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						An investor's best friend? Israel Diamond Exchange 
						launches digital coins
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		 [February 08, 2018] 
		 By Ari Rabinovitch and Tova Cohen 
 RAMAT GAN, Israel (Reuters) - Israel's 
		diamond exchange is turning to digital currencies to inject new life 
		into a marketplace long ruled by cash and backroom handshakes, but it 
		must first persuade traditionally conservative players that the 
		technology can work.
 
 One of the world's largest diamond centers, the exchange hopes its 
		virtual currency will make trading more efficient and less opaque.
 
 Current transactions are "often carried out anonymously, with the shake 
		of a hand and minimal documentation", according to a recent report by 
		Israel's Justice Ministry. That murkiness has led the FBI and Europol to 
		target the trade as a vehicle for money laundering and crime financing.
 
 Narrow profit margins between rough and polished gems make it hard for 
		polishers to get financing, and banks have cut back lending or pulled 
		out entirely.
 
 Backers of the digital currency program believe it will help address 
		those issues.
 
		 
		"We foresee alignment behind this currency because it's going to make 
		things easy," Eli Avidar, managing director of the exchange, told 
		Reuters in an interview.
 "This industry is facing challenges, and this is going to in a lot of 
		aspects address those challenges ... the profitability element of the 
		business, the speed of doing business, money laundering aspects and the 
		problematic elements of banking nowadays," he said.
 
 The exchange is planning to launch two coins.
 
 The first, to be known as the Cut, will be available only to dealers on 
		a peer-to-peer basis. Traders from around the world will receive digital 
		wallets after being vetted by the exchange, similar to today's 
		background checks.
 
 Each transaction will be verified in a matter of minutes and be 
		available to the public on blockchain - a digital ledger maintained by a 
		random group of peers - but the identity of who owns what will be kept 
		private. The exchange can provide that information to regulators upon 
		official request.
 
 DIFFICULT TRANSFERS
 
 The Cut could solve increasing problems moving money between traders and 
		retailers, one mid-size diamond dealer said.
 
 "Transfers of money have become increasingly difficult. With banking 
		regulation, even the smallest move becomes complicated. It can take 
		days," said the dealer, who asked not to be identified because of the 
		sensitivity of the process.
 
 "Buyers don't want to give the money till they get the stone, and 
		sellers don't want to give the stone till they get the money."
 
 He wanted to see how it will be regulated, however, which may take some 
		time, given that the coins are being launched without any government 
		regulation in place, as is typical in the cryptocurrency world.
 
 Bitcoin, the original cryptocurrency, has lost 70 percent of its value 
		from its peak in December partly because of market concerns about a 
		global regulatory clampdown. Many bitcoin backers say regulation should 
		be welcomed.
 
 A spokeswoman for the Economy Ministry, which oversees the diamond 
		trade, says there has been no in-depth discussion yet on how the coins 
		would be regulated.
 
 Presale of the Cut went live at the International Diamond Week that 
		started on Monday. The coins should enter into use within a few weeks, 
		said Avishai Shoushan, CEO of the year-old CARATS.IO, which created the 
		coins for the exchange.
 
		
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			A trader inspects a 6.19 carat diamond worth 1.2 million dollars 
			during a four-day show at the trading floor of Israel's Diamond 
			Exchange in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv, Isreal August 29, 2013. 
			REUTERS/Nir Elias/File Photo 
            
			 
The coin is based on an index using 14 parameters, compared with just four 
characteristics used to price physical diamonds.
 Price is determined by an algorithm, because whereas gold is priced by the ounce 
or oil by the barrel, for example, diamonds are priced individually since each 
diamond is so different from the next.
 
 A second coin, Carat, will be issued later and is meant for institutional and 
retail investors who want to invest in the diamond market without taking 
possession of physical diamonds.
 
 "We are creating a way for people to invest in the market without actually 
buying and selling diamonds," Shoushan said.
 
 A quarter of the market value of both coins will be backed by diamonds held by a 
third party. All this, he said, should make the tokens "much less volatile 
compared to any other cryptocurrency."
 
HIGH SECURITY
 In the high security four-tower complex on the outskirts of Tel Aviv, $23 
billion changed hands between local and foreign traders in 2017. The area is 
known as the diamond district, and visitors coming by train access it across 
Diamonds Bridge.
 
 Visitors are fingerprinted before they can enter the buildings and look down on 
the world's largest trading floor. Should a diamond go missing, the entire 
complex locks down.
 
 Israel's diamond district is full of polishers who specialize in large, high-end 
diamonds. The country cannot compete in smaller stones with massive operations 
in India and China. The trade by nature is global. The State Bank of India has a 
branch beside the exchange.
 
 
Israel's diamond exports in 2017 fell 12 percent to $15.5 billion. Consultancy 
Bain said in a 2017 industry review that diamond jewelry sales, which according 
to De Beers hovered at $80 billion in 2016, were "stagnant". 
Slowing long-term demand and the shaky financial position of polishers are two 
big concerns, it said.
 Martin Rapaport, chairman of the highly influential Rapaport Group whose diamond 
price list is a global industry benchmark, has a big presence in Israel and may 
have to compete with the new system.
 
 He applauded the effort to expand diamond demand, but told Reuters he thought 
cryptocurrencies were "a bit of a fad" and is unsure of their sustainability.
 
 "Diamonds have an inherent value and that inherent value has been around for 
centuries. Whether or not you can take that and hype it into something modern 
and something interesting like a cryptocurrency is highly questionable," he 
said.
 
 (This story refiles to add dropped letter from company name, paragraph 17.)
 
 (Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
 
				 
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