Showing posts with label Investing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Investing. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Paris art "stock exchange" launched

PARIS. As previously posted, A&F Markets was poised to create an art "stock exchange" (the second in the world) and ARTINFO reports the initiative has now been launched. ARTINFO states that the exchange "will treat artworks as investment vehicles" but this is technically incorrect since investors will own shares in the artworks themselves rather than in investments vehicles incorporated solely for the purpose of holding the art assets. It had been reported that the exchange would initially offer shares in six artworks. However, at least for now, shares in only two artworks are available - LeWitt's "Irregular Form" and Vezzoli's "The Premiere of a Play That Will Never Run." Interestingly, instead of offering the same number of shares in each piece at a different rate (the Vezzoli is valued at $32,000 more than the LeWitt), the exchange is offering shares in both works at €10 ($13) per share.

Sol LeWitt, "Irregular Form" (1998)
No doubt certain circles in the art world are skirming over this commoditization of art. Founder Pierre Naquin defended the venture by pointing out how floating these works will actually bring them closer to the public because "participating galleries must commit to show their stock-market works by appointment, as well as to loaning them for retrospectives or other exhibitions, since these are expected to increase the value of the shares." True... but only until a work gets bought which in practice will likely be when an investor acquires 80% of the shares and squeezes out the minority shareholder(s).
 


The price tags of the works are by no means at the high-end of the market ($142,000 and $174,000) and I doubt their value will increase dramatically and quickly enough to prevent a determined investor from being able to buy a work (though does the fact that Art Exchange "retains the exclusive right to sell any of the works within its system" mean they can block a sale? Surely not). I'm debating if I should buy some shares myself to experience the exchange first-hand (I'll keep my readers guessing as to whether or not I think the shares are a good investment).

Monday, November 22, 2010

LINKS

  • PARIS. Artworld Salon reports on the Deloitte "Art & Finance" conference held at the end of last month. It highlights three themes: I agree with the first, disagree with the second and would modify the third. The final paragraph is by far the most astute: "before we continue to develop art into an investment vehicle (in whatever way), let's take a step back and think about what makes art different to other assets and markets, not what makes it similar" (my own emphasis added).
  •  "Whose painting is it anyway?" Pop quiz on what constitutes good title to art.
  • LONDON. Another deferral of an export license to allow public instutions to match the sale price and keep the art in the UK. At least this case involves a painting by "simply the greatest British painter of the 19th century" which foreseeably meets the Waverely Criteria (unlike the case of the export of the Fatimid ewer where it's far less obvious).

Thursday, October 07, 2010

Market News

Below are a few links regarding the art market. The second link covers the Lehman Brothers auction in NYC which I had previously decided not to cover in light of the extensive media coverage it received. However, I have included the link below solely because it may say something about which artists the market is currently craving (Chinese art still oh so hot) or, rather more poignantly, which ones it is not (the "atypical 1993 Damien Hirst cabinet" didn't attract a single bid... but nonetheless sold four days later).

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Ensuring dealers get paid is not as simple as "tightening up" a contract

When The Arts Newspaper reported on a growing contingent of collectors "who take longer to pay, or worse yet, cancel sales," my initial lawyerly reaction was slight disbelief given the wide array of relatively straightforward provisions that can be inserted in a written contract to ensure, as far as possible, timely payment for a purchased artwork. The following contractual provisions sprung to mind:
  • Delivery against payment. A collector would obtain possession of the purchased artwork upon the dealer receiving full payment or immediately thereafter.
  • Risk of loss/damage. The risk of loss/damage would pass to the collector at the time of sale rather than payment such that if combined with a delivery against payment provision, a collector has a strong incentive to make full payment immediately.
  • Purchase price discount. Any dealer discount offered would be contingent on the collector making either full payment or payment within a certain timeframe (usually within 30 days of sale). In all other cases, the discount would be forfeited.
  • Interest on late payment(s). Interest on any outstanding amount owed would be charged at the rate negotiated and specified in the contract (e.g. around 1.5-2% but no greater than 10% or else it may be deemed an unlawful penalty).
  • Non-possessory security interest in the artwork. As a last resort, should the collector possess the artwork beyond a specified period and continue to resist paying in full, the dealer could acquire a security interest in the artwork. Such security interest could be perfected in the original contract as long as it was for value (i.e. monetary), in writing and passed title to the collector. Nevertheless, the dealer should also make a U.C.C. filing to ensure his security interest has priority over any other interests the collector may grant to other third party creditors.
Any combination of the contractual provisions above and others could help ameliorate many a dealer's financial condition. Indeed, the idea of "tightening up" terms of sale is familiar to most of the bigger players navigating the art market in the capacity of intermediary. As the article mentions, Christie's currently requires buyers to make full payment prior to obtaining possession of a work (i.e. essentially "delivery against payment") and Sotheby's' "Conditions of Sale" (entitled "Conditions of Business" in the UK) provide, among other things, that a buyer must immediately pay in full and the auction house reserves "the right to impose from the date of sale a late charge of 1.5% per month of the total purchase price if payment is not made in accordance with the conditions [of sale]."

