A view of the diamond trading floor in Mumbai, where dealers negotiate the sale of polished stones.
MUMBAI · April 10, 2026 : India’s diamond industry, the engine that polishes nine out of every ten diamonds on Earth, is undergoing a forced metamorphosis. Centered in the industrial hub of Surat and the financial nerve center of Mumbai, the sector is reeling from a new 50% US tariff on Indian-cut stones. This geopolitical friction has triggered an immediate restructuring of global supply chains, as traders scramble to navigate a landscape where the cost of entry to the world’s largest consumer market has doubled overnight.
The Tariff Shock and Global Realignment
The 50% tariff has rendered direct exports from India to the United States economically unviable for many mid-market firms. In response, the industry is seeing a rapid shift toward "third-country" processing. Rough diamonds are being routed through alternative hubs: such as Dubai or Botswana: to undergo final finishing or certification, attempting to legally distance the finished product from the Indian tariff origin. While this adds logistical complexity, it remains cheaper than the steep American levy. Industry leaders in Mumbai warn that this is a survival tactic as the trade balance shifts.

From Factory to Flagship
Despite the trade pressure, India is doubling down on its domestic potential. The recent opening of the world’s largest Forevermark flagship store in Mumbai signals a pivot from being merely a global workshop to becoming a primary consumption market. By capturing more of the value chain internally, Indian firms hope to insulate themselves from external trade shocks. The strategy is clear: if the West makes it harder to export, India will build the infrastructure to sell high-end luxury to its own burgeoning middle class.
Vertical Integration as Survival
The crisis in Antwerp has already left a vacuum in the global trade, and India’s current struggle with the US adds a layer of volatility. With the rise of lab-grown alternatives and shifting consumer habits, the Surat-Mumbai axis is at a crossroads. The survival of the 500,000-strong workforce depends on whether the industry can successfully rebrand itself from a high-volume polisher to a vertically integrated luxury powerhouse.
Source: https://news.bcd-w.com
Mumbai / Surat / Diamond / India / US Tariffs / Trade


