March 2020

JEWELRY INSURANCE ISSUES (formerly IM News), provides monthly insight and information for jewelry insurance agents, underwriters and claims adjusters.

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Jewelry Insurance Issues

Table of Contents

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2024

Gems aren't only in jewelry - January

A new switcheroo - February

Diamond deflation - March

2023

Exploring the 4 Cs: Carat Weight & Cut are a team - January

Beautiful gems — but not always in jewelry - February

Rapaport's New Year Message - March

New technology, new standards for diamond cut - April

Wedding season has a new star - May

Lab-Grown Colored Gems - June

Price, value, valuation ... and limit of liability - July

Lab-Grown Diamonds – now and into the future - August

Fake diamond certificates – recurring scams and a strange new one - September

Mined or lab-made? - October

Fraud catcher: the sales receipt - November

2022

What's up with diamonds? Prices! - January

Ferreting out the Fakes - February

Vodka, caviar . . . and diamonds? - March

Conflict of Interest - April

Under the "covers" - May

Agents: Do you know who you're doing business with? - June

Brand-name fakes: a tale of jewelry, duplicity, and international intrigue - July

What is insurable jewelry? - August

Vintage Rolexes - September

Lab-Made Diamonds in the Fast Lane - October

Exploring the 4 Cs: Color – more complex than you may think - November

Exploring the 4 Cs: Clarity – for all transparent gems - December

 

2021

High-end jewelry & its docs - January

Where is gold going? - February

Hot off the press: Imposter diamonds & forged inscriptions - March

Jewelry insurers’ ethics - April

Can you spot a forgery? - May

Green Diamonds - June

Is the appraisal good enough? And is it enough? - July

Men’s Jewelry—Passing fad or wave of the future? - August

Jewelry appraisals — watches vs. jewels - September

Replacements & CAD/CAM - October

Lab-Grown Diamonds are coming your way - November

How important is the picture? Very! - December

2020

2020 Fraud Alert! Fake Lab Reports - January

Is it worth its weight in gold? - February

Grading lab-made diamonds - March

Safety deposit boxes - April

Evaluating a jewelry appraisal - May

Verifying the Lab Report - June

When you need a jewelry appraisal, what do you do? - July

Calling a diamond a diamond - August

Diamond clarity meets Artificial Intelligence - September

Mined or Lab-made: Who knows? - October

Covid 19 & jewelry insurance - November

Gem Enhancement’s slippery slope - December

2019

Gem Certificates again at issue - January

Yogo sapphires – What's in a name? - February

Lab-made diamonds: pricing, grading, valuation - March

What is an "eco-friendly" diamond? - April

GIA report: What's left out - May

A tale from the Caribbean - June

Lab-Grown diamonds are taking off - July

Brand impersonators & counterfeit jewelry - August

Lab reports for colored gems - September

FTC Guidelines for jewelry - October

Selling Salvage Jewelry - November

What's in a name—a brand name, that is? - December

2018

What's a Certified Appraiser? - January

Best Appraiser Credentials - February

Are the diamonds you’re insuring real? - March

Handwritten Appraisals - April

Internet Tips for Jewelry Insurers - May

De Beers will sell lab-grown diamonds - June

Do genuine gemstones break? - July

Luxury Watches - August

Who owns the ring? - September

Insuring Bling - October

The Price of a Replacement - November

Love Is In The Air - December

2017

Moral Hazard, Documents and the Bottom Line - January

Ruby and Jade - February

How to mail a diamond - March

Jewelry Insurance Appraisal Standards: JISO - April

Describing a gem's color - May

Why not just put jewelry on the Homeowner policy? - June

GIA Diamond Reports - July

Not just a pretty face - August

Moral hazards on the rise - September

Hurricanes, fires, floods—and jewelry insurance - October

Inherent vice / wear-and-tear losses are rising - November

FRAUD UPDATE – lack of disclosure, false inscriptions & doctored docs - December

2016

Inflated appraisals—alive & well! Shady lab reports—alive & well! MORAL HAZARD—ALIVE & WELL! - January

