Art
UBS Seeks To Set Global Standard With New Art Report

The Zurich-listed bank and wealth manager is planning a global art market report that it intends to be an international benchmark for this sector.
UBS, which is the lead
partner of the Art Basel show, will next year issue a global art
market report by cultural economist and author Dr Clare
McAndrew. The Swiss bank aims to make the report a “new
benchmark for the international art trade”.
The first UBS Global Art Market Report will be issued in
March next year, to coincide with the Art Basel fair in Hong
Kong. The report, designed to be an annual production, will cover
the main macroeconomic art trends and deliver fundamental data on
the art market as a whole. It will also examine specific areas of
interest and new business developments for collectors and
professionals.
Dr McAndrew is the founder and managing director of Arts
Economics, which she set up in 2005. She completed her PhD in
economics at Trinity College Dublin in 2001, where she also
lectured and taught economics for four years. She then directed a
number of research projects for Arts Council England on the
effects of regulation, taxation and other issues in the visual
arts market. In 2002, she joined US firm Kusin & Company, a
boutique investment banking firm specialising in art investment,
as chief economist. After three years in the US, she returned to
Europe in 2005, and continued her work in the art market in a
private research and consulting capacity for a global client
base.
Dr McAndrew has published widely on the economics of the art
market, including her recent book, Fine Art and High
Finance (Wiley Press). She also produces an annual
macroeconomic report on the global art market for The European
Fine Art Foundation (TEFAF). She is founding member of the
Art Investment Council, which was set up in 2012 to promote
a greater understanding of art as an asset class by encouraging
transparency, best practices, education and consistency of
terminology and reporting.
The world’s largest wealth manager intends to continue supporting
the Art Basel programme into the next decade, it said. It has
supported the programme since 1994 and expanded its
involvement with Art Basel to include Miami Beach in 2002 and Art
Basel in Hong Kong in 2014.
With interest in fine art continuing as one of the “hard assets”
that have featured as an investment trend in recent years, banks
such as UBS, Citigroup and Deutsche Bank have sought to offer
advisory services around art for clients. In other developments,
Pictet and Carlyle Group, for example, have supported a joint
venture business, Athena Art Finance, focusing on art-based
finance.
“Our joint venture to produce the Art Basel and UBS Global
Art Market Report complements our leading position in
financial research and analysis across the globe, as well as our
in-house Art Market Review and bespoke client offerings through
The UBS Art Competence Center,” said Jürg Zeltner, president, UBS
Wealth Management.