auction price.
Auction records compiled from Lotus Gemology (June 2025 update) and Sotheby's/Christie's auction archives. Bars proportional to per-carat price; the Sunrise Ruby remains an outlier — its 2015 record has stood for over a decade.817
VI
Retailers · Luxury Houses
Where coloured gemstones are core, not accessory
Section 06 / 07Last updated · Feb 2026

Bulgari — The Coloured-Gemstone Maison

Indelibly linked to coloured stones since the 1950s

Bulgari (Bvlgari) pioneered the cabochon cut applied to coloured gemstones, the combination of precious with semi-precious stones, and the modern association of vivid colour with high jewellery. The maison's identity is built on emeralds, rubies, sapphires, tourmalines, and tanzanites — not on diamonds.18

Acquired by LVMH in 2011 for €4.3bn; today part of LVMH's Watches & Jewellery division (€10.58bn / $11.04bn in 2024). The Bulgari association with Elizabeth Taylor — particularly her Bulgari emeralds from Richard Burton during the 1963 filming of Cleopatra — remains a defining commercial asset of the house.19

Member of the Responsible Jewelry Council (RJC) since 2006; coloured gemstones added to RJC's revised Code of Practices.20

Bulgari Aeterna 140th Anniversary Collection (2024)
Highest-jewellery showcase pieces
Piece Key stones Reported value
Serpenti Aeterna necklace Seven pear-shaped diamonds, 140 ct total €40M19
Tubogas Flower of Time necklace 31.07 ct oval Zambian emerald 19
Sapphire Aeterna Waves 38.93 ct cushion Sri Lankan sapphire + diamonds 19
Magnifica Collection (2021) Multiple necklaces · ruby, sapphire, emerald centres Several >$5M each18
Bulgari brooch (Jan 2026 Sotheby's) Cabochon emerald centre, sapphires, diamonds €355,60018

Other Luxury Houses with Major Coloured-Stone Programmes

Cartier · Van Cleef · Boucheron · Harry Winston · Graff · Mikimoto
Cartier
Richemont · founded 1847
Coloured stone heritage"Tutti Frutti" Art Deco emerald/ruby/sapphire designs (1925)
Signature piecesPanthère collection (emerald eyes), high-jewellery rubies
Parent revenueRichemont Jewellery Maisons FY25: €15.33bn ($16.5bn)
Trade weightSunrise Ruby (record $30.3M, 2015) was a Cartier ring
Van Cleef & Arpels
Richemont · founded 1896
Coloured stone heritage"Mystery Setting" patented 1933 — invisible rubies/sapphires
SignatureAlhambra clovers, Fauna high jewellery
CEO of RichemontNicolas Bos (former Van Cleef CEO, appointed June 2024)
Stance on LGDNatural only · positions on rarity and provenance
Boucheron
Kering (Pinault) · founded 1858
Coloured stone heritageFirst jeweller on Place Vendôme (1893)
SignatureQuestion Mark necklace, Serpent Bohème, high-jewellery rubellites
Parent groupKering Luxury (also Gucci, Saint Laurent)
Recent record (2025)$12.7M Boucheron ring (fancy-deep-blue diamond + rubies, Christie's)21
Harry Winston
Swatch Group · founded 1932
Coloured stone heritage"King of Diamonds" but holds significant ruby & emerald inventory
Notable acquisitionBought Rockefeller Emerald for $5.5M (Christie's 2017)8
Coloured-stone programmePremier & Sunflower collections feature high-quality rubies/sapphires
Parent revenueSwatch Group Jewellery segment (smaller within Swatch group)
Graff
Private (Laurence Graff) · founded 1960
Coloured stone heritageStrong reputation in fine rubies; sold 8.62 ct Burmese ruby ring for $8.57M (2014)8
SignatureYellow diamond focus, exceptional coloured stones
StatusPrivately held · independent of conglomerate
Trade positionMajor direct buyer at top-tier coloured-stone auctions
Mikimoto
Private (Mikimoto family) · founded 1893
SpecialismPearls · invented cultured pearl 1893
Coloured stone usePearl + emerald, pearl + sapphire signature designs
StatusJapan's premier high jeweller, global presence
Trade weightSets the standard for fine pearl + coloured stone combinations
A reading note on like-for-like. Unlike diamonds, coloured-gemstone revenue is rarely disclosed separately by these maisons. LVMH reports Watches & Jewellery as one €10.58bn segment; Richemont reports Jewellery Maisons as one €15.33bn segment. Coloured stones are estimated to account for 30–50% of high-jewellery (top-end) revenue at Bulgari, Van Cleef and Cartier, and a smaller share at brands diamond-led brands like Harry Winston. Hard figures are not publicly disclosed.
VII
Outlook
Synthetics · ESG · GIA expansion · Generational trends
Section 07 / 07Last updated · Feb 2026