Clarity Enhancements v. Inherent Vice - February

How green is my emerald? - March

Cruise Jewelry - What's the problem? - April

Crown of Light ® - how special is it? - May

Diamonds at Auction — Big gems, big prices, and the trickle-down effect - June

Are you sure her wedding jewelry is covered? - July

What Affects Jewelry Valuation? - August

What to look for – on the jewelry appraisal, on the cert, and on other documents - September

Growing Bigger & Bigger Diamonds - October

Scam season is always NOW - November

Ocean Diamonds - December

2015

Pair & Set Jewelry Claims and the Accidental Tourist - January

Is that brand-name diamond a cut above the others? - February

Vacation Jewelry – Insurer beware! - March

Apple's Smartwatch – The risk of a wrist computer - April

Why you should read that appraisal - May

Smoking Gun! - June

Color-Grading Diamond: the Master Stones - July

Padparadscha—a special term for a special stone - August

Jewelry Appraisal Fees - September

Insuring a Rolex - steps to take, things to consider - October

Diamond camouflage and how to see through it - November

GIA Hacked! - December

2014

Who Grades? - January

Sales, discounts, price reductions, bargains, specials, mark-downs . . . . and valuation - February

Credential Conundrum - March

Frankenwatches - April

Fakes, fakes, and more fakes - May

Marketing Confusion — What is this gem anyway? - June

12 Reasons Not to Insure a Rolex! - July

Why NOT to insure a Rolex: Reasons 5-7 - August

Why NOT to insure a Rolex: Reasons 8-10 - September

Why NOT to insure a Rolex: Reasons 11-12 - October

The Doublet Masquerade - November

Is the gem suitable for the jewelry? Is this a good insurance risk? - December

2013

Wedding Rings on HO? NO! - January

Silver: the new gold - February

Point Protection - March

Tiffany v. Costco - April

What counts in valuing a diamond? - May

Appraising Jewelry - What’s a credential worth? - June

A Cutting Question concerning vintage diamonds - July

Synthesized Diamonds - Scam update - August

Pretty in Pink - Kunzite on parade... - September

Preventing jewelry losses - October

Scratch a diamond and you’ll find . . .??? - November

Synthetics in the Mix - December

2012

Advanced Gem Lab - A deeper look at colored gems - January

Whose Diamond? - February

Appraisal Inflation - It Keeps On Keeping On - March

Big Emerald - April

Changing colors and making gems: Are we seeing "beautiful lies"? - May

Diamonds - Out of Africa. . .or out of a lab? - June

Appraiser's Dream Contest - July

GIA & the Magic of Certificates - August

Pricey when it’s hot: What happens when it’s not? - September

Fooling With Gold - October

Tanzanite – December's stone - November

Branding Diamonds - What do those names mean? - December

2011

Unappraisable Jewelry - January

Replicas - Are they the real thing? - February

Composite Rubies- From bad to worse - March

Jewelry Hallmark - A Well-Kept Secret - April

Non-Disclosure: Following a Trail of Deception - May

Preserving the Diamond Dream - June

Spinel in the Spotlight - July

Jewelry 24/7 - Electronic Shopping - August

Diamond Bubble? - September

Disclosure: HPHT - October

"Hearts & Arrows" Diamonds - November

How a Gem Lab Looks at Diamonds - December

2010

Emeralds - And What They Include - January

Pink Diamonds: From Astronomical to Affordable - February

Palladium-the Other Precious White Metal - March

Bridal Jewelry - April

The Corundum Spectrum - May

How Photos Cut Fraud - and help the insured - June

The Price of Fad - July

Old Cut, New Cut-It's All about Diamonds - August

EightStar Diamonds-Beyond Ideal - September

The Hazard of Fakes - October

Jewelry with a Story - November

Counterfeit Watches - December

2009

Blue Diamond-cool, rare and expensive-sometimes - January

Turning Jewelry into Cash—
Strategy in a Bad Economy
- February

Enhancing the Stone - March

Being Certain about the Cert - April

Every Picture Tells a Story - May

