De Beers shaped today’s diamond market. They started in
the U.S. back in the late 1930s.
De Beers wanted to expand its market (at the time De
Beers controlled 90% of the global diamond market). Diamonds, the larger
diamonds, had always symbolized wealth and status but how could De Beers
market the smaller diamonds to the masses?
In 1938, De Beers hired Philadelphia ad agency N.W. Ayer.
The agency set an ambitious goal, they set out to: “create a situation
where almost every person pledging marriage feels compelled to acquire a
diamond engagement ring.”
A U.S. promotional campaign was planned and it focused on
telling every guy (and maybe even more important every girl) that he
absolutely needed to give his special her a diamond ring (and diamond
jewelry) to express his true love and lasting commitment, because, just like
his love and commitment, ‘a diamond is forever.’
“The agency wanted to make it look like diamonds were
everywhere, and they started by using celebrities in the
media. "The big ones sell the little ones," said Dorthy
Digham, a publicist for De Beers at N.W. Ayer.”
How Diamonds Became Forever,The New York Times
The “A Diamond is Forever” campaign was so successful the
U.S. became, and still is at $9 billion a year, the world’s largest diamond
jewelry market.
The same campaign was also a huge success in Japan with
diamonds replacing pearls in the 1950s. Today China and India’s 2.6 billion
people are targeted – because only diamonds can show her how you truly feel.
“If you look back 20 years, there was no diamond acquisition culture in
China. But today in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, there is an obvious
launch pad. 40% of brides in those cities are getting diamond engagement
rings. It was zero 15 years ago." Gareth Penny, CEO DeBeers
The decade to come will be the years of the diamond. According to a Bain
& Company report global rough-diamond demand in value terms should
increase at a compound annual rate of 5.1%, to $26 billion by 2023.
"The appetite for high-quality diamonds in China
and India is growing," notes Gerhard
Prinsloo, the author of the report." In terms of market share, India
and China will represent 30% by 2020, equal to that of the United States.
Supply should only increase by 2.8% per year, leading to a structural
shortage."
Diamond demand, over the next decade or so, will be
particularly driven by India and China due to a doubling of the middle class
in these countries (of the two China has the fastest growing demand, jumping
to a share of about 15 percent of the world's diamond market from less than
three percent in 2003).
There’s no
shortage of future markets – it won’t be long before one out of every four
people on the planet is going to be an African. They don’t know it yet but
there’s diamond jewelry in most of their futures.
Dundee Capital
Markets
Current diamond demand is 175 million carats, by 2020
demand is expected to reach 247 million carats.
Two new diamond mines are expected to start production in
Canada over the next few years - Gahcho Kué and Renard.
Dominion Diamond’s Ekati mine will increase production by
starting to mine the Misery pipe.
Globally there are three large mines scheduled to start
operations within the next four years: Lace, Botuobinskaya and Bunder. The
last major mine discovery came a decade ago in India, at Rio Tinto's yet to
be completed Bunder project.
LUKoil’s Grib mine started production this earlier this
year and Alrosa’s Karpinskogo mine started production in October.
Some of the largest and most important mines in the world
are running out of diamonds to mine - Orapa and Jwaneng (Botswana) have less
than 15 years of production left at current parameters. Orapa and Jwaneng are
the largest diamond mines in terms of total dollar value produced.
The alluvial Marange diamond fields (Zimbabwe - 13% of
global rough supply in 2013) are expected to produce eight million carats of
diamonds in 2014. Mining is transitioning from easily accessible loose
surface gravel to hard conglomerate rock. Most miners are not willing to make
the necessary investment at current rough diamond prices. Conglomerate rock
grades are 0.4-0.5 carats per tonne while surface grades were 3.75 cpt
Marange is the largest producing project in the world in
terms of total carats produced. It is third in terms of total dollar value
after Botwana’s Orapa and Jwaneng mines.
Pikoo Kimberlite Field
Let’s take a look at what might well be the world’s
newest emerging diamond district.
Stornoway Diamond Corp.’s (TSX – SWY) regional
exploration programs were intended to test the diamond potential of the Sask
craton in north-central Saskatchewan.
Exploration work included KIM sampling
programs, an airborne geophysical survey (to detect magnetic differences on
the ground), prospecting and geophysical anomaly checking – ground truthing
of targets.
Kimberlite indicator mineral (KIM) sampling consists of
digging a hole and taking up to 20 kg of glacial till – dirt - and sending it
to a laboratory for the recovery and analysis of indicator minerals - if any.