Lab-Grown / Synthetic Coloured Gemstones

Four production methods · Different quality, different price
Synthetic ruby (the first commercially synthesised gemstone) appeared in 1902 via the Verneuil flame-fusion process. Today, four production methods dominate lab-grown coloured stones — each producing visually identical chemical composition to natural stones, but distinguishable under high magnification by inclusion patterns.22
Flame Fusion
Verneuil process · 1902
Stones producedRuby, sapphire
TimeHours per stone
CostLowest
QualityGlassy · curved growth planes detectable
Flux Growth
Carroll Chatham · late 1930s
Stones producedEmerald (most successful), ruby, alexandrite
TimeMonths per crystal
CostHigh
QualityExcellent · close to natural appearance
Czochralski
"Crystal pulling" process
Stones producedRuby, sapphire, alexandrite, corundum
TimeDays to weeks
Crystal sizeDiameters >2", lengths >40" possible
QualityHigh optical homogeneity and purity
Hydrothermal
Closest to natural conditions
Stones producedEmerald (best results), ruby, quartz
TimeSlowest · weeks to months
CostHighest
Quality"Best superior" · same optical & physical properties as natural22
The trade reality. Unlike lab-grown diamonds (which now command ~14% of US jewellery market value), synthetic coloured gemstones remain a niche. Reasons: (1) coloured stones already cost a fraction of fine diamond at the entry level — less price-arbitrage incentive for synthetic; (2) the natural-stone narrative for ruby, sapphire and emerald is built on origin (Mogok, Kashmir, Muzo) — something a lab cannot replicate; (3) consumer awareness of synthetic coloured stones is materially lower than awareness of lab-grown diamonds.

Structural Trends Shaping 2025–2035

Four forces affecting the next decade · most are hypotheses, not observations
US gemstone imports 2025
▼44%YoYHigh
2024 $19.6bn → 2025e $11.0bn. Sharp reversal of earlier multi-year uptrend; reflects tariffs, weaker discretionary demand.30
GIA origin scope
+3stonesHigh
From Jan 2026: opal, peridot, demantoid garnet added to origin determination.6
Forecast 2024–2032 CAGR
~5–6%p.a.Hyp
Paid-report forecast · not observed. 2025 contraction may force forecasts to be revised down.2
2025 → 2035 rough market
$1.9 → $5.7bnHyp
Future Market Insights projection · 11.3% CAGR. Forecast, not observed.2

1 · Generational substitution from diamonds. Younger US consumers — particularly Millennials and Gen Z — increasingly choose coloured stones for engagement rings and self-purchase. Sapphire engagement rings have moved from niche to mainstream over the last decade; ruby and emerald are growing similarly. Med — supported by trade press but no audited consumer-survey data.

2 · Origin certification expansion Hyp. GIA's Jan 2026 expansion to opal, peridot, and demantoid garnet brings scientific provenance to stones previously sold without it. Hypothesis: this could push prices upward for documented top-quality material — though this is the typical pattern observed historically for ruby/sapphire origin certificates, it has not yet been tested for these specific stone categories.6

3 · Blockchain provenance Hyp. Fura Gems publicly champions blockchain-backed mine-to-market traceability — the first coloured-gemstone miner to do so at scale. Hypothesis: if this becomes industry-standard, it may compress the price gap between certificated and uncertificated stones. This is an analyst hypothesis only — not yet observed in market prices. Adoption beyond Fura has been limited; consumer awareness of blockchain provenance in jewellery remains low.16

4 · RJC standards extension. The Responsible Jewelry Council has extended its Code of Practices Standard to explicitly cover rubies, emeralds and sapphires. Luxury houses (Bulgari RJC member since 2006) increasingly require certified-sourcing audits from suppliers. Med — verified policy change; market impact still developing.20

A note on 2025's reversal. Three of the four forecasts above (CAGR projections, rough-trade growth, certification price effects) are hypotheses or paid-report estimates, not observed trends. The 2025 USGS data point — a 44% drop in US gemstone imports — is the freshest hard observation, and it contradicts the smooth-growth narrative that many of these forecasts assume. Readers should weight near-term forecasts accordingly.