Color-Grading Diamonds - June

The Newest Diamond Substitute - July

What Happens to Stolen Jewelry - August

Jewelry As an Investment - September

Black Diamond: Paradox of a Gem - October

Protect Your Homeowners Market—Keep Jewelry OFF HO Policies! - November

What’s So Great about JISO Appraisal Forms & Standards? - December

2008

Garnet - and Its Many Incarnations - January

Organic Gems - February

Do Your Jewelry Insurance Settlements Make You Look Bad? - March

Don't Be Duped by Fake JISO Appraisal - April

Diamonds in the Rough - May

The Cultured Club - June

Sapphire-Gem Superstar - July

It's a Certified Diamond! - But who's saying so? - August

FTC Decides: Culture Is In! - September

Paraiba Tourmaline – What's in a Name? - October

How Fancy is Brown? - November

CZ – The Great Pretender - December

2007

Moissanite's New Spin - January

Online Jewelry - Buying and Insuring - February

Blood Diamonds - March

Damaged Jewelry, Don't Assume! - April

Chocolate Pearls - May

Appraisal Puff-Up vs Useful Appraisal - June

It's Art, but is it Jewelry?- July

Diamonds Wear Coats of Many Colors - August

Danger! eBay Jewelry "Bargains" - September

TV Shopping for Jewelry - October

Enhanced Emerald: clever coverup - November

How do you like your rubies -
leaded or unleaded?
- December

2006

The New Platinum: A Story of Alloys - January

Ruby Ruse - February

How Big are Diamonds Anyway? - March

GIA Diamond Scandal
Has Silver Lining for Insurers
- April

Watch Out for Big-Box Retailers Insurance Appraisals - May

Mixing It Up: Natural and Synthetic Diamonds Together - June

Tanzanite - Warning: Fragile - July

Red Diamonds - August

Inflated Valuations & Questionable Certificates - September

Emeralds - October

Where Do Real Diamonds Come From? - November

Counterfeit Watches - The Mushroom War - December

2005

The Lure of Colored Diamonds - January

Synthetic Colored Diamonds - February

Watches: What to Watch for - March

When is a Pear not a Pair? - April

The Truth About Topaz - May

White Gold: How White is White? - June

One of a Kind - or Not - July

Jewelry in Disguise - August

Valued Contract for Jewelry? Proceed with Caution! - September

Antiques, Replicas and All Their Cousins - October

Grading the Color of Colored Diamonds - November

New GIA Cut Grade for Diamonds - December

2004

Synthetic Diamonds - and Insuring Tips - January

Bogus Appraisals and Fraud - February

A Picture is Worth Thousands of Dollars - March

Don't be Duped by Fracture Filling - April

Gem Scams Point to Need for Change - May

What is a Good Appraisal - June

4Cs of Color Gemstones - July

Gem Laser Drilling: The Next Generation - August

Why Update an Appraisal? - September

When to Recommend an Appraisal Update or a Second Appraisal - October

Secrets of Sapphire - November

Will the Real Ruby Please Stand Up - December

2003

Mysterious Orient:
A Tale of Loss
- January

Bogus Diamond Certificates and Appraisals - February

Can Valuations be Trusted? - March

Spotting a Bogus Appraisal or Certificate - April

Counterfeit Diamond Certificates - May

Case of the Mysterious "Rare" Sapphires - June

Politically Correct Diamonds - July

Name Brand Diamonds- September

Princess Cut: Black Sheep of Diamonds - October

Reincarnate as a Diamond - November

Synthetic Diamonds - December

2002

Irradiated Mail/Irradiated Gems - January

Fake Diamonds (Moissonite) - February

GIA Diamond Report - March

AGS and Other Diamond Certificates - April

Colored Stone Certificates - May

Damaged Jewelry: Don't Pay for Nature's Mistakes - June

The Case of the "Self-Healing" Emerald - July

Mysterious Disappearance: Case of the Missing Opals - August

The Discount Mirage - September

What Can You Learn from Salvage? - October

Gaining from Partial Loss - November

Year in Review - December

2001

Colored Diamonds - January

Good as Gold - February

Disclose Gem Treatments - March

FTC Jewelry Guidelines - April

