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ENDIAMA Diamond Governance Checklist

Source-backed researchStrategic asset underwritingCapital formation lens

Briefing position

What governance issues should investors check before underwriting ENDIAMA?

Featured snippet answer

Before underwriting ENDIAMA, investors should check concession authority, mining-project interests, SODIAM and diamond-marketing interfaces, joint ventures, reserve evidence, production data, ESG obligations, EITI transparency, related-party controls, sanctions exposure, valuation method, state residual rights, and minority shareholder protections.

Use case

ENDIAMA is not a simple mining company. It is Angola’s state diamond company and a governance node in the national diamond value chain. Its role touches concession management, project participation, diamond-sector reform, marketing interfaces, public revenue, communities, and international transparency expectations.

This checklist is designed for investors and analysts reviewing ENDIAMA under Angola’s PROPRIV framework. It does not value ENDIAMA. It defines what must be known before valuation becomes credible.

One-page governance checklist

Area Pass Partial Fail Evidence needed
Legal mandate Statutes, concession authority, state role
Asset perimeter Subsidiaries, project interests, JVs, liabilities
Marketing interface SODIAM role, sales rules, pricing evidence
Reserve evidence Resources, reserves, mine plans, technical reports
Production data Carats, grade, revenue, project-level disclosure
Governance Board, committees, related-party controls
Transparency EITI, public reporting, audit quality
ESG and communities Resettlement, rehabilitation, local development
Sanctions and compliance Counterparty screening, Kimberley Process, AML
Minority rights Voting, dividends, information, reserved matters

Checklist 1: confirm ENDIAMA’s legal mandate

What to confirm

Investors should review the statute and legal framework defining ENDIAMA’s role in prospecting, exploration, production, and commercialization of diamonds. The official ENDIAMA description and the company’s organic statute are starting points, but transaction documents must define what economic interest is actually being sold.

Why it matters

A minority stake in a state diamond company is not the same as direct exposure to a mine. Investors must understand whether they are buying operating cash flow, concession authority exposure, holding-company economics, project interests, or a hybrid of all three.

Red flags

  • The sale describes ENDIAMA generally but not the specific rights attached to shares.
  • Concession authority and commercial rights are not separated.
  • State policy duties are not priced into governance documents.

Checklist 2: map asset perimeter and subsidiaries

What to confirm

The diligence file should list subsidiaries, project interests, joint ventures, exploration rights, marketing arrangements, debt, contingent liabilities, litigation, and non-core assets.

Why it matters

Diamond value can sit in operating mines, exploration projects, marketing flows, or strategic rights. If the perimeter is unclear, investors cannot connect valuation to cash flow.

Evidence required

  • Corporate structure chart.
  • Subsidiary list.
  • Mine and project interest schedule.
  • Joint-venture agreements.
  • Debt schedule.
  • Related-party contracts.
  • Litigation and claims register.

Checklist 3: define the SODIAM and marketing interface

What to confirm

Investors should identify how diamond sales are made, what role SODIAM plays, how pricing is determined, whether sales are arm’s length, and how proceeds move between entities.

Why it matters

Mining value depends on both production and sales. If the marketing channel is opaque, revenue quality is difficult to underwrite.

Red flags

  • Sales process is not disclosed.
  • Marketing fees or margins are unclear.
  • Related-party buyers are not identified.
  • Export or certification procedures are not explained.

Checklist 4: demand project-level production and reserve evidence

What to confirm

Investors need project-level data, not only national or company-level headlines. That includes production volumes, grades, reserves, resources, mine life, capex, operating costs, and partner interests.

Why it matters

A diamond company can report strong aggregate production while individual projects vary sharply in quality, margin, risk, and remaining life.

Minimum evidence

  • Mine-by-mine production.
  • Reserve and resource statements.
  • Technical-report basis.
  • Capex and sustaining capex.
  • Operating cost by project.
  • Partner ownership and offtake terms.

Checklist 5: review joint ventures and strategic partners

What to confirm

ENDIAMA may participate through joint ventures and partnerships. Investors should assess partner rights, change-of-control clauses, funding obligations, dispute mechanisms, offtake terms, and project governance.

Why it matters

A public-market investor may buy into ENDIAMA but have economic exposure governed by private joint-venture contracts.

Red flags

  • JV agreements are not summarized.
  • Change-of-control consent is ignored.
  • Partner funding obligations are unclear.
  • Project disputes are not disclosed.

Checklist 6: test transparency and EITI alignment

What to confirm

Angola’s EITI implementation and extractive-sector transparency context should be used as a diligence lens. Investors should ask whether ENDIAMA-related payments, production, state transfers, and beneficial ownership can be traced through public reporting.

Why it matters

Extractive-sector privatization requires trust. Investors need confidence that payments, production, ownership, and government revenue are reportable and auditable.

Red flags

  • EITI disclosures do not reconcile with company materials.
  • Beneficial ownership remains opaque.
  • State transfers are not explained.
  • Project-level data is unavailable.

Checklist 7: assess ESG, community, and rehabilitation obligations

What to confirm

Diamond assets can carry land, water, resettlement, artisanal mining, community, security, and rehabilitation risks. Investors should demand clear environmental and social obligations.

Why it matters

ESG risks can affect license durability, community relations, international buyer acceptance, and financing.

Evidence required

  • Environmental permits.
  • Mine closure and rehabilitation plans.
  • Community agreements.
  • Security arrangements.
  • Resettlement history.
  • Grievance mechanisms.

Checklist 8: check sanctions, AML, and diamond-chain compliance

What to confirm

Investors should confirm Kimberley Process compliance, sanctions screening, counterparty diligence, anti-money-laundering procedures, export controls, and buyer qualification.

Why it matters

Diamond-sector compliance affects access to international buyers, banks, insurers, and institutional investors.

Red flags

  • Buyer screening is not disclosed.
  • Chain-of-custody controls are weak.
  • Compliance is described generally but not operationally.
  • Related-party sales are not controlled.

Checklist 9: define minority investor protections

What to confirm

If ENDIAMA is partially privatized or listed, investors should identify voting rights, dividend policy, board seats, information rights, reserved matters, related-party controls, and state residual rights.

Why it matters

A minority stake in a strategic resource company can be attractive only if minority protections are real.

Minimum controls

  • Audited reporting.
  • Dividend policy.
  • Related-party approval process.
  • Independent directors.
  • Reserved matters for asset sales and debt.
  • Clear state policy obligations.

Scoring rule

ENDIAMA should not be treated as underwritable until investors can connect legal mandate, project economics, diamond sales, governance, EITI-style transparency, ESG obligations, and minority rights into one evidence file.

Source notes

This checklist relies on the updated PROPRIV framework, legal commentary from CMS and PLMJ/RVA, ENDIAMA public materials, Angola’s ENDIAMA organic statute, and EITI transparency context. It should be refreshed when transaction documents, project schedules, or prospectus materials become public.

Institutional action path

Use these controlled entry points when the research moves from reading into committee review, source verification, or transaction screening.

Next research path
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