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Posts Tagged ‘auction’

Should Wine Be a Part of Your Investment Portfolio?

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

On My MindI just finished reading an article that leads with the headline “investing in high end collectible wine beats stocks” regardless of the economy.  The summary article was published in a very well respected wine journal.  The study, conducted by two PhD candidates from the University of Fribourg, is an update of the original first published prior to the recent recession and concludes that investing in investment grade, auction worthy wine, improves on financial returns while reducing risk.  The time interval used covered two bull and two bear markets back to 1996.  At first, I felt uneasy about the concept.  While I enjoy my fair share of nice wine, my philosophy has always been to enjoy the wine, even at the high end of the spectrum.  Somehow, I never thought of it as a part of my investment portfolio.  Nonetheless, the concept does deserve consideration.

First off, let’s define the term investment.  Webster’s dictionary offers two definitions.  The first is “an outlay of money…….for income or profit ” while a second is “ to make use of future benefits or advantages.”  The study described above clearly was referring to the first definition, suggesting that it should add financial returns to your portfolio.  So let me address this first.

As with any financial investment, timing is everything.  That statement ranks up there with the importance of location, location, location when purchasing property.  Yes, if you purchase highly coveted and auction worthy wines during a bear market cycle (such as the spring of 2009), the auction price of the wine will likely appreciate moving forward over time.   Remember, however, that a profit (or loss) in one time frame may not be realized in another.  How many auction hungry collectors invested huge sums of money for coveted wines a few years ago, realized a short term profit, only to see it evaporate into a loss in the one of the worst bear markets in the last century?  However, if you have a very long time horizon (I would argue at least 10 years), then investing in the highest grade, auction worthy wines such as Gran Cru Burgundy, First Growth Bordeaux and Rhone may offer some profit potential.  Why do I say at least 10 years?  Because an extended time frame tends to smooth out bear market losses and bull market gains and hopefully places you on the positive side of the financial ledger.

Wine Collecting Part IV

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

The Basics of Wine Collecting: Part I

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

My world of wine was very limited until about 15 years ago, my range of knowledge limited to red, white and……well that was about it.  The wine menus at restaurants were daunting and may as well have been scripted in a foreign language.  It became, to say the least, embarrassing, if not darn right intimidating.  If I was going to order wine at restaurant, shouldn't I have some hint of what I was ordering?  The question was, where should I start……..a great question that a lot of new wine consumers ask and rightfully so.  Today, there are so many new regions producing quality and affordable wines, that the task seems almost overwhelming.  Fortunately, a close friend recognized my enigma and suggested that I visit his local wine retailer and let him work with my taste preferences.  So I made the trip to the store, a very tasteful community based spirits establishment.  Very patiently Randy, the proprietor, worked with me, narrowing down my taste preferences and my budget, even offering samples of several wines.  After nearly an hour of discussion and tastings, we settled on a mixed case of inexpensive, everyday wine.  I also promised him that I would get back to him in couple of weeks afte completing my Wine Tasting 101a.  Two weeks later I was back at the store and ready to replace the depleted inventory.  I told Randy how shocked I was by the discovery that wine seemed to possess an amazing universe of aromas and flavors, brought to live even more so when paired with certain foods.  Over the ensuing years, I developed a close relationship with Randy, sampling one varietal after another from different wine regions but all still at affordable prices and in manageable lots.  Remember, as a novice, my goal here was to sample as many everyday wine styles as possible.

Then one evening, I headed down to the basement to retrieve bottle for dinner when I recognized that I had accumulated a few cases worth of wines.  It was comforting, I thought, to have a variety of standby wines to pair with different foods or just to share with friends at a casual gathering.  Wouldn’t it be great, I thought, to expand my wine inventory to include many of the world’s regions and to consider adding a few special bottles for rare occasions.  It was at that juncture, as I look back, that the concept and intrigue of a wine collection first dawned on me.  However, if I was going to travel that path, it was clear that I required A LOT of additional education.

Come On Down…..

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

For those of you my age (gulp… 58), you likely well remember those wonderful game shows where the Bob Barkers of the world would yell “comm’on down” to the next contestant. She or he would scream in delight as they nearly tripped down the aisle and on to the stage, at times apoplectic with tears. Of course, this was all prelude to vying for the “deal of a lifetime”. Well, there have been times over the last few months when I have felt that “Bob Barker” urge to purchase the latest wine deal of a lifetime. It may have come from a local retailer or across my on line screen. Not a day ends without at least one or two of these “deals” scrolling across my screen….and they are convincing! It’s just amazing how many wines are competing for my palate and credit card. (To my wife’s chagrin, I have had a few weak moments during which I have relented and pulled the trigger……nothing bank breaking…… ……just….well you know….some truly good deals…… really dear!)

All of this is just another example of the dysfunctional economic times in which we live; retailers of all categories vying for what dollars and cents remain in consumer pockets. How deep the discounts may go in the retail wine market is yet unknown. While I have seen discounts on wine prices of between 20% and 40%, I received one on line the other day for 50%. Compare these discounts with the haircut that so many equities have taken since the summer, not to mention the free fall in the price of a barrel of oil (down to $36/barrel from the $147 last summer) and you understand that we may still have some distance to drop in the fair value of the high and intermediate priced wine market. Now to be fair, remember that each producer bottles a fixed amount of wine for given vintage. This supply then attempts to satisfy the demand. With the supply relatively static, pricing eventually falls to the demand side. If a producer offers only a small inventory for a given vintage and the wine is a highly collectible one, the pricing may not suffer as much as one that is in abundant supply. The equity markets and the commodity markets (i.e., oil), on the other hand, can easily alter supply, either offering secondary offerings or drilling new oil respectively. A vintner, on the other hand, can’t go back and harvest and issue more wine of a given vintage (unless some from that year is withheld in their cellars). Anyway, you get the point. It may be a far reaching extrapolation to expect wine prices to parallel the equity markets precipitous fall but we shall see…. Remember as well, the purchase of wine, is a discretionary want and, in most cases, not a need. As these discretionary funds have dwindled, we have witnessed their impact in both the art and wine auction markets with expected bids far beneath what was projected six months ago…sometimes 50% less. And in some cases, I have read of lots of wine or art work going unsold. Yes….these are extreme times.

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