New Office
Fine Wine Firm Taps Into Asian Thirst For Asset Class

Investing in the noble grape is not always a path to riches but a firm operating in this space is tapping into Asian demand by creating a Hong Kong office.
UK-headquartered Cult
Wines, a firm investing in and collecting fine wines, is to
set up a new office in Hong Kong to tap into Asian demand,
already a noted trend in this corner of the alternatives and
collectibles space.
Asian investors have – albeit with some fluctuations amid worries
about the mainland Chinese economy – been significant
drivers of the global market for wines from regions such as
Bordeaux and Burgundy, for example. Cult Wines says that of the
$352 million of wine sold at auction in 2014, $104 million, or 30
per cent, was accounted for by Hong Kong alone. By 2024 it is
predicted that China will boast nearly 15,700 ultra-high net
worth individuals and 338 billionaires – with a presumed thirst
for “trophy assets” such as fine wine.
Explaining its confidence about Asian demand, Cult Wines said it
sees “strict limitations on supply and rising demand from wealthy
buyers in Asia”.
The market has not been without recent pullbacks, however. The
Liv-ex 100 index, which is a widely-cited benchmark of auction
prices produced by London’s Liv Ex exchange, rounded out December
2015 up by a mere 0.7 per cent, not quite sufficient to take
the index higher from a year before. It dropped from 238.50 to
238.26. The narrower Liv-ex 50 (which tracks the first growths)
was flat on the year. The market had recovered slightly from soft
performance in the summer. For some periods, wine prices have
outperformed those of mainstream equities – triggering interest
from investors. A number of firms operate in the wine investments
space, such as
Berry Bros & Rudd, for example.
Founded in 2007, Cult Wines manages private client and trade
client portfolios for more than 1,800 clients across 55
countries. Assets under administration are around £30 million
($43.9 million) with the firm aiming for sales of around £25
million next year and £50 million by 2020 (2015 sales: £17
million).
To some degree, fine wines as a “passion investment” are seen as
on a par with fine art, classic cars, jewellery and watches as
items desirable both for their prestige value and hedging
qualities against inflation and economic uncertainty, although
debate remains as to how much they genuinely diversify investment
risks.
“We see targeting the Hong Kong and China market as a
natural extension of our current growth plans and this will
certainly help us to consolidate our services to a growing client
base in Asia,” said Tom Gearing, managing director at Cult Wines.