You walk into a jewelry store with a diamond ring. The jeweler examines it, disappears into the back for a few minutes, and returns with a number. The number is lower than you expected. You leave, try two more stores, get similar numbers, and begin to wonder whether your diamond is simply not worth what you thought.
Here is what is actually happening — and why the offers you are receiving do not reflect what your diamond is worth in a fair market.
The Single-Buyer Problem
When you walk into a jewelry store, you are presenting your diamond to a single buyer. That buyer has several structural advantages over you:
- They know the current wholesale market price. You probably do not.
- They know what they can resell the stone for. You do not.
- They know you are likely to walk to two or three other stores before giving up. They know the range of offers you will receive is narrow.
- They have no competition. There is no other buyer at the table bidding against them.
In this environment, the rational strategy for the buyer is to offer the minimum price at which they believe you will sell. They have no incentive to offer more. A higher offer does not increase their chance of winning your diamond — you are sitting across from them either way. It just reduces their margin.
A single offer is not a market price. It is the floor one buyer thinks you will accept.
How Jewelry Store Economics Work
A retail jewelry store buying a diamond from the public is not operating as a pure collector. They need to resell what they buy, and they need to do so at a profit that covers their overhead — rent, staff, insurance, security — and leaves a margin. On 47th Street in Manhattan, where rents are significant, that overhead is substantial.
A typical dealer buying a diamond from a member of the public will need to pay enough below wholesale that they have room to resell to another dealer, or to set the stone in jewelry for retail sale, and still make a meaningful return. The offer you receive reflects all of this math — math that is invisible to you in the moment.
This is not dishonesty. It is simply how a business with real costs operates. Understanding it allows you to approach the situation clearly rather than with frustration.
The Information Asymmetry
The deeper issue is information. The dealer knows things you do not:
- What comparable stones sold for at the last diamond show
- Which buyers in their network are currently looking for exactly this type of stone
- What the current Rapaport price list shows for this color, clarity, and carat weight
- How long it will take to move the stone and at what price
The Rapaport Diamond Report — the wholesale price benchmark used throughout the industry — is not public. It is a subscription service used by dealers. Without it, you are negotiating blind.
What Competition Does to the Price
The dynamic changes completely when buyers know they are competing. A dealer who must bid against other dealers to win your stone has a different calculation. Now, bidding low means losing. The incentive shifts from minimizing the offer to maximizing it — up to the point where the price exceeds their profitable resale value.
This is basic auction theory, and it is exactly what the Diamond District does internally when dealers trade with each other. It is also, notably, what does not happen when you walk in off the street alone.
Studies of sealed-bid auction formats consistently show that competitive bidding produces prices 15-40% higher than single-buyer negotiations for the same assets. For a $20,000 diamond, that is a $3,000 to $8,000 difference.
What You Can Do
There are a few approaches that change the dynamic in your favor:
- Collect multiple offers yourself. If you visit ten dealers and collect written offers, you create a de facto auction. This works, but it takes significant time, requires comfort navigating the Diamond District, and still limits you to the buyers who happen to be available on the day you visit.
- Use a broker with competitive access. A broker who can present your stone to multiple buyers simultaneously — as dealers do among themselves — creates the competitive dynamic without you having to manage it. The key is finding a broker whose fee structure does not eat the difference.
- Understand your floor before you go. If you have a GIA certificate, you can look up current Rapaport price benchmarks through services like RapNet, or ask a gemologist to give you a realistic resale range before you approach any buyer. Walking in with this knowledge fundamentally changes the conversation.
Parure was built precisely because this problem is structural and solvable. We present your piece to our vetted network of buyers simultaneously, under a sealed-bid format, so that competition — not your negotiating confidence — determines the price.
Published by the Parure team, New York.