Sources

[1] Data Bridge Market Research — Global Gemstones Market (2024 valuation). Reports global gemstones market valued at USD 33.96 billion in 2024, projected to reach $49.80bn by 2032 (CAGR 4.90%). Segments by precious vs semi-precious, treatment, origin, channel, price range. Includes diamond in broadest sense; coloured-only subset roughly two-thirds of figure. databridgemarketresearch.com
[2] Future Market Insights — Coloured Gemstone Market 2025-2035. Projects coloured gemstone wholesale/rough market growing from USD 1.9 billion (2025) to USD 5.7 billion (2035) — CAGR 11.3%. 2020-2024 historic CAGR ~4.3% (post-pandemic recovery). Notes that "small-scale mining still accounts for more than 30% of colored gemstone supply" per their definition; other industry estimates put artisanal at 70-80% for many specific stones. futuremarketinsights.com
[3] National Jeweler · "State of Colored Stones: The Big Three in the Modern World" (2025) — citing Gemfields industry research. Sapphire, ruby and emerald collectively dominate the value of the coloured gemstone segment. Article references Gemfields' published research "Understanding the Global Supply of Emerald, Ruby and Sapphire" (2024) and the 2022 global market analysis. Emerald alone holds ~32% share of the coloured gemstone segment by value (Future Market Insights/Robert Genis). nationaljeweler.com
[4] USGS — Mineral Commodity Summaries 2024 & 2025, Gemstones data sheets (historical context). US apparent gemstone consumption 2023: ~USD 21 billion, down from $26.2bn in 2022. Imports supply nearly 99% of US domestic gemstone needs. Diamonds historically contribute 89-92% of total US gemstone import value; coloured gemstones ~8-11%. Earlier dashboard iterations cited a "136% rise in coloured gemstone imports 2020-2024" — that figure is now superseded by the USGS MCS 2026 release (see [s30]), which shows a sharp 2025 reversal. This source is retained for historical context; for the most current US figures see [s30]. usgs.gov (Gemstones 2025) · usgs.gov (Gemstones 2024)
[5] GIA — Coloured Stone Research, Gem Localities and Formation series. Authoritative source on the geology and trade history of major coloured gem origins. Fine sapphires in ancient Roman artefacts essentially only from Ceylon (Sri Lanka); fine rubies mostly from Mogok in Burma; emeralds sourced from Egypt until Colombian discovery in the New World. Kashmir produced legendary "velvety cornflower blue" sapphires until effective mine depletion in the 1930s; Mogok rubies remain the gold standard for "pigeon's blood" colour. gia.edu (Colored Stone Research) · gia.edu (Localities)
[6] Future Market Insights — Global Gemstones Market & Industry Analysis 2036. Reports UK 2024 import value of $92bn (global trading hub aggregate); emeralds hold 32% share of coloured gemstone segment by value. Gemfields August 2025 sold Fabergé for $50M to refocus on core mining. December 2025: GIA expanded origin-determination services to include opal, peridot, and demantoid garnet starting January 1, 2026 — extending scientific provenance to wider coloured-stone market. futuremarketinsights.com
[7] Gemfields Group Limited (LSE: GEM, JSE: GML) — Operational results 2023, 2024, 2025 trading updates. Auction revenue 2023: $242M; 2024: $196M; 2025: $128.5M (down 34% YoY). 75%-owned Kagem emerald mine (Zambia) production paused January-May 2025 due to reintroduced 15% Zambian export duty; resumed limited mining May 2025. 75%-owned Montepuez Ruby Mine (Mozambique) second processing plant ($70M capex) completed late 2025; first auction February 2026. Kagem 11,685-ct "Imboo" emerald recovered 2024. gemfieldsgroup.com · sharecast.com
[8] Lotus Gemology — Ruby, Sapphire & Spinel Auction Records (updated June 2025); Sotheby's & Christie's auction archives. Sunrise Ruby (25.59 ct Burmese, Cartier): $32.42M ($1,266,901/ct) at Sotheby's Geneva 12 May 2015 — current per-carat and total world ruby auction records. Jewel of Kashmir (27.68 ct): $6.75M ($243,703/ct) at Sotheby's Hong Kong 7 October 2015 — per-carat sapphire record. Blue Belle of Asia (392.52 ct Sri Lankan): $17.30M total at Christie's Geneva 11 November 2014 — total sapphire record. Padparadscha 8.01 ct: $97,478/ct at Sotheby's 2017. Hope Spinel: $29,217/ct (2015). Rockefeller Emerald: $5.5M at Christie's NY 2017. lotusgemology.com