Assortment of kimberlitic indicator minerals
including purple pyrope, red, orange and pink pyrope garnets, chromian diopside,
picroilmenite and chromite.
Indicator minerals such as pyrope garnets, chromites, and
ilmenites are used as kimberlite tracers because these KIMs are found in the
same place diamonds form, deep beneath the earth’s surface in the diamond
stability field.
Kimberlite magma comes up from below the diamond
stability field and takes indicator minerals, and hopefully diamonds, all the
way to the Earth’s surface…
“Kimberlite, a variety of ultramafic volcanic and
sub-volcanic rock, is the dominant source of diamonds worldwide. It is widely
accepted that the majority of diamonds are not formed within the kimberlite
and much evidence points towards an ancient origin for most diamond in the
deep lithospheric keels of Archaean cratons. The kimberlites, therefore, are
transporting agents that ‘‘sample’’ deep, occasionally diamond-bearing,
mantle material and rapidly convey it to surface.” DIAMONDS AND ASSOCIATED HEAVY MINERALS IN KIMBERLITE: A REVIEW OF
KEY CONCEPTS AND APPLICATIONS TOM E. NOWICKI, RORY O. MOORE, JOHN J. GURNEY
AND MIKE C. BAUMGARTNER
Glaciers smear the visually distinctive, dense and
resistant to weathering indicator minerals across the surface in a fan shaped
pattern called the indicator train. The train narrows back to a source
(>).
The terms up ice or down ice simply refers to where you
are in relation to a kimberlite source. Take a look at the next map, find
Pelican Narrows and Deschambault Lake. The glaciers came in from the north
east heading south west. Ice direction would be from Pelican Narrows towards
Deschambault Lake. If you found a kimberlite in the middle of the two
villages Pelican Lake would be up ice, Deschambauly Lake down ice.
The Pikoo claims were staked by Stornoway, in February
and March of 2011, based on their regional test results.
The black outline
is the North Sask Craton boundary
The Pikoo claim block was optioned to
North Arrow Minerals TSX.V – NAR.
North Arrow focused on much tighter spaced till sampling
than what Stornoway had done with their regional sampling. Two distinct
indicator trains, the North Pikoo train and the South Pikoo train were
found.
Both the North and South Pikoo trains were drill-tested
in July of 2013. The 2,000 meter program resulted in the discovery of a new
diamondiferous kimberlite field.
In the North Pikoo area, five drill holes tested an
east-west trending target over a 1.1 km strike length. The drill holes
encountered between one and six individual kimberlite dykes ranging from 3 cm
to 59 cm in width, interpreted to be vertical to steeply south dipping.
Surface anomalies suggest the dyke system extends over a significantly
greater strike length than tested by the five hole drill program.
The most significant
discovery might of been in the South Pikoo area.
The PK150 kimberlite dyke is a roughly 15 meter wide
almost vertical body intersected over a 75 m strike length (3 holes spaced 35
m apart) and is currently open to depth and along strike. Since the
indicator mineral trains are a couple of kilometers wide a longer strike
length might be established.
According to John Kaiser of The Bottom Fishing Report:
“The kimberlite is comprised of dark grey hypabyssal
kimberlite containing abundant olivine as well as common ilmenite and orange
to purple garnets and less common chrome diopside.
The kimberlite is also riddled
with mantle nodules up to 10 cm in diameter suggesting that the kimberlite
magma may have entrained a good payload from the diamond stability field… the
micro diamond results are well distributed through the 3-4 sample batches processed
for each of the three holes, ruling out the risk of a "nugget
effect" from the lucky presence of a particularly rich mantle nodule.”
A 209.7 kg sample of drill core from the kimberlite
returned 745 diamonds larger than the 0.106 mm sieve size, including 23
diamonds larger than the 0.85 mm sieve size – considered the cut-off for
commercial stones.
The total weight of the +0.85
mm diamonds recovered from the sample was 0.2815 carats, for a total recovery
sample grade of 1.34 carats per tonne for stones over +0.85 mm.
Recovered diamonds have similar, high
quality characteristics across all size fractions. Over 95% of the diamonds
are described as intact, white octahedrons and aggregates.
The large project area hosts additional kimberlite
targets and numerous anomalous KIM samples outside of the initial areas
of interest (North Pikoo and South Pikoo trains). These areas were
more densely till sampled in June and September 2014.
Preliminary results have been received from approximately
half of the program samples and have defined new kimberlite indicator mineral
(KIM) trains within the property. These KIM trains are separate and discrete
from the North and South Pikoo KIM trains.
