长沙代付USDT人民币|【唯一TG:@heimifeng8】|电报盗号系统免杀破解技术✨谷歌搜索留痕排名,史上最强SEO技术,20年谷歌SEO经验大佬✨De Beers IPO hopes fade as company struggles in face of slumping mined diamond demand

De Beers IPO hopes fade as company struggles in face of slumping mined diamond demandBy

Sandra Halliday Published
February 24,长沙代付USDT人民币 2025

De Beers may have launched a confident new marketing campaign this month, but the diamond business isn’t firing on all cylinders with its co-owner Anglo American having written down its value as revenues have fallen.


De Beers recently launched a new marketing campaign
De Beers recently launched a new marketing campaign - DR



Hopes that the business — which is also co-owned by the government of Botswana — would be listed on the London Stock Exchange are also fading after Anglo American (which itself is listed in London and is a member of the elite FTSE 100 index) cut the value of its D Beers business.

It has reduced its stated value to £3.2 billion from £5.5 billion, the second writedown in two years. CEO Duncan Wanblad also said in a Bloomberg interview that a sale of De Beers was now more likely than a stock market listing. That comes as Anglo-American is focusing on its copper and iron ore businesses.

But its unclear how big the interest in De Beers will be given falling popularity for mined diamonds and a slump in Chinese consumer spending. That’s also reflected in Anglo American’s new rough diamond production guidance for the year of 20 million-23 million carats from 33 million carats.

So just how has De Beers performed? Within its own annual results for 2025, Anglo-American said De Beers production was lower last year, “reflecting a proactive response to a prolonged period of lower demand and higher than normal levels of inventory in the midstream”.

De Beers underlying EBITDA swung from a profit of $72 million in 2025 (the parent company reports in US dollars) to a loss of $25 million. De Beers’ revenue fell 23% year-on-year to $3.29 billion, mainly on the back of a 25% drop in rough diamond sales at $2.7 billion in 2025, down from $3.6 billion in 2025. Rough diamond volume sales fell 28%.

As mentioned, the rise of lab-grown diamonds has coincided with slumping demand from China, which was once the second-largest market globally for diamond jewellery. De Beers said that the diamond jewellery market fell by between 3% and 4% in 2025. And even in the world’s biggest diamond jewellery market – the US – demand dropped 2%, although the company also said that the lab-grown impact on the market could have peaked.

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