Myths Part I: Each Piece is Unique - May

Myths Part II: Myths, Lies, & Half-Truths - June

New Trend: Old Cut Stones - October

The Appraisal Process - November

Year in Review - December

2000

Deceptive Pricing - January

Gems - Natural or Manmade - February

Jeweler/Appraisal Credentials - March

Fracture Filling - April

Salvage Jewelery - May

Gem Treatments - June

Don't Ask/Don't Tell - A Buying Nightmare - July

Laser Drilling of Diamonds - August

Jeweler Ethics or the Lack Thereof - September

Gem Scam - October

The Truth about Clarity Grading - November

Year in Review - December

 

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Grading lab-made diamonds

Lightbox, the DeBeers wing for lab-grown diamonds, began selling the gems a couple of years ago for super-low prices and without grading reports. They've now decided to grade their colorless diamonds.

When Lightbox opened in 2018, its pricing was based solely on carat weight. It deliberately did not assign color and clarity grades to its diamonds because, as CEO Bruce Cleaver put it, "We don't think they deserve to be graded. They're all the same."

The company's decision has changed, probably due to consumer feedback and perhaps also industry buzz. "All the same" is not exactly a statement of quality.

As of this month, each white (that is, colorless) Lightbox diamond of 0.2 carats or more will receive a card describing it as "near colorless" or better, with clarity of VS or above, and cut at least "very good." The spec card, pictured above, shows how these grades compare with the letter grades GIA established for mined diamonds.

The "grades" are statements of the gems' minimum qualities. The stones are not individually graded, because Lightbox does not believe it's worth the extra cost to individually grade each stone.

 "The manufacturing process makes the diamonds basically identical," explains Steve Coe of Lightbox. "There may be a slight difference between them, but we don't think it will add any greater value to put more information. They all cost the same amount of money to manufacture in the first place, so it doesn't make any sense to imply that one costs more to manufacture than another one."

According to Lightbox, stones that fail to meet the stated quality criteria are simply rejected and are not sold. (Probably they will be used for industrial purposes.)

Are the grades true?

Ordinarily, grading reports produced by the seller should not be taken at face value. But a GIA scientist examined a pair of Lightbox gems from a third-party vendor in 2019 (before Lightbox issued grading cards) and found them to be at the high end of the assigned ranges for color, clarity and cut.

GIA researchers say that 75% of the CVD-grown diamonds they encounter show evidence of post-growth HPHT (high pressure high temperature) treatment, an effective means of removing brownish tints from off-color diamonds. But a large amount of energy is needed to create sufficient heat and pressure, which can add significantly to the cost of production. The Lightbox diamonds show no evidence of HPHT treatment, meaning that Lightbox's diamond-growing technology is advanced enough to make color treatment unnecessary.

Grading scales from GIA's
Laboratory-Grown Diamond Report

GIA's grading terminology

In adopting verbal descriptions, Lightbox is following GIA's practice. For mined diamonds GIA's lab reports use a letter-grade system, but for lab-made diamonds they rely on general descriptive terms.

GIA's Laboratory-Grown Diamond Report describes the diamond's color as colorless, near colorless, faint, very light and light. Clarity is described as flawless, internally flawless, very very slightly included, very slightly included, slightly included and included.

GIA's justification for using words rather than letter grades is that laboratory-grown diamonds do not have the same range of color as mined diamonds, so the precision of the D-Z letter grades is not needed.

