20 May 2016

Why this green stone can be worth more than gold

The BBC has an article by Tim McDonald about some expensive stone:

During the Han dynasty, the wealthiest Chinese noblemen were sometimes buried in jade suits (photo) made from hundreds of small jade tiles linked together, sometimes using gold thread. It was a lavish display of status, but it also suggested that jade offered protection from physical decay. For centuries since, there has been a deep connection between Chinese culture and the smooth green stone.
“Jade usually represents good health and long life for Chinese people,” according to Kent Wong, managing director of Hong Kong luxury jeweler Chow Tai Fook.
Jade suits are no longer in fashion, but China’s appetite for the stone has grown as the country has become wealthier. Credit Suisse says there are now a hundred million middle class people in China collectively holding $7.3tn in financial assets and real estate. More than two million Chinese are millionaires.
With figures like that it’s no wonder more Chinese are buying luxury products like jade, which has in recent years experienced double-digit growth, Wong said. Demand for jade is driven almost entirely by the Chinese market. At the top end, it can be worth more than gold.
In fact, it’s so valuable, that criminals half a world away are taking notice. A gang in the UK was recently sentenced to prison for plundering jade artifacts from museums and an auction house. The artifacts were estimated to be worth up to eighty million dollars on the Chinese auction market, although criminal blundering ensured they never got there.
Why is it so valuable? Jade is in fact a catch-all title for two chemically different substances that are physically similar. Jadeite, which comes exclusively from Burma, is by most accounts the more prized of the two. But nephrite, which traditionally comes from western China, was in use long before jadeite became popular.
Older Chinese nephrite pieces sometimes command huge figures at auction. Bonhams auction house in Hong Kong recently sold a collection of historical jade items for over twenty million dollars, dating from as early as the Neolithic period. It’s a big number, but it’s not investors who are buying. “In my experience, nobody treats Chinese archaic jade as an investment vehicle. It’s a highly specialized, highly scholarly, very narrow sector of the collectors’ market,” said Colin Sheaf, the head of Asian art at Bonhams.
Investors typically seek out something with broader appeal. Often that means jadeite jewelry. Art deco pieces are particularly prized. In October of 2015, Sotheby’s Hong Kong sold an art deco jadeite brooch by Cartier for nearly a million dollars.
Jade is popular with Hollywood celebrities, too. Jessica Chastain wore jade earrings to the premiere of Interstellar in 2014.
The deputy chairman of Sotheby’s Asia, Quek Chin Yeow, thinks there’s money to be made at the top end of the market, but only if you know what you’re buying. “Like all investment possibilities, you have to select the right pieces,” he said.
Picking a winner can be tricky, though, because every piece of jade is different, and figuring out what each one is worth is more of an art than a science. There are labs that can determine the chemical makeup of the stone, and whether it’s chemically treated, or if it’s an outright fake. But there’s no “jade index” that gives a price per ounce like there is for gold.
Color is often the first thing buyers look for. Jade is almost synonymous with green, and bright emerald shades of the color are still the most prized. But jade comes in many hues, ranging from blue to lavender to “icy” white, which has increased significantly in price in recent years. Buyers also look for size, shape, transparency, texture, and craftsmanship. A jade bangle, for instance, is often a good investment because it can only be made with high-quality material, according to Wong. As with anything, the higher the quality, the higher the value.
With jade, auction sale records often provide the best indicator of price. The single most expensive jade item ever sold is the Hutton-Mdivani Necklace (photo). It was owned by Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton. Made of 27 graduated bright emerald green jadeite beads with a clasp set with diamonds and rubies, the necklace sold for nearly thirty million dollars at auction in 2014, more than six times the price it sold for at auction twenty years earlier.
But, if the top end of the market seems glamorous, there’s a dirty underbelly to the industry, which by some estimates is worth eight billion dollars. Jadeite comes from Myanmar (formerly known as Burma), and there are serious concerns over labor and human rights in the mining industry there, so much so that the US left in place sanctions on the jade industry there, even as it removed them from most other sectors of the country’s economy.
There’s no certification process to prove to consumers that their purchase has been sourced ethically. On the other hand, Quek points out that some of the most prized jade items are decades or even centuries old, and tracing the source would be virtually impossible.
As with any investment, there’s always the possibility that market conditions will change. Although there are enthusiastic jade lovers the world over, it’s a market that depends very heavily on growth in China. But China’s economy isn’t growing as fast as it once did. It’s currently seeing its slowest growth in over twenty years. Even so, if it hits the government target of six to seven percent growth, that still equates to an enormous amount of wealth being added to the country’s economy every year.
There are other concerns too. Many luxury goods have taken a beating recently, in part because of the Chinese government’s crackdown on corruption, which has been blamed for all manner of things, from declining gambling revenues in Macau, to slowing fortunes for high end wine-makers, slow sales of Tibetan mastiffs, and, indeed, jade.
Wong thinks there’s no government policy that could derail a love affair with jade that dates back to the Neolithic period. He believes that, as China becomes wealthier and its appetite for jade grows, the price is only likely to climb.
Rico says he likes it, but can't afford it...

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