The Wines of the Wealthy
Have you ever enjoyed a glass of wine at dinner and wondered what the one-percenters are enjoying at their tables?
Or, perhaps, the one-tenth-of-one-percenters?
Sotheby’s, the auction house based in New York, London and Hong Kong, recently released its 2018 Wine Market Report, which is a summary of the auction action last year among the kind of premium wines that few of us can afford. Overall sales, much of it from large private collections, amounted to a record $98 million.
This included a single bottle of 1945 Romanée-Conti Burgundy that sold for $558,000 at a Sotheby’s auction last fall, plus a collection of Château Lafite and Mouton Rothschild whose prices soared into the millions. The report also notes that prices for Burgandy and Bordeaux wines were up 65% and 63% respectively over 2017, primarily for mature (aged) bottles that are ready to drink right away. Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, Pétrus, Lafite, Leroy Burgundies and Cheval Blanc were among the bottles reporting highest-price sales among wine collectors and
connoisseurs.
Interestingly, these auctions are also starting to market fine whiskies, including a
1926 bottle with the Sir Peter Blake label that sold in New York for $843,000.
If you’re interested in joining the fun and raising the quality of the wine you’re
drinking at social get-togethers, Sotheby’s next live sale, planned for March 9, will
feature more than 250 lots of Domaine de la Romanée-Conti; the sale is expected
to collect more than $3 million. An online-only sale will include six decanters of a
Macallan wine in a Lalique Six Pillars collection, including one called the Peerless
Spirit, with a high estimate price of $90,000.
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