The article doesn't mention whether young, primary market dealers, who represent the intermediaries most affected by late or non-payment for works, have followed in the footsteps of the auction houses and major secondary market galleries but I think it's safe to assume that they have not. As a commercial lawyer, my gut reaction was to advocate that dealers side-step the "handshake" mentality of the art world (an invoice typically constitutes the sole written evidence of a sale) and enter into written contracts of sale replete with commercially-sound provisions. However, I then stopped to think about how this is the art market we're discussing- it's not as simple as drafting or revising a contract. To prescribe a contractual remedy for the financial woes of dealers as the most natural or obvious would be somewhat misguided for it is premised on an overly neoclassical view of the art market as being no different to any other market. Such a view, which likely attributes dealers' financial troubles to their lack of business acumen and bargaining power, fails crucially to appreciate and respond to the complex and unique architecture of the art market.

As Velthuis wrote, art market intermediaries operate to the beat of "two contradictory or conflicting logics: a logic of art and a logic of capitalist markets," each logic or sphere being characterized by its own rituals, laws and understandings of what constitutes legitimate and acceptable behavior. The tension between these two socially distinct worlds is felt, in my opinion, most acutely by primary market dealers because they, above all others, are perceived as "cultural institutions" serving as "gatekeepers to the art world: they elect and select artists from the many that seek to be represented, and promote new, innovative values that may go against the grain." Whether dealers actually define their identity or the extent to which they might do as "disinterested promoters and patrons rather than merchants and marketeers of art," my understanding is that the art world convention deems it unacceptable for their economic interests to be aired openly and unabashedly profit-maximizing behavior, contractual or otherwise, is ultimately detrimental to a dealer as it may drive away a purported majority of collectors pursuing (or pretending to pursue as the convention would have it) a pure, almost sacred, artistic experience free from the corrupting effects of money and mass consumption. If young and emerging galleries began selling art like a broker sells securities ("delivery against payment," for example, is a common procedure in the securities industry) or even like the Gagosians or major auctions houses of this world sell art, the art world would perhaps reject them. Of course this denegation of commercial pursuits is, to use Bourdieu's term, no more than a layer of "cultural camouflage" but that doesn't change the fact that it exists and dealers have to grapple with it. At the end of the day, these are the rules of the game and dealers knew that to be the case when they voluntarily chose to enter the market. They are, however, wholly justified in expecting collectors to hold their end of the deal and abide by the unwritten ethical code of buying art. Hence why the very title of the article points a finger directly at unethical collectors rather than lecturing unsavvy dealers.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Explaining the recent record-breaking prices paid at auction

Here's an article from The New York Times art section also related to investing in art, this time about attempting to reconcile the record-breaking prices recently paid at auction ($106.5m at Christie's for Picasso's "Nude, Green Leaves and Bust" and $104.3m at Sotheby's for a Giacometti sculpture) with the current economic climate.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Numbers don't lie: the wisdom of investing in art

Below are the links to two interesting articles on the risks and potential returns associated with investing in art, the "passion investment." Although neither piece says anything new as such, I nevertheless decided to post the links because their scrutiny of the actual numbers and statistics involved in art investments seemed enlightening. After all, numbers don't lie... though of course, they don't paint the whole picture either. 

Both articles also illustrate how the key is timing and doing the research necessary to mitigate as far as possible the unpredictability of collector demand. For example, despite being a "very appealing image from Monet's early period," according to Nicholas Maclean (dealer and former co-head of Christie's Impressionist and Modern Art department), the sale at auction of Monet's La Plage à Trouville in 2000 resulted in a loss of £2.9m due to the market having "moved towards later works, in particular the series paintings." Irrespective of the quantity or quality of the research undertaken, however, there is always a certain art to foreseeing future trends in demand for works and/or artists not least because the global art market lacks a comprehensive price register of each and every transaction purported to be "investment grade." The introduction of this much-needed price register would increase market transparency and subsequently reduce (but by no means eliminate) the risks involved in acquiring art for investment purposes. Collectors would be able to draw more accurate conclusions and cast more reliable forecasts by studying such publicly available information. But even then substantial risk would remain because investors are not just guided by potential returns when they acquire art- they are also guided by the intangible and often unforeseeable force that is their own, personal taste in art. The truth of the matter is that, unlike gold bars or stock certificates, you can hang art on your walls and so even those who buy art as a way of hedging the volatile stock or real estate markets are still likely to buy what they love. As they should.