Is the 500-Pound Beleza Emerald Really Worth $280 million?
A couple claims the Beleza Emerald was lost in the Camp Fire of 2018 and was worth $280 million. The valuation doesn't add up to us, and we explain why.
2 Minute Read
An Impending Legal Battle
Apparently, there's an impending legal battle with Pacific Gas and Electric — who was found liable for the faulty wires that started the fire — over whether or not the specimen was actually in the Bieglers' possession, if it was actually destroyed, and how much it was worth. The Bieglers claim the stone was mined in Brazil and that it's worth an attention-grabbing $280 million USD.
The Beleza Emerald Raises Some Red Flags
IGS will be very interested to hear more about how this valuation was determined. It raises red flags and alarm bells for a few reasons.
- Nearly all of the extremely large emerald specimens we've seen over the years are nothing more than enormous slabs of mica and quartz sprinkled with low-grade emerald crystals. For a specimen of this size to have real value, it must consist primarily of large, gem-quality, facet-grade emerald rough of exceptional color and clarity.
- For the past five decades, Brazil has been an important source of gem-quality emeralds for the world's jewelry industry. If the crystals in the specimen had real value as facet rough, the Brazilians would simply cut them into gems. It's pretty simple economics. The market for a bunch of high-quality faceted emeralds is far larger than the market for one very large emerald "specimen."
- Brazilian gem traders are market savvy and participate in all international gem and jewelry trade shows. They know what they're doing. When these large Brazilian emerald specimens make the news, seasoned experts have most likely already passed on them. These crystal clusters probably contain only a small percentage of commercial-grade material and even less facet-grade emerald.
How Does the Beleza Emerald Valuation Compare to the Bahia Emerald?
Taking a comparable sales approach to valuation, the numbers just don't add up. Take, for example, the 341-kg (approximately 752 pounds) "Bahia Emerald," discovered in Bahia, Brazil in 2001. Forbes says this specimen "could be worth $309 million." Based on photos published online, the Bahia Emerald seems to be only about 10% emerald. The rest consists of mica and quartz matrix.
If you extracted 34 kg of actual rough emerald from the Bahia, it would yield approximately 34,000 carats of cut stones. Closeup photos indicate it's predominantly low to medium-quality material, maybe suitable for bead making and cabbing — but not faceting. Therefore, assigning a generous $100 per-carat average value brings the total to a little over $3 million. That's about 1% of the highly speculative $309 million figure in Forbes.
Apply the same formula to this 500-pound "solid block of black schist and quartz with green crystals" and you'd be lucky to reach $2.3 million. Like I said, Brazilian gem traders are market savvy. If they thought they could have extracted $2.3 million worth of cut emeralds from this massive specimen, it never would have left Brazil intact.
Of course, anything is possible in life. We haven't seen the specimen or even a picture of it. However, based on the little information we do have, something seems off here. If anyone has more information on the Beleza Emerald, we'd love to include it and expand this article's scope.
Jeffery Bergman, SSEF SGC
With humble roots from a non-gem trade family, as a lapidary hobbyist, Jeffery cut and polished his first gemstone at the age of fourteen launching him on a lifelong career which has taken him to more than 70 countries, and every continent except Antarctica. With 5 decades of broad-based experience in natural gemstones, diamonds and fine jewelry, in 2020 Jeffery founded Eighth Dimension Gems (formerly Primagem) in Bangkok, Thailand, where he has lived for over 30 years.
Jeffery’s formal gemmological training was accomplished at the prestigious Swiss Gemmological Institute in Basel, Switzerland where he passed requisite exams for his SSEF Basic Gemmology (BGC) and SSEF Basic Diamonds (BDC) Diplomas. Additionally, he completed SSEF’s Advanced Pearls (ATC), Advanced Colored Stones (ATC), and Scientific Gemmology (SGC) courses.
Featured in many gem and jewelry periodicals, Jeffery has also appeared in interviews on the ABC, BBC, CCTV, CNA, CNN, NBC and GEO. He has been quoted in Time, USA Today, National Geographic, Discover, GIA’s Gems & Gemology, Gem-A’s Journal of Gemmology, ICA’s InColor, Rivista Italiana di Gemmologia/Italian Gemological Review and many other publications around the world. A guest speaker at seven GIA Gem Gatherings as well as many gemological conferences & universities, Jeffery is also an Honorary Professor for the AIGS – Asian Institute of Gemological Sciences in Bangkok, Thailand.
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