[9] Industry pricing premia — Lotus Gemology, AGTA, GIA, trade publications. Unheated Mogok ruby trades at 2-5× the price of heated equivalents at high quality levels. Lead-glass filled ruby ("composite ruby") trades at small fraction of natural ruby. Colombian emerald typically commands 30-60% premium over Zambian equivalent at similar grade. Kashmir sapphire commands the highest premium of any gemstone origin — 5-20× over Sri Lankan or Madagascan equivalent at top quality. Sources: Lotus Gemology trade reports, AGTA price guides, GIA auction analysis articles. lotusgemology.com · gia.edu
[10] GIA, Gübelin Gem Lab, SSEF — Treatment disclosure and origin determination protocols. Heat treatment of corundum (ruby and sapphire) has been the industry standard since the 1970s — disclosed but not heavily price-discounting for sapphire; ruby premium for unheated is substantial. Three labs dominate origin and treatment certification globally: GIA (broadest reach, US-based), Gübelin Gem Lab (Switzerland — premier reputation for ruby/sapphire origin determination), SSEF (Swiss Gemmological Institute — coloured stone specialist). Stones bound for high-end auction typically carry certificates from at least one and frequently all three. gia.edu · gubelingemlab.com · ssef.ch
[11] GIA, AGTA — Emerald treatment and "jardin" (inclusion) standards. Emeralds are routinely treated with cedar oil or other clear oils to fill surface-reaching fractures and improve apparent clarity; this is universally accepted in the trade and disclosed at GIA "Insignificant / Minor / Moderate / Significant" levels. Resin-filled or epoxy-treated emeralds are materially less valuable. "Jardin" (French for garden) is the trade term for the network of inclusions typical in emerald — emeralds are graded with the expectation of inclusions, unlike diamonds. gia.edu
[12] Gemfields Auction Results page — Kagem cumulative figures. 52 emerald auctions of Kagem gemstones held from July 2009 through August 2025 generated USD 1,122 million in cumulative revenues; 53rd auction completed December 2025 took cumulative to $1.147bn. Kagem operations resumed focused mining May 2025; premium emerald recoveries "met expectations" per Gemfields year-end statement. gemfieldsgroup.com
[13] Gemfields G-Factor for Natural Resources reporting 2024. The G-Factor measures % of mining revenue paid to host governments via primary taxes, royalties and dividends. Montepuez Ruby Mine returned 24% of 2024 revenue to Mozambique; Kagem (Zambia) returned only 9% in 2024 due to mid-year operational suspension and weak market conditions. Kagem long-term G-Factor average: ~19%. Montepuez 2015-2024 G-Factor: 25%; Kagem 2015-2024: 20%. Voluntary transparency tool introduced by Gemfields 2021. mining.com
[14] Trade-publication geography — All About Gemstones, Robinson's Jewelers, Precious Earth. Cross-referenced industry resources on coloured gem origins. Ruby: Myanmar (Mogok, Mong Hsu), Mozambique (Montepuez), Madagascar, Tanzania (Longido, Rukwa), Thailand. Sapphire: Sri Lanka (Ceylon — Ratnapura), Madagascar (Ilakaka), Myanmar, Australia (NSW, Queensland), Montana (US), Kashmir (essentially depleted). Emerald: Colombia (Muzo, Chivor, Coscuez), Zambia (Kagem), Brazil (Bahia, Minas Gerais), Ethiopia (emerged 2016), Afghanistan (Panjshir Valley), Russia (Ural Mountains). enchantedgems.wordpress.com · preciousearth.in
[15] Jadeite — Geological Survey & trade history. Myanmar's Uru Valley (Kachin State, northern Myanmar) is the world's only commercial source of gem-quality jadeite (one of the two jade minerals; the other, nephrite, is more widely distributed). Imperial jade — translucent, intense emerald green — commands the highest prices of any jade, primarily through Chinese cultural demand. Hutton-Mdivani jadeite necklace sold for $27.4M at Sotheby's Hong Kong 2014. Myanmar jade trade was placed under US sanctions following 2021 military coup. en.wikipedia.org
