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Wednesday 29 June 2016 9:16 pm

Giant 1,109-carat diamond fails to sell at Sotheby’s auction

By: William Turvill

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The biggest uncut diamond to be discovered in more than a century has failed to sell at auction.

Lucara Diamond Corp has announced that its giant Lesedi la Rona gem will be retained by the company after bidding at a Sotheby’s auction in London did not meet the reserve price.

Read more: Petra Diamonds unearths 121 carat white diamond

The 1,109-carat diamond was discovered by the Vancouver-based company in its Botswana mine last November.

https://twitter.com/LucaraDiamond/status/748205120320483328

It was expected to sell for more than $70m (£52.1m), but the highest bid reached $61m, according to Reuters.

Lucara’s share price fell 16 per cent to $3.31 on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Read more: People are buying fewer diamonds now it's summer

When the stone was found, Lucara president and chief executive William Lamb said: "The significance of the recovery of a gem quality stone larger than 1,000 carats, the largest for more than a century and the continued recovery of high quality stones from the south lobe, cannot be overstated.

"Our focus on mining the south lobe, which is delivering value beyond expectation, has been perfectly timed with the commissioning of our recent plant modifications, enabling the recovery of these large, high quality exceptional diamonds."

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