A winter drill program commencing
in February 2015 is being planned to test as many as nine new
targets at the heads of these trains as well as some of the untested lake
bound and land based targets related to the North and South Pikoo trains. An
application was submitted to the Saskatchewan Environment on June 9, 2014 to
drill up to 30 drill holes.
NAR and SWY
The Pikoo Diamond Project is a joint venture (JV) between
North Arrow Minerals (80%) and and Stornoway Diamond Corp. (20%).
Stornoway has exercised its right to participate in the
Pikoo East option agreement between North Arrow (70%) and Canadian
International Minerals TSX.V - CIN (30%). The Pikoo East properties comprise
5 claims totaling 3,447 hectares.
The A group directly adjoins North Arrow/Stornoway’s
Pikoo property, and the B group lies approximately 7 km northeast of Pikoo’s
northern boundary.
Till samples (black blocks on above left map) have been
collected on the Pikoo East properties under the option agreement. The
samples have been submitted for kimberlite indicator mineral (KIM)
processing. Results are expected in early 2015.
Stornoway has also exercised its right to participate in
the Orchid property agreement between North Arrow (70%) and Eagle Plains
Resources TSX.V – EPL (30%).
Staking Rush
In June of 2013, North Arrow announced they drilled
kimberlite at Pikoo.
In November, NAR made headlines by announcing it had high
microdiamond counts from the PK 150 kimberlite dyke. The high diamond counts
demonstrated the potential for a coarse diamond size distribution (larger
diamonds might be found) and established Pikoo, and the northern Sask Craton,
as Canada’s new diamond district.
Of course a junior resource company staking rush ensued.
Click on the map for a larger image.
We know what North Arrow and Stornoway are up to. A few
other companies have been quietly working away or entering the play via land
acquisitions.
Alto Ventures TSX.V – ATV collected 325 till samples on
its 60% owned contiguous to Pikoo properties. Results are expected in
December/January.
Athabasca Nuclear Corp. TSX.V – ASC has just acquired the
right to earn an 80% interest in the Prongua Lake diamond project. The
Project encompasses 16 mineral claims totaling in excess of 9,270 acres and
is located up ice to the north, east, and northeast of North Arrow and
Stornoway’s Pikoo project. A number of early-stage geophysical targets have
been identified.
Copper Reef Mining TSX.V – CZC completed a small ground
magnetic survey and collected an unknown number of till samples on its
properties.
Gem Oil Inc., a private company, has done an enormous
amount of work. A report is expected sometime in the new year.
Strike Diamond collected 118 till samples (the
majority up ice from Pikoo) on its 80% owned properties. Results from
SRK’s property are expected in December/January.
Above, to the left, you can see the arrow pointing to
several small subtle circular magnetic lows and highs. These are kimberlite
targets. To the left of these kimberlite targets is the western border, in
pink, of North Arrows Pikoo claim blocks.
On the map to the right the arrows point to black dots
representing where Strike Diamonds took till samples for indicator mineral
processing.
Conclusion
Demand for diamonds is not going to fade away, diamonds
are a part of our western cultural heritage, and an established and growing
eastern one as well. De Beers created value. They packaged it in an
acceptable way and delivered it to customers. Diamonds - currently a $72
billion a year industry thanks largely to a De Beers marketing campaign that
started in the late ‘30s - are a girl's best friend.
They may also be a BFF to investors looking for a safe
haven from market storms.
Mined diamond supply is not going to be able to keep up
with increasing demand - production growth will be limited as older mines become
exhausted and production is scaled back, new production is not expected to
fill the gap.
There’s close to 800 till samples from Canada’s newest
diamond play in the lab for indicator mineral processing.
It just might be a very Merry Christmas and extremely
happy New Year for a few diamond focused resource juniors, and their
shareholders, in the North Sask Craton Diamond Play.
Saskatchewan diamonds might thrill again and they should
be on every investors radar screens. Are they on yours?
If not, maybe they should be.
Richard lives with his family on a 160 acre ranch in
northern British Columbia. He invests in the resource and
biotechnology/pharmaceutical sectors and is the owner of Aheadoftheherd.com.
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***
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Richard Mills has based this document on information
obtained from sources he believes to be reliable but which has not been
independently verified.
Richard Mills makes no guarantee, representation or
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subject to change without notice. Richard Mills assumes no warranty,
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Furthermore, I, Richard Mills, assume no liability for
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