U.S. tariff hike to cut Indian diamond polishers’ revenue by 28-30% this fiscal: CRISIL

Mr. Jindal
5 Min Read

The imposition of 50% tariffs (25% reciprocal plus 25% penalty) by the U.S. on gem and jewellery is expected to lead to a revenue fall of India’s natural diamond polishing industry by a steep 28-30% to $12.50 billion this fiscal, compared with $16 billion last fiscal, CRISIL Ratings said in a note. 

The blow will follow a 40% degrowth over the past three fiscals because of a fall in both prices and sales volume of natural diamonds as demand in the U.S. and China dropped, and competition from lab-grown diamonds rose, it said.

The 50% tariffs, effective this week, makes exports to the U.S. tough for two reasons: one, the industry’s low margins make absorption of the incremental levy very difficult and two, declining demand means passing on the incremental burden to consumers will not be easy, it said.

The consequent reduced operating leverage could erode the operating margin of diamond polishers by 50-100 basis points and pressurise their credit profiles, it added.

“Our analysis of 43 diamond polishers, accounting for nearly a fourth of the industry’s revenues, indicates as much,” the rating agency said.

The Indian polished diamond industry derives 80% of its revenues from exports while the U.S. is a key market for India and accounted for as much as 35% of its exports. 

Sales had begun getting impacted after a 10% tariff was imposed in April 2025. Hence, the share of the US in India’s polished natural diamonds slid 1100 basis points in the first four months of this fiscal to 24%, CRISIL said.

But in a proactive move, diamond polishers had cranked up production in July and August to meet the anticipated festival demand in the US. 

“Not surprisingly, exports surged 18% in July on-year. And competition from lab-grown diamonds in markets such as the US will continue to dent revenues, with the variety having already captured ~60% of the market share by volume. Subdued Chinese demand adds to these woes,” the rating agency said.

Rahul Guha, Senior Director, CRISIL Ratings, said, “The upshot is that revenues for the domestic industry, which polishes 95% of all diamonds produced in the world, is set to drop to its lowest since 2007.”

“To be sure, consumption in India has been increasing sequentially over the years, but the incremental demand doesn’t have the heft to fully offset the losses in the U.S. and China. Additionally, while the UAE has emerged as a dominant hub for India’s exports with its share doubling to ~20%, on year, the risks of a substantial downturn in revenues are high,” he said.

The industry’s ability to navigate the market dynamics, including tariffs, is crucial to its future. Diamond polishers can take three steps: increase domestic sales; push sales in alternative geographies; and set up polishing facilities in trading hubs as rerouting via low-tariff nations is not an option, he said. 

Even if retailers explore alternative sourcing options in lower-tariff countries such as the UAE or Belgium, a significant portion of the diamonds would still be polished in India and thus subject to higher tariff, he added.

And given the falling demand, US retailers are unlikely to absorb the tariff cost. Hence, operating margins of diamond polishers would decline to 3.5-4.0% after dropping 100 bps in the past three fiscals from a peak of 5.5% in fiscal 2023.

Diamond polishers are expected to keep a lean inventory to control debt. Miners have cut production to limit the fall in prices, in line with subdued demand. Timely collection from customers abroad will be monitorable amid slowing demand. Debt levels of diamond polishers should reduce over the medium term.

Himank Sharma, Director, CRISIL Ratings said, “While limited reliance on external debt has helped diamond polishers maintain a stable capital structure, declining scale of operations and pressure on profitability will likely test their credit risk profiles. Specifically, while the financial leverage1 is expected to be relatively stable at 0.7-0.8 time, the interest coverage could decline to 2 times from 2.3-2.5 times last fiscal.”

In the road ahead, demand for natural diamonds in key markets will need close monitoring, given the tariff landscape and geopolitical uncertainties, CRISIL said. 

Published – August 28, 2025 03:40 pm IST

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