Mountain Province’s sales and production fell in the third quarter amid difficult trading conditions and maintenance work at its Gahcho Kué mine in Canada.
Sales value slid 58% year on year to $21.2 million for the three months that ended September 30, the company reported Thursday. Sales volume declined 40% to 409,081 carats, with the average price down to $52 per carat from $72 per carat a year earlier.
“The diamond market has remained constrained by the tariffs and related trade negotiations between the US and India,” said Mountain Province CEO Mark Wall. “Any near-term improvement in price largely depends on the US and India reaching a trade deal.”
Total output from Gahcho Kué dropped 16% year on year to 1 million carats for the quarter, with Mountain Province’s 49% share amounting to 490,434 carats. De Beers owns the remaining 51% of the mine. A five-day shutdown occurred at the deposit in September for scheduled maintenance.
As a result, the company reduced its full-year production outlook to a range of 4 million to 4.2 million carats, compared with a previous guidance of 4.3 million to 4.7 million carats.
Image: A haul truck at the Gahcho Kué mine in Canada. (Mountain Province)



