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Visiting the offices of gemstone miner Tanzanite One (TNZ), in northern
In ones and twos, the Massai arrive at the company’s Arusha office on flash new mopeds, their tartan ponchos slung over their shoulders. They have the latest cell phones glued to their ears. One for business, another for the wife, and as Tanzanite One’s then chief executive Ian Harbottle, explained to me when I visited the site last year, “another for the mistress.”
Inside though, the 50 or so locals had other things on their mind, as they awaited their turn to show off the blue tanzanite gems they’d found on their own digs. When ready, they’d watch the jeweller meticulously cast his loupe over their tanzanite, before weighing them for quality. After a wait of an hour or so, they could walk out with as much as $2,000-$3,000. Not bad for two or three weeks’ work.
Tanzanite has been good to Arusha. And Arusha, nestled under the icy glaze of
But it’s not just gemstone production that’s booming in
Business is booming in
Why you should get into gemstones
Tanzanite One has proved itself adept at mining one of them. The world’s largest producer of the blue-hued gemstone, it saw full year profits more than double in 2007. Net income rose 267% to $6.6m, or 8.58 cents a share, from $1.8m, or 2.3 cents a year earlier, on the back of a 38% rise in production.
Demand for the rare blue gem has also increased, partly down to Tanzanite One’s canny positioning of the gem as a ‘birthstone’. A man is meant to give it to his wife on the birth of their first baby, a marketing tool which echoes De Beers’ successful campaign to associate diamonds with getting engaged.
Prices for gemstones are doing well, says Scott Finlay, an analyst with London-based Canaccord Adams “and historically, have appreciated when the US dollar has weakened. So getting into gemstone producers right now is a good strategy,” he says citing Tanzanite One and Gemfields, an emerald miner, as two examples.
We certainly like Tanzanite One, and have done for a while. But bounty lies elsewhere in Africa too, and the City here in
Frontier markets could prove resilient
Frontier markets, the sorts of economies that hitherto would have scared off all but the boldest or most reckless investors, could prove to be quite resilient to a
Over the past seven years, frontier markets such as
So as the Dow Jones and US dollar continue to tick down, it might not be a bad idea to start buying some tanzanite, or Tanzanite One at least. And
Do bear in mind however, that frontier markets aren’t called frontier for nothing – only invest money that you can afford to lose, or at least see subjected to fairly volatile movements. If you’re looking for a fund, all require sizeable initial investments, but New Star’s Heart of Africa fund, can be bought through a fund supermarket such as Hargreaves Lansdown, which enables you to invest less than the minimum investment of £12,500 which applies if you go direct to the fund manager.
Turning to the wider markets…
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Economic worries return to Wall Street
In
Across the
On Wall Street, stocks fell for a second consecutive day as the technology sector weighed following disappointing results from Oracle and Google. The Dow Jones fell 120 points to end the day at 12,302. The broader S&P 500 was down 15 points, at 1,325. And the tech-heavy Nasdaq slumped 43 points to close at 2,280.
In
Pound tumbles on bearish housing data
Crude oil had fallen back to $106.60 this morning and Brent spot was down by over a dollar, at $104.28.
Spot gold tracked oil lower this morning, falling to $942.60 from $951.80 in
Turning to forex, the pound was broadly lower this morning as weak consumer and housing data (see below) pointed to an economic slowdown.
And in
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