[16] Fura Gems Inc. (TSXV: FURA, OTC: FUGMF) — company filings, GIA Gems & Gemology, Club of Mozambique trade press. Founded January 2017, CEO Dev Shetty, HQ Dubai & Toronto. Only mining company in the world exploring all three Big Three categories: 76% interest in Coscuez Emerald Mine (Boyacá, Colombia) acquired October 2017; 7 ruby mining licences in Montepuez, Mozambique acquired by October 2019 (80% effective interest in 4 ruby licences 4392L, 3868L, 3869L, 6811L; 100% interest in licence 5572L); Great Northern Mining and Capricorn Sapphire mines, Queensland Australia acquired 2020. 2021 production: 5.5M ct Australian sapphires, 6M ct Mozambican rubies, 300,000 ct Colombian emeralds. First auctions: Colombian emerald April 2021, Mozambique ruby September 2021, Australian sapphire November 2021. Long-term loan facility US$21M + US$7.6M ($28.6M aggregate) arranged 2020. Self-positions on transparency, ethical sourcing, blockchain provenance proof. furagems.com · gia.edu · clubofmozambique.com
[17] Estrela de Fura — Sotheby's New York Magnificent Jewels auction, June 2023. 55.22-carat polished Mozambican ruby cut from a 101-carat rough recovered at Fura Gems' Mozambique ruby mine in July 2022. Auctioned at Sotheby's NY Magnificent Jewels sale June 2023; described by Sotheby's jewellery specialist Uni Kim as setting a new most-expensive-ruby auction record. The stone underscored Mozambique's emergence as a high-end ruby origin alongside the traditional Burmese Mogok source. gulfnews.com (Reuters)
[18] Bulgari — Sotheby's "Story of Bulgari's Mastery with Coloured Gemstones" & "Icons of Jewelry Design"; Samuelson's Diamonds historical reference. Bulgari "indelibly linked to emeralds" via Elizabeth Taylor connection during 1963 Cleopatra filming. Pioneered cabochon cut applied to coloured stones, combining precious + semi-precious, and the "rainbow revolution" of the 1970s. Bvlgari's 1960s necklaces showcased pale blue Sri Lankan sapphires with citrines, amethysts, tourmalines. Andy Warhol: "Bulgari jewelry was the eighties." Acquired by LVMH 2011 (€4.3bn). Recent Sotheby's-sold Bulgari emerald/sapphire/diamond brooch: €355,600 (January 2026). Magnifica Collection necklaces priced over $5M each. sothebys.com · sothebys.com (Icons)
[19] Bulgari Aeterna 140th Anniversary Collection (2024) — Rapaport, Monochrome Watches, The Jewellery Editor coverage. Aeterna collection unveiled 2024 marking Bulgari's 140th anniversary. Highlights: Serpenti Aeterna diamond necklace valued at €40 million (seven pear-shaped diamonds totalling 140 carats, serpentine baguette-cut diamond design). Tubogas Flower of Time — engraved 31.07-carat oval Zambian emerald. Sapphire Aeterna Waves — 38.93-carat cushion-cut Sri Lankan sapphire on platinum. Fuochi D'Artificio High-Jewellery Manchette — 1,450 hours to create, sapphires/rubellites/mandarin garnets/tanzanites/tsavorites/tourmalines/topazes/amethysts/rubies/emeralds. Sapphire Brocade necklace gemstones took two years to source. thejewelleryeditor.com · rapaport.com
[20] Responsible Jewelry Council (RJC) Code of Practices — Lampoon Magazine Bulgari profile. RJC has worked to improve coloured gemstone supply chain transparency, recently including rubies, emeralds and sapphires explicitly in its revised Code of Practices Standard. Bulgari has been an RJC member since 2006. The article notes: "from two billion dollars, if trends continue and strengthen, colored gems could displace diamond's market share and reach ten billion dollars in the next decade." Driven by Millennial/Gen Z conscious-consumer demand for ethical sourcing certification. lampoonmagazine.com
