@ambarliana582: Mau punya usaha sendiri seperti Bu Wiwik Utami daftar jadi mitra UMiMAX Pertamina batch 2 https://umimaxpertamina.org #fyp #pertamina #umkm #usaha #gratis

Ambar (Lia Padoli)
Ambar (Lia Padoli)
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Monday 06 July 2026 01:33:05 GMT
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If I had to choose one gemstone to pass to my children, it would be a Mozambique ruby. Not a Burmese ruby. Not a Kashmir sapphire. Not a no-oil Colombian emerald. All of those are exceptional choices with strong arguments behind them. But if the criteria is smart investment with a clear appreciation trajectory and discoverable liquidity over decades, my answer is Mozambique ruby in the right quality. Here is the logic. The price gap between Burmese and Mozambique ruby has not fully closed. The best Mozambique material, open vivid crimson red, loupe clean, well cut, produced at a standard that genuinely competes with top Burmese stones on visual quality, still trades at a meaningful discount to comparable Burmese. Somewhere between half the price and 30% of the price, depending on the specific stones being compared. That gap exists because of something that lives in perception more than in the stone itself. Burmese ruby has centuries of history. It has auction records, legendary provenance, a cultural weight that the market has priced in over generations. Mozambique ruby has 15 years of serious production history. The quality has been demonstrated and recognized. But the price premium attached to that history hasn't fully transferred yet. It will. When enough time passes and enough exceptional Mozambique rubies move through serious auctions and serious collections, the mental anchor that currently says
If I had to choose one gemstone to pass to my children, it would be a Mozambique ruby. Not a Burmese ruby. Not a Kashmir sapphire. Not a no-oil Colombian emerald. All of those are exceptional choices with strong arguments behind them. But if the criteria is smart investment with a clear appreciation trajectory and discoverable liquidity over decades, my answer is Mozambique ruby in the right quality. Here is the logic. The price gap between Burmese and Mozambique ruby has not fully closed. The best Mozambique material, open vivid crimson red, loupe clean, well cut, produced at a standard that genuinely competes with top Burmese stones on visual quality, still trades at a meaningful discount to comparable Burmese. Somewhere between half the price and 30% of the price, depending on the specific stones being compared. That gap exists because of something that lives in perception more than in the stone itself. Burmese ruby has centuries of history. It has auction records, legendary provenance, a cultural weight that the market has priced in over generations. Mozambique ruby has 15 years of serious production history. The quality has been demonstrated and recognized. But the price premium attached to that history hasn't fully transferred yet. It will. When enough time passes and enough exceptional Mozambique rubies move through serious auctions and serious collections, the mental anchor that currently says "Burmese is worth twice as much" will adjust. Not because the gap between the best of each origin closes to zero, Burmese will always carry a premium for origin. But because the gap that currently exists is not fully justified by quality differences alone. Some of it is perception lag. Buying the right Mozambique ruby now means buying before that perception catches up to reality. The stone has to be correct. Open red, not dark, not pinkish, not orangish. Loupe clean from the table. Not heated. That level of quality in Mozambique exists and is findable. It is the only version of this argument that holds.

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