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Posts Tagged ‘2009 Bordeaux’

2009 Bordeaux Futures Strategy….Making Sense of it All

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

“American wine drinkers are balking at the high prices for….. Bordeaux prices, despite the……..classic quality.  More than a month after the first….futures went on sale, retailers across the country report that consumers are buying them, but not in large amounts.  The……futures were offered at the highest levels in history with the retail price…..averaging $545 a bottle.  The increases are staggering with the…..Cheval Blanc futures….selling for 110 percent higher…….the Chateau Palmer 89 percent higher and the Chateau Haut Brion at $571,” versus the average auction price of $423 for the for stellar 1982 that is ready to drink tonight.  “You have to buy 1961 wines to find Bordeaux more expensive than this.”  Re-read this paragraph carefully because it’s a quote from a Wine Spectator article published in July of 2006 right on the heels of the ’05 “Bordeaux vintage of the century.”  You can also find similar articles that describe the fervor over the turn of the century 2000 vintage.  Does this ring familiar, right here…..right now about the ’09 vintage?  The looming question is can we learn anything about the pricing evolution of top vintage classified Bordeaux that can help you (and me) make some purchasing decisions about the ‘09’s? 

Let start with the year 2000 wines.  While I don’t have a long list of futures pricing on first growths, I do recall ordering a little of the Lafite and Margaux in 2001, plunking down about $300 per bottle.  I remember feeling aghast that I would spend so much on a single bottle of wine that I would not see for a couple of years.   The wines were bottle released in ‘03 at ~$400, the Lafite selling today for $2000 and the Margaux a bargain at ~$1100.  Remember, this was the post internet bubble burst.  The Haut Brion which was bottle released at $424 today goes for around $600.  Let’s take a gander at the 2nd growth Cos d’Estournel which was bottle released at $95.   Today is goes for a moderate $150.  On the other hand the Leoville Las Cases, released at $170, has skyrocketed today to a cool $360!

For the 2005’s, the Chateau Haut Brion futures price was offered at $571/bottle in 2006.  The bottle release jumped to $930 in 2008, dipped into the $600’s during the recession and has bounced back today to the high $700’s-800.  The Lafite futures were released around $620.   Today, a bottle will run you about $1200.  The Las Cases futures ran $280 and the Cos $200 if you bought some in ’06.  Release prices in ’08  were, respectively $315 and $206.  Today, the Las Cases will run you ~$300 and the Cos ~$190-200, very little price appreciation today from futures release in 2006.   Pontet Canet, an outstanding 5th growth that I have purchased over the years and written about in the Collection Corner, saw the ’05 futures pricing come out at ~$82, the public release price at $100 and the pricing today at $110 on average. 

The 2009 First Growth Bordeaux Futures are in and………….

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

They’re record breaking……….just no other way to say it.  With the first Bordeaux futures tranches or allotments now released, they’re every bit as staggering as envisioned.  Chateau Lafite and Mouton Rothschild and Margaux released their first tranche pricing from the Chateau’s at $550US while Haut Brion went one better at $612US.   Remember, these are not the final consumer prices as negociant and retail pricing must be added in.  When all is said and done, some of these will approach or even exceed $1000US.   Fueled by a slowly rebounding US economy, efforts to stabilize European countries such as Greece and Spain and still vigorous and financially flushed China, vintners are counting on a brisk consumer response to still another “Bordeaux vintage of the century,” right on the heels of the 2000 and 2005 (not that 2003 was shabby either).  Right out the gate, they appear to have some justification for elation.  Many US merchants report that consumers are ruefully paying up for the rights to own some of these treasures in 2012 while others say that there is some sticker shock and restraint.  The strongest consumer push behind these prices seems to be flowing from Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong.  It remains to be seen whether they have force to maintain the early intense demand.   As a framework for comparison, these futures prices are the highest on record, surpassing even the hot 2005 futures prices, this while our equity markets have essentially stagnated for the last decade and we emerge from the worst economic environment in nearly 80 years!  How about that for a disconnect!  So how does one make sense of all of this?  In a nutshell, it’s a case of another great Bordeaux vintage along with a keen sense of marketing and timing by the Bordelais region that convinces wine enthusiasts around the globe that you just “gotta have it, right here, right now.” 

As mentioned earlier, only a fraction of each of the first growth’s  futures have been made public, perhaps only a third by some estimates.  Does this mean that pricing for future tranches will change?  Possibly.  If China (with the support of other markets) can exhaust the supply, then prices will either maintain or increase (pretty scary).  If, however, it becomes clear that the initial fervor has subsided and demand has stabilized at a lower level, perhaps pricing will soften slightly.  Either way, I don’t envision any bargains based upon the initial response.   So where do you (and I) fit into this equation?  Do we close our eyes, open our wallets and pull out the credit card?  In order to answer this question, we need to look at some very basic parameters.  At the very foundation of it all is what you can afford?  If you can’t afford what you want, then afford what you can.  The great equalizer in a superb vintage such as the ’09, the 05 and the ‘00 is that it tend to lift “all boats” or all wines, in our case.  If the first growths are out of your range, don’t hesitate to explore the 2nd through 5ths as well as the non-classifieds.

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