[21] 2025 top jewellery auction results — Rapaport "A Glittering Year on the Block." Christie's took 6 of the top 10 positions in 2025 (vs 9 in 2024). Boucheron ring featuring 6.24-carat fancy-deep-blue diamond + white diamonds + rubies sold for CHF 10.6M ($12.7M) at Christie's Geneva 14 May 2025, against CHF 4.5–6.5M presale estimate. The Regent Kashmir Christie's HK 27 May 2025 sale (35.09-ct antique cushion-cut Kashmir sapphire ring with diamond accents): HKD 74.7M ($9.5M). rapaport.com
[22] Synthetic / lab-grown coloured gemstone production — GIA "Introduction to Synthetic Gem Materials"; ICIA & trade references. Four major methods: Flame Fusion (Verneuil process, 1902 — first commercial synthetic gemstone, used for ruby and sapphire, glassy curved growth planes detectable); Flux Growth (Carroll Chatham late 1930s — commercialised flux-grown emerald; months per crystal, high cost, excellent quality); Czochralski / Crystal Pulling (large crystals possible — >2" diameter, >40" length — used for ruby, sapphire, alexandrite, corundum); Hydrothermal (slowest, most expensive, closest to natural conditions — best for ruby and emerald, "best superior" quality). Synthetic ruby was the first commercial synthetic gem. Synthetic corundum is widely used as alexandrite imitation. Lab-grown coloured stones share virtually all chemical/optical/physical properties of natural counterparts — distinguishable only under high magnification by inclusion patterns. gia.edu
[23] Grizzly Mining Limited — company website, Jewellery Outlook, Mining Review Africa, Forbes Africa profile, The Marque profile of Abdoulaye Ndiaye. Founded by Abdoulaye Ndiaye (Senegalese-born, the "Emerald King") in 1997 after he began trading emeralds in Lufwanyama in 1972 and acquired the mine 25 years later. 100% owned flagship Grizzly Mine in Lufwanyama region, Copperbelt Province, Zambia. ~60 million carats produced annually; 170 million+ carats produced lifetime. ~4,000 employees. Quarterly auctions held in-country and internationally at Almas Tower, Dubai. Nov 2024 auction generated $22.4M revenue; earlier auctions ~$19M. ~90% of revenue from high-quality emeralds which constitute only a small fraction of physical output. Together with Gemfields' Kagem, makes Zambia the world's largest emerald producer by volume (overtaking Colombia). Note: Lev Leviev reportedly bought half of "Grizzly Mine" in 2017 and renamed it Gemcanton; Grizzly Mining LinkedIn/website continues to operate as a separate entity — likely a licence-area carve-out rather than ownership of the parent company. grizzlyemeralds.com · jewelleryoutlook.com (Nov 2024 auction) · miningreview.com
[24] Belmont Emeralds (Grupo Belmont) — company website, GIA Gems & Gemology field research (Spring 2015 New Production article + 2014 site visit), London DE Brazilian emerald history, Bonas Group profile. Located in Itabira region, Minas Gerais, Brazil; operational since 1978 (started as cattle ranch on Ribeiro family rural property). Owned by Ribeiro family, with Marcelo Ribeiro as Director. Largest independent miner of emeralds in Brazil; ~250 employees. ~250,000g rough emerald per year from 350,000 tonnes of soil (1g per 280kg ore). Mix of open-pit and underground (75m vertical shaft from 1998; 50% production still open-cast). Optical sorting replaced hand-picking since 2004. Markets: US, Europe, Asia, Brazil. 80% of rough subsequently cut at Belmont's Itabira sorting facility. Brazilian emeralds known for blue-grey cast — typically harder and larger than other emeralds, requiring no enhancement. Mine-to-market traceability strongly emphasised. 40th anniversary celebrated 2018. belmontemeralds.com · gia.edu (Mine to Market) · gia.edu (G&G Spring 2015) · londonde.com
[25] Fura Gems leadership transition & complete ownership chain — JCK, Rapaport, National Jeweler trade press June 2024; SEC filings & press releases 2019-2020; Wildeboer Dellelce (transaction counsel); Private Capital Journal; Crunchbase. Dev Shetty stepped down as Fura Gems CEO in June 2024 to pursue other opportunities; founded Fura in 2017 after running Montepuez and Kagem mines for Gemfields; instrumental in bringing the $35M Estrela de Fura ruby to Sotheby's NY auction June 2023.

