DiamondBuzz
Big, Slightly Tinted Diamonds: Object Of Desire In The US Market
Buyers Of 2.5-Carat and Up Pieces Are Increasingly Choosing Stones With J Color Or Lower, Sometimes Much Lower On The Color Scale
Big, slightly tinted diamonds are suddenly the object of desire in the US — and the industry is asking why.
Buyers of 2.5-carat and up pieces are increasingly choosing stones with J color or lower, sometimes much lower on the color scale, say retailers and traders. That shift signals more than a fashion tweak: it reflects how affluent shoppers now want their diamonds to read as “natural” at a glance.
Lab-grown gems typically come in the brightest, clearest grades, so a warmly hued, imperfect-looking stone has become a visible badge of authenticity — a deliberate antique vibe in a polished world where synthetics dominate. No surprise: The Knot reports that 61% of U.S. couples now pick lab-grown rings.
A report explores who’s buying these larger, lower-color stones, how cultural moments and celebrities — think Taylor Swift — helped fuel the taste for them, and why antique cuts seem particularly suited to carrying color. The piece also ties this appetite to broader marketing narratives, including De Beers’ push for so-called “Desert diamonds.”
It’s not all doom and gloom for mined diamonds. Larger sizes — especially 2 carats and above and long fancy shapes — have held up better than smaller goods over the past year. The report isolates this rising niche and asks the key question: can these warm-toned showstoppers withstand the continued rise of lab-grown competition?
DiamondBuzz
ACRA Has Reaffirmed Alrosa’s AAA(RU) Credit Rating With A Stable Outlook
ACRA Cited Miner’s Strong Operating Profile, Global Leadership, Solid Resource Base, High Profitability
Russian rating agency ACRA has reaffirmed Alrosa’s AAA(RU) credit rating with a stable outlook, citing the miner’s strong operating profile, global leadership in diamond mining, solid resource base, high profitability, low debt levels, strong liquidity, and robust corporate governance.
ACRA noted that Alrosa’s confirmed reserves can support more than 30 years of operations at current production levels. It also expects tightening diamond supply to support price recovery in the medium term.
The agency highlighted Alrosa’s profitability, with FFO before interest and taxes at 28%, projected to rise to 30% between 2026 and 2028.
Pavel Marinychev, CEO, Alrosa, said:

“The high assessment of ACRA for the third year in a row confirms the sustainability of the Alrosa business model, the quality of the management system and the financial stability of the company. This is an independent confirmation that the chosen strategy remains effective even in conditions of external turbulence. Despite geopolitical uncertainty, the company maintains leadership positions, financial discipline and consistently fulfils all its obligations.”
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