Alt Investments
January Proves To Be A Cheery Month For Fine Wine Investors

Equities started the year poorly but fine wine prices shone in January, new figures show.
The start of 2016 may have been grim for many equity indices but
it has been much more cheery for those investing in fine wines
from regions such as France’s Bordeaux.
According to the Liv-ex exchange tracking auction prices for fine
wines, its Liv-ex 100 Index rose 1.1 per cent in January, while
the Liv-ex Investables Index was up 1.4 per cent. By contrast,
Shanghai’s benchmark stock index fell 22 per cent in January, and
oil has slumped by 30 per cent since the middle of November last
year.
Over the past 21 years, fine wine has outperformed equities, gold
and crude oil as an asset class, and the latest data will add
fuel to those in the wine investment field who tout the benefits
of the noble grape as a portfolio diversifier. (It should be
noted that fine wines may be less liquid in market transaction
terms than conventional list equities, however.)
The ratio of bids to offers on the Liv-ex exchange has reached
the highest level since the middle of 2010, rising over 1.0 in
January. Historically, a ratio above 0.5 per cent indicates a
rising or at least stable market.
According to a statement from The Wine Investment Fund, a
UK-registered vehicle holding a portfolio of fine wine assets,
January typically is a relatively quiet month for auctions and
sell-through rates were broadly in line with expectations. TWIF
has argued that investors should be careful about becoming
carried away by recent positive figures, noting that recent falls
in the sterling exchange rate have boosted fine wine prices.
“Fine wine prices are still sitting well below their long-term
trend level and a sustained recovery is more likely than not in
the near future. The recent solid performance against a very
difficult backdrop for other asset classes suggests this recovery
may be underway,” said Andrew della Casa, director
of TWIF.