jshepherd
Pearl Paradise
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2004
- Messages
- 6,294
This is an interesting read if you didn't catch the actual episode. Investigators bought a bunch of akoya strands from a handful of national jewelry chains and had them examined by a couple of professionals. It turns out they were all basically junk and goes on to warn buyers that they need to be sure to purchase quality akoya pearls.
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=126354
It's a good piece and mirrors one that was done a few years back, but I think it misses the main point.
Those retailers don't go to Japan or Hong Kong and select pearls themselves. They aren't pearl experts, or experts at buying or selecting pearls. They sell all types of jewelry. Their sales people aren't trained in pearls. They don't really know or understand what they are selling. They are only guilty of one thing - trusting their suppliers are selling a quality product.
There are only a handful of companies in the United States that supply nearly every one of those national chain jewelers and mom & pops. One of the companies is based near here and I personally witnessed the owner buy a large lot of 6-7 mm range akoya in Hong Kong that most members would consider junk for about $40 per strand. Most of the others are on the East Coast. They are the ones buying this junk and passing it off to their wholesale accounts as quality jewelry and it's a problem almost exclusive to akoya.
Why? You can't call a cheap freshwater pearl that is potato-shaped, has rings, surface blemishing and dull luster “fine.” Well, I shouldn't say that. I've seen 2-3 dollar Hong Kong strands called gem before, but even someone with failing eyesight can see what they really are.
Akoya are different. They are almost always round, so when compared with freshwater, they always win on shape. They inherently have better luster, so when compared with a dull freshwater, even the low-grade akoya still look ok. Customers and the retailers just don't know what they are buying. They don't know that a strand of $499 akoya was sold to the first set of hands for $40.
What about the akoya that was $499 when it was sold to the first set of hands? That is a quality strand of pearls you will find selling in a very high-priced retail store, often with a brand name and premium description attached and a price tag to match. The same wholesalers buy good quality too. But that isn’t where the money is made.
A few days ago, I posted in another thread that if pearls ever became commoditized in the way diamonds are, most companies that sell pearls would either go out of business or need to be completely restructured. This is why and they know it.
A better investigation, in my opinion, would have been to examine the suppliers and find out how large markups are every time their pearls cross a border or exchange hands.
http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=126354
It's a good piece and mirrors one that was done a few years back, but I think it misses the main point.
Those retailers don't go to Japan or Hong Kong and select pearls themselves. They aren't pearl experts, or experts at buying or selecting pearls. They sell all types of jewelry. Their sales people aren't trained in pearls. They don't really know or understand what they are selling. They are only guilty of one thing - trusting their suppliers are selling a quality product.
There are only a handful of companies in the United States that supply nearly every one of those national chain jewelers and mom & pops. One of the companies is based near here and I personally witnessed the owner buy a large lot of 6-7 mm range akoya in Hong Kong that most members would consider junk for about $40 per strand. Most of the others are on the East Coast. They are the ones buying this junk and passing it off to their wholesale accounts as quality jewelry and it's a problem almost exclusive to akoya.
Why? You can't call a cheap freshwater pearl that is potato-shaped, has rings, surface blemishing and dull luster “fine.” Well, I shouldn't say that. I've seen 2-3 dollar Hong Kong strands called gem before, but even someone with failing eyesight can see what they really are.
Akoya are different. They are almost always round, so when compared with freshwater, they always win on shape. They inherently have better luster, so when compared with a dull freshwater, even the low-grade akoya still look ok. Customers and the retailers just don't know what they are buying. They don't know that a strand of $499 akoya was sold to the first set of hands for $40.
What about the akoya that was $499 when it was sold to the first set of hands? That is a quality strand of pearls you will find selling in a very high-priced retail store, often with a brand name and premium description attached and a price tag to match. The same wholesalers buy good quality too. But that isn’t where the money is made.
A few days ago, I posted in another thread that if pearls ever became commoditized in the way diamonds are, most companies that sell pearls would either go out of business or need to be completely restructured. This is why and they know it.
A better investigation, in my opinion, would have been to examine the suppliers and find out how large markups are every time their pearls cross a border or exchange hands.
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