Ownership chain (verified): Fura was taken private in October 2020 by Lord of Seven Hills Holdings FZE (L7H) — a Fujairah Free Zone Authority-registered UAE holding company — in an all-cash amalgamation valued at ~$40.8M total equity. L7H built its position through 2019-2020: ~8.5% pre-2019 → 39.2% in Oct 2019 ($0.25/share private placement) → 51.5% mid-2020 → 100% Oct 2020 (CAD 0.15/share buyout of remaining 48.5%). L7H is "incorporated under the laws of Fujairah Free Zone Authority, UAE"; originally a marketing agent for high-grade manganese ore with a diversified investment portfolio. Controllers: Gagan Gupta (named as "controller of L7H" in the November 2019 Newswire disclosure) and Michael Kuan, Chairman of Kuan Capital, Shanghai (described as controlling L7H per Private Capital Journal 2020). Gaurav Gupta serves on Fura's board as a director representing the majority shareholder and has signing authority for L7H. Fortuna Holdings (fortunaholdings.net) is a Dubai-based, Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)-registered single-family office that appears to be a related or successor investment vehicle of the same family-office grouping. Important clarification: This is NOT "Fortuna Investments" founded by Justus Parmar 2015 in Vancouver (an unrelated Canadian VC firm). jckonline.com (Shetty exit) · privatecapitaljournal.com · wildlaw.ca (transaction counsel) · newswire.ca (Oct 2019) · crunchbase.com (Fortuna Holdings)
[26] Bangkok & Chanthaburi, Thailand — Gem and Jewelry Institute of Thailand (GIT); Chanthaburi Gem and Jewelry Traders Association; Rapaport "Why Bangkok Is the Go-To Spot for Colored Stones" (June 2024); JewelleryNet feature; ICA Congress 2019 Chairman Prida Tiasuwan. GIT estimates that more than 80% of gemstones traded internationally, particularly rubies and sapphires, have undergone enhancement in Chanthaburi. Chanthaburi Gem & Jewelry Traders Association data: 80% of Thailand's coloured gemstone exports are cut and treated in Chanthaburi. Thailand's coloured-gemstone industry employs more than 700,000 people (per Central Bank of Sri Lanka document citing GJIT). Thailand imports rough from Mozambique, Colombia, Brazil, China, Madagascar, India, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Tanzania. Philippe Ressigeac (GemCloud): "Bangkok handles much of the world's rubies for treatment, cutting and polishing. Small-sized sapphires are also commonly processed in Bangkok, though single, larger stones often go to Sri Lanka." Sumed Prasongpongchai (Director, GIT): "The pivotal strength of Thailand's gemstone industry lies in gem-cutting and enhancement techniques, particularly the refinement of colored stones through processes like heat treatment for rubies and sapphires." ICA Congress 2019 Chairman Prida Tiasuwan described Bangkok as "the world's largest coloured stone trading and processing hub." Thailand specialises in "lower-quantity but higher-quality products and service" per CBSL Sri Lanka report. rapaport.com (June 2024) · jewellerynet.com · cbsl.gov.lk (PDF)
[27] Jaipur, India — GIA Gems & Gemology Winter 2016 "Jaipur: The Global Gem and Jewelry Power of the Pink City"; GIA February 2016 "Jaipur, India: The Emerald Cutting and Trading Powerhouse"; IMARC Group India Gemstone Market Report 2026-2034; GJEPC; Rising Rajasthan (state government); IBEF. GIA Winter 2016 G&G: "In Jaipur there are at least 100 factories cutting colored gemstones" plus huge artisan cottage industry on contract basis. Nirmal Bardiya of RMC: "Jaipur cuts 90% of all tanzanites 1 gram and under" (confirmed by other sources). India coloured-gemstone exports April 2021-March 2022: $311.45M (GJEPC). India gemstone market USD $2,180.10M (2025) → $3,287.6M (2034), 4.53% CAGR (IMARC Group); emerald (locally "panna") leads at 34.7% market share 2025 due to cultural/astrological importance. Rajasthan accounts for 17.5% of India's total gems & jewellery exports. Sitapura SEZ Jaipur spread across 110.8 acres, houses 154 units generating employment for 11,217 people. "Gem Bourse" planned, expected to create over 100,000 jobs. Jaipur processes 300+ varieties of precious & semi-precious gemstones. Receives emerald rough primarily from Zambia plus Brazil (Bahia). Surat focuses on diamond cutting (>80% of world's diamonds); Jaipur focuses on coloured gems and jewellery manufacturing. February 2025 Bangkok Gem & Jewelry Fair: India and Thailand signed 3 MOUs cooperating in coloured-gem trade, silver jewellery, gemstone standardisation — specifically Jewelers Association Jaipur ↔ Chanthaburi Gem & Jewelry Traders Association, and GJEPC's IIGJ-RLC ↔ GIT Thailand. gia.edu (G&G Winter 2016) · gia.edu (Emerald Powerhouse) · imarcgroup.com · rising.rajasthan.gov.in
