Bahraini Pearls
Bahraini Pearls
Hi,
I just returned from 10 days in the Kingdom of Bahrain, one of the world centers of the Natural Pearl business. This visit included meetings with Bahrain Customs to understand their very tight restrictions on bringing pearls into the country, meetings with the Bahrain Gem and Pearl Laboratory which must certify pearls as natural, and with some of the oldest pearl trading houses and elite jewelers in the Kingdom. One of my aims centered on determining whether, or to what degree, new Bahraini pearls exist.
Most of the traders and jewelers said that there is VERY little new pearl production in Bahrain, and some said there is none. However, I met one man who pulled a small bag from his safe to show me what he believes is essentially all of Bahrain's production for 2008. In total, this amounted to about the size of an orange, with almost all of them very small, in the 2-3mm range, however with nice shapes, good luster, and lovely colors chiefly in the cream to light gold shades, and with the largest around 9mm. In private, many traders admit many of the pearls sold come from other countries, go through the certification process at the Bahrain Laboratory, and subsequently are sold as Bahraini Certified Pearls.
Bahrain, an island kingdom approximately 45 miles by 20 miles, has oil and natural gas revenues fueling a rational modernization program, far less leveraged by loans than Dubai, where a real estate bubble threatens to burst. Bahrain hopes to weather the global recession better than most. Nevertheless, at the Jewellery Arabia show at the Convention Center, where lavish booths by Cartier, Van Cleef and Arpels, and all the big houses, volumes of sales were off more than 50%compared to last year, despite huge crowds of wealthy Saudi Arabians.
The official rules of the Kingdom state that NO CULTURED pearls may be sold or imported. However, there were tens of thousands of cultured pearls for sale at the show; and jewelers in the city all have cultured pearls readily for sale.
The general level of knowledge of natural versus cultured pearls seems highest of anywhere I have visited, and the prices of natural pearls are correspondingly favorable. The consensus opinion is that the value of natural ocean pearls is steadily increasing due to underlying demand and diminished supply. The local market favors necklaces strung of round pearls, often with the center gem only 8mm, graduating down to 2 or 3mm, but nicely matched and with good luster, commonly enhanced by any number of techniques, including bleaching, polishing, and use of other chemicals to improve the look. This working is done after the certification is completed and is considered normal, just as cutting and polishing of diamonds would be considered not only normal but absolutely required. Buyers have little interest in natural pearls that do not have perfect shape.
The government has studies in progress aiming to somehow restore the pearl fishery of Bahrain. Diving is difficult and dangerous, plus the money paid to the divers is a tiny fraction of what the pearl sells for in the marketplace. Thus, the price of pearls from some rejuvenated fishery will surely escalate.
The Bahraini people rank with the friendliest I've ever encountered, the food is good, the weather at this time of year like the nicest day in California, and very safe to stroll at any time, day or night. I highly recommend pearl lovers spend a few days in Bahrain, where tourist companies can easily arrange for you to go on a pearl diving sail, where you will dive yourself.
Best to all,
Tom Stern,MD