Although several years ago it was difficult to produce colorless diamonds of high quality, today's grown diamonds are generally colorless or close to colorless, or they are treated post-growth (usually by HPHT) to make them so. GIA feels descriptive words provide more information to consumers.

GIA's reports on lab-grown diamonds carry the standard letter-grade scales for comparison. The reports also disclose if the gem has been color-treated. The price of GIA's laboratory-grown diamond report is the same as for its grading report on mined diamonds, and both reports can be verified through the lab's Report Check feature.

More on terminology & marketing

Engagement ring from
Chatham Created Diamonds

The FTC guidelines recently removed "synthetic" as a recommended qualifier for lab-made diamonds. This change came in response to complaints that consumers took the word to mean fake. GIA subsequently updated its lab reports to use the term "laboratory-made" rather than "synthetic."

A poll several years ago found that the terms "lab-made" and "lab-grown" didn't have wide consumer appeal because they made a romantic and timeless symbol sound cold and impersonal. A major marketing overhaul has happened since them.

Lab-made gems are now marketed as socially and ecologically responsible.  Some companies emphasize their diamonds as grown. One company calls itself Pure Grown Diamonds. Others incorporate the manufacturer's name, such as Chatham Created Diamonds.

Lightbox officials make no bones about calling their diamonds manufactured products—deliberately distinguishing them from DeBeers' much more expensive mined diamonds.

FTC Guides require a lab-made diamond be accompanied by "clear and conspicuous" disclosure of its lab origin, suggesting terms such as laboratory-made, laboratory-grown, or man-made. The important thing is that the consumers be informed that the diamond is lab-made, not mined.

Lightbox earrings

Colored Diamonds

Lightbox's colored diamonds, in pink and pale blue, do not come with the spec card for quality. Their lab-grown colored and white diamonds both sell for the same price, $800 per carat.

 

FOR AGENTS & UNDERWRITERS

GIA had been offering Synthetic Diamond Reports for more than a decade, but in 2018 it changed the name to Laboratory-Grown Diamond Report. Many consumers will have these older reports, so insurers should be aware that synthetic means lab-made, and both terms signify a genuine diamond (not imitation).

All scheduled jewelry should have a detailed descriptive appraisal, even if there is a diamond report, because the jewelry should also be described. Also, an appraisal will confirm that the lab report matches the diamond in the jewelry being insured.

The appraisal should be from a reliable gemologist appraiser who is independent of the seller. Recommend a trained and qualified gemologist (GG, FGA+, or equivalent), preferably one who has additional insurance appraisal training. One course offering such additional training is the Certified Insurance Appraiser™ (CIA) course of the Jewelry Insurance Appraisal Institute.

The best appraisal includes the JISO 78/79 appraisal form. This form complies with all the recommendations of the FTC Guides.

Value is determined, ultimately, by the market. New technologies and an increasing number of diamond producers mean more competition, which can put the pricing of both lab-made and mined diamonds in flux.

In colored diamonds, the valuation difference between mined and lab-grown can be enormous. If a gem is being insured as mined, it is vital to be sure it is not lab-grown.

FOR ADJUSTERS

Mined and lab-made diamonds are both real diamond, but they differ widely in price. If an appraisal does not state whether the stone is mined or lab-grown—or if appraisals or other documents have unfamiliar terms or brand names—it's worth checking the internet. Reputable diamond-growers and retailers of lab-grown diamonds are proud of their products and have websites with a wealth of information about their products and processes.

Whether through ignorance, carelessness or deliberate fraud, information about gem treatments is often lacking on appraisals. All information about the jewelry's quality affects its value.

When a replacement is needed, it can be useful to consult a trained gemologist appraiser (GG or FGA+), who can compare documents from the replacement source with appraisal documents on file to be sure the replacement jewelry is appropriate to make the insured whole.


 

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