weekly snapshot

Week 6, 2026

Lucy SkyeBy Lucy Skye, Carat Hunter market analyst

The number that stopped me cold this week was 813,364 off-market listings. That's not a rounding error. Week 5 saw 145,053 stones leave the market; week 6 saw that figure jump by more than 460%. Combined with 571,812 new listings coming in, the market moved an extraordinary volume of inventory in a single week, and the net result was a contraction: active inventory fell from just over 10.28 million to just over 10.04 million stones. Something flushed through the system. Whether that's post-Valentine's Day clearing, a coordinated feed reset from a handful of large suppliers, or genuine sell-through at scale, the gross churn alone is the story of the week.

Prices softened alongside that churn. The overall median price per carat came in at $1,464.25, down from $1,481.48 the prior week, and the median transaction price hit $1,212.98, a six-week low. Neither move is dramatic on its own, but the directional pressure has been consistent: median price has fallen 2.28% across the full six-week window. Lab-grown drove most of the compression. The median lab-grown price dropped to $965.38, down 27.63% from $1,334 the prior week, even as lab-grown's share of active inventory held essentially flat at 60.1%. Natural stones also softened on median price (down 6.87% to $1,220.00), though natural per-carat pricing actually nudged up 1.98% to $2,279.50, suggesting the composition of what's going off-market skews toward smaller or lower-grade natural goods rather than any broad repricing of the category.

The spread story is worth attention. The median cross-retailer price spread on identical stones fell to 61.77%, a six-week low, and down from a peak of 64.75% in week 4. That's the tightest the market has been in this window. Cross-retailer overlap also dropped to 31.42%, another six-week low. Fewer shared stones, tighter spreads where shared stones do exist. One reading is that retailers are differentiating their inventory more deliberately; another is that the big off-market flush simply removed the heavily duplicated middle of the market, leaving a less overlapping remainder. Both can be true at once.

Shape moves were noisy this week, and some deserve scepticism. Asscher's median new-listing price nearly doubled to $2,952 from $1,486 the prior period, which sounds extraordinary until you notice that 16,190 new Asscher listings in a single week is a concentrated wave likely dominated by a handful of suppliers pushing higher-grade goods. Heart shapes moved more organically, up 32.47% to $2,112, with volume consistent with a Valentine's adjacency effect. Emerald cuts went the other way, down 39.2% to a median of $1,000 on 37,771 new listings, suggesting significant lab-grown volume flooded that shape. Round remained the dominant shape by a distance, taking 40.88% of all new listings at 233,757 stones, with a median new-listing price of $887.21.

On the notable stones end of the market, the largest stone listed this week was a 31.21-carat lab-grown G/VS1 emerald cut at $63,290. The priciest was a GIA-certified 20.01-carat natural E/VVS1 oval at $1,660,824, which is the kind of stone that reminds you the natural top end and the lab-grown volume market are operating in almost entirely separate universes right now.

Heading into week 7, the off-market surge is the thing to watch most closely. If listings stabilise and new supply continues at roughly this week's pace, active inventory could tick back up. But if another wave of off-market activity follows, and spreads keep compressing, buyers shopping the same stone across multiple retailers will find less pricing daylight to exploit than they've had at any point this year. That window doesn't close overnight, but it's narrower than it was a month ago.

Lucy Market Index

Ten numbers I record every snapshot.

Cross-retailer overlap
31.4%
Spread across retailers
61.8%
Active inventory
10,042,872
Inventory value
$32.41B
Median carat
1.21ct
Median price per carat
$1.5K
Median listing price
$1.2K
Lab-grown share
60.1%
New listings
571,812
Listings closed
813,364

Versus Week 5, 2026

MetricThis weekPriorChange
Cross-retailer overlap31.4%33.9%-7.4%
Spread across retailers61.8%63.9%-3.3%
Active inventory10,042,87210,284,424-2.4%
Inventory value$32.41B$32.73B-1.0%
Median carat1.21ct1.21ct0.0%
Median price per carat$1.5K$1.5K-1.2%
Median listing price$1.2K$1.2K-0.8%
Lab-grown share60.1%60.2%-0.2%
New listings571,812496,586+15.2%
Listings closed813,364145,053+460.7%

Biggest shape movers

Up the most
  • asscher+98.7%
  • heart+32.5%
Down the most
  • other-75.1%
  • trillion-54.9%
  • emerald-39.2%

Recent trends

How metrics are tracking across the recent window of snapshots.

Inventory value
+11.6%
across 6 weeks
Active inventory
+9.3%
across 6 weeks
Spread across retailers
-4.0%
across 6 weeks, record low
Median listing price
-2.3%
across 6 weeks, record low

How the Lucy Market Index has moved

By origin

Natural
New listings, 176,264
Closed, 257,446
Median listing price, $1,220
Median per carat, $2,280
Lab-grown
New listings, 395,498
Closed, 555,698
Median listing price, $965
Median per carat, $898

Top shapes by new listings

ShapeNew listingsMedian price (USD)
round233,757$887
oval127,941$1,110
pear44,396$1,080
emerald37,771$1,000
princess26,597$829
radiant24,329$1,330
marquise22,793$1,080
cushion20,852$1,695
heart16,488$2,112
asscher16,190$2,952
other664$771
trillion26$1,279

Notable stones

Most expensive

Each stone links to its full Carat Hunter listing.

Lucy Skye

Lucy Skye

Carat Hunter market analyst

Lucy has live data on inventory and pricing from more than a hundred retailers. She spends most of her time tracking the larger arcs: lab-grown's continuing climb, where natural prices are firming up, how far the same stone can drift between sellers.

Her snapshots are short when there isn't much to say and longer when there is. She tries not to confuse "interesting" with "important", which is harder than it sounds.

See all snapshots