[28] Ratnapura, Sri Lanka — Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) "Winning Industries Gem and Jewellery" PDF; Sri Lanka Export Development Board; Sri Lanka Gem & Jewellery Association (SLGJA); ScienceDirect academic paper on small-scale gem mining (Sept 2024). Industry contributes over USD $400M to nation's export earnings annually, ~0.45% of GDP (Ministry of Industries, 2024, per ScienceDirect article). Total gem & jewellery trade at export and retail points ~Rs. 55 billion (USD $550M annually). ~3,000 manufacturing units around the country. 70% of Sri Lanka's land mass is potentially gem-bearing per Prof. C. B. Dissanayake's prospectors' map. Sapphire varieties = ~85% of export share; country exports 75+ kinds of stones. Gem mining concentrated in Districts of Ratnapura, Matale, Badulla, Moneragala. Specialism: large sapphires (over Bangkok), padparadscha, star sapphires, star rubies, cat's eye chrysoberyl. Export of rough uncut stones is prohibited per SLGJA — mandatory value-add cutting in country. "Star of Adam" 1,404 ct blue star sapphire discovered Ratnapura 2015, valued $300M+. Cabinet approval December 2020 for construction of International Gem and Jewellery Trade Centre at Demuwawatha, Ratnapura — to provide export services like Bangkok and Hong Kong. cbsl.gov.lk (PDF) · srilankabusiness.com · slgja.org · sciencedirect.com
[29] Idar-Oberstein, Germany — Incolor Magazine No. 52 (Nov 2024) "Idar-Oberstein: Centuries of Excellence" + "The Timeless Art of Gemstone Carving in Idar-Oberstein"; Gemporia; International Gem Society; Imperial Gem Lab blog (visit to Atelier Munsteiner & C.F. Arnoldi); Rubblerockandgem trade history. 500+ years of gemstone history, originating with agate deposits in Nahe River area in the Hunsrück region. By late 19th century, processed 80% of world's gemstones at peak. Two world wars + Asian competition ended "second golden age" by mid-1940s. Today specialises in: high-end precious-stone cutting, fine carving (Steinschneidekunst), cameos, intaglios, small & large sculptures, objets d'art, coats-of-arms carvings, custom orders. Bernd Munsteiner (b. 1943) developed the "Fantasy Cut" in the 1960s — focused on depth, texture, capturing light vs traditional brilliance maximisation. Tom Munsteiner's "Apollo" — 196.17-ct Paraiba tourmaline — won Guinness World Record for the world's largest cut Paraíba (2022), set in platinum with the Spirit Diamond. Most agate lapidary work has moved to China; quartz cutting to Jaipur. Idar-Oberstein still globally unique for high-end carving. "Recut in Germany" / "Made in Germany" remain highly respected labels in international trade circles. Notable ateliers: Atelier Munsteiner, C.F. Arnoldi (est. 1919), Emil Weis, Henn. incolormagazine.com (Centuries of Excellence) · incolormagazine.com (Carving) · gemporia.com · imperialgemlab.com
[30] USGS — Mineral Commodity Summaries 2026, Gemstones data sheet (released 6 February 2026). The most material data correction in this dashboard's history. Prepared by Donald W. Olson, USGS. Five-year salient statistics (US, $M): Imports for consumption: 2021: 24,600 · 2022: 28,700 · 2023: 24,200 · 2024: 19,600 · 2025e: 11,000. Apparent consumption: 2021: 23,700 · 2022: 26,900 · 2023: 21,300 · 2024: 17,600 · 2025e: 9,300. Diamond imports accounted for 79% of the total value of gem imports in 2025 — down from the 2018-22 average of 89%, suggesting coloured stones held up better than diamonds in 2025, but the overall market still contracted sharply. Combined value of US natural & synthetic gemstone domestic output 2025: $47M (down 30% YoY). Net import reliance: 99% of apparent consumption. The 2025 figure is USGS's estimate and may be revised in the MCS 2027 release. usgs.gov (Gemstones 2026, PDF) · usgs.gov (MCS 2026 landing page)
End of sources