Product intelligence · HS 710239 · 2024 data

Diamonds: non-industrial, (other than unworked or simply sawn, cleaved or bruted), but not mounted or set

Global exports of diamonds: non-industrial, (other than unworked or simply sawn, cleaved or bruted), but not mounted or set totalled $50,500,840,439 in 2024, a -25.1% change from the previous year. Traded by 140 countries across 1,866 bilateral corridors, with demand from 141 importing markets. The long-term trend is rapid decline.

Data: OECD BIMTS · Coverage: 19952024 · Updated: 2026-07-17

Global trade

$50.5B

-25.1% YoY

3Y / 5Y CAGR

-10.3%

5Y: -7.0%

Supply structure

Moderately concentrated

HHI 0.157

Volatility

Low

Score 18/100

1.

Market movement

In 2024, diamonds: non-industrial, (other than unworked or simply sawn, cleaved or bruted), but not mounted or set trade exhibited significant decline, with global flows reaching $50,500,840,439 and a three-year compound annual growth rate of -10.3% (five-year: -7.0%). The all-time peak of $103,836,221,790 was recorded in 2011; the current level is 51% below that high-water mark.

Over the 30-year observation window (19952024), 62% of years recorded positive growth, indicating a mildly upward trajectory with periodic contractions. Trend momentum is decelerating (-4.8% acceleration).

The World Trade Flows Characterization classifies diamonds: non-industrial, (other than unworked or simply sawn, cleaved or bruted), but not mounted or set as "Two-way trade" in the unclassified price segment, providing additional context for market positioning and competitive dynamics.

2.

Supply & demand structure

The supply side is moderately concentrated (Herfindahl-Hirschman Index 0.157). The three largest exporters — India ($16.2B), United States ($7.1B), and Israel ($5.3B) — collectively dominate supply flows. The leading exporter has grown at -13.2% over the last three years.

On the demand side, importer concentration is diversified (HHI 0.120). The three largest import markets are United States ($12.8B), Hong Kong ($6.5B), and United Arab Emirates ($5.2B). The largest importing market sources from 83 different supplying countries.

Estimated substitution elasticity: -10.45. Buyers are highly price-sensitive and can switch between suppliers relatively easily.

The dominant trade corridor is India → United States at $4.8B, representing 37.7% of the importer's total demand.

3.

Risk profile & trade outlook

The volatility score for diamonds: non-industrial, (other than unworked or simply sawn, cleaved or bruted), but not mounted or set is 18 out of 100, classified as low. Trade flows are relatively stable compared to other HS6 products, suggesting mature supply chains and predictable demand.

For market entrants, contracting demand signals caution before committing resources. A moderately concentrated market rewards differentiated positioning and strategic partner selection.

Data confidence is rated "High" based on reporting coverage and consistency across OECD member and partner countries.

Historical evidence

Annual trade value 19952024

Peak: $103,836,221,790 in 2011. Currently 51% below peak.

YearGlobal trade (USD)YoY growth
2015$80,684,017,830-9.3%
2016$78,648,542,645-2.5%
2017$79,727,420,021+1.4%
2018$82,434,341,172+3.4%
2019$72,758,523,934-11.7%
2020$46,386,087,476-36.2%
2021$69,898,984,763+50.7%
2022$80,267,884,859+14.8%
2023$67,408,034,908-16.0%
2024$50,500,840,439-25.1%

Top exporting countries

Ranked by export value of diamonds: non-industrial, (other than unworked or simply sawn, cleaved or bruted), but not mounted or set in 2024.

View all 140 exporters →

Top importing markets

Largest import destinations for diamonds: non-industrial, (other than unworked or simply sawn, cleaved or bruted), but not mounted or set.

View all 141 markets →

Leading trade corridors

Largest bilateral export flows for diamonds: non-industrial, (other than unworked or simply sawn, cleaved or bruted), but not mounted or set, ranked by value. Click any country to view its full profile.

#ExporterImporterValue 20243Y CAGR
1IndiaUnited States$4.8B-22.2%
2IsraelUnited States$3.8B-8.0%
3IndiaIndia$2.9B
4IndiaUnited Arab Emirates$2.5B+9.3%
5United StatesHong Kong$2.2B+17.4%
6United StatesIsrael$1.5B-9.0%
7IndiaBelgium$1.5B-10.7%
8BelgiumUnited States$1.3B+8.0%

Showing top 8 of 10 corridors with available data for 2024.

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Sources, definitions & methodology

Data source

OECD Bilateral International Merchandise Trade Statistics (BIMTS). Aggregated from 312M+ reported trade records across 200+ countries and 5,300+ HS6 product codes. Coverage: 19952024.

Key indicators

HHI (Herfindahl-Hirschman Index): market concentration, 0 = fully diversified, 1 = single player. CAGR: compound annual growth rate over a stated period. Volatility score: trade value variability, 0–100 scale.

How this page is made

All statistical content on this page is data-driven, composed programmatically from live OECD trade records. No generic AI-generated prose is used. Analytical paragraphs combine real data points with factual interpretation. This page was last refreshed on 2026-07-17.