A rare pink diamond has sold for HK$453.2 million (US$57.7 million) in Hong Kong, setting a record for price per carat paid at auction for any diamond or gemstone, according to Sotheby’s auction house.

The 11.15-carat Williamson Pink Star on Friday fetched the second-highest price paid at auction for any jewel, Sotheby’s added.

The winning bid, made by an undisclosed buyer from Boca Raton, in the US state of Florida, was more than twice the estimated US$21 million sale price (HK$164,849,010).

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The stone was the second-largest pink diamond to be sold at auction. Pink diamonds are the rarest of the precious gems and the most in-demand on the global market.

The world record for a pink diamond was set in 2017, when a stone known as the CTF Pink Star was sold in Hong Kong for HK$558,916,643 (US$71.2 million).

Friday’s sale “not only attests to the resilient demand for top quality diamonds in Asia, but a heightened awareness of the great scarcity of pink diamonds”, said Wenhao Yu, chairman of jewellery and watches at Sotheby’s Asia.

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The Williamson Pink Star was named after two other pink diamonds: the record-setting CTF Pink Star and the Williamson Stone, a 23.6-carat diamond given as a wedding present to Queen Elizabeth in 1947.

Tobias Kormind, managing director of UK jewel retailer 77 Diamonds, said the “astounding” sale proved high-quality diamonds could still fetch major prices in a shaky economy.

“Hard assets such as world-class diamonds have a history of performing well even in times of instability,” he said.

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