Monday, 23 January 2012

Art Investors Lured by 12% Return Promise From $80 Million Fund

January 23, 2012, 7:23 PM EST

By Scott Reyburn
Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Investors are being invited to join a European-based group that plans to buy about $80 million worth of art and forecasts annual returns of 12 percent.
The Art Collection Fund will acquire high-quality modern, contemporary and even tribal works over a four-year period. The pieces will be sold after six years, or earlier, through private sales and auctions, the Luxembourg-based company said in an e- mailed statement.
“The fund is aimed at people who want to invest in art and who haven’t time to be collectors,” the fund’s founder and chief executive, Stanislas Gokelaere, 43, said in an interview. “We want to educate them and bring them close to this world.”
Investors are diversifying after returns declined from financial markets and real estate. Still, some funds that look to art as an alternative asset class have struggled to raise money or prove themselves as consistent providers of returns. In 2009, New York-based Skate’s Art Market Research delayed a review of such vehicles after several failed to achieve their target capitalization.
Gokelaere, a former head of mergers and acquisitions at the brewer InBev, is an established French collector of tribal art, as well as of modern and contemporary works. Bernard Steyaert and Florence de Botton, former European-based executives at Christie’s International, are the other members of the team.
“We’ll be buying blue-chip works priced between 100,000 euros ($130,400) and 3.5 million euros,” Gokelaere said. “We won’t acquire cutting-edge pieces and we’ll be concentrating on slightly lesser-known names that appreciate in a slower, stronger way. We want to avoid bubbles.”
Borrowed Works
Works by second-tier abstract expressionists Joan Mitchell and Arshile Gorky were suggested as possible investments.
About 65 percent of the collection will be devoted to modern and contemporary art, Gokelaere said. Participants will be able to borrow and live with works equivalent to the value of their commitments.
The minimum investment in the fund, scheduled to open formally in April, is 500,000 euros. Investors will be charged 2 percent per annum management fees and 20 percent of the net proceeds.
So far, the fund has attracted unconfirmed commitments of about 10 million euros -- half the targeted first closing -- from investors in Belgium, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Italy and the U.K., according to Gokelaere. The total target capitalization is 60 million euros.
Price Rises
The international market for art-investment funds was worth an estimated $960 million last year, up from $760 million in 2010, according to a report by Deloitte Luxembourg and the London-based research company ArtTactic published in December last year. The industry is relatively small compared stocks and hedge funds.
Institutional investors continue to be wary of art, citing the market’s lack of liquidity and transparency, as well as its high transaction costs and volatility. Some wealthy individuals are more positive about the model after dramatic price rises for certain names since the low of 2009 after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
A private collector entered eight abstracts by Gerhard Richter for auction at Sotheby’s New York in November 2011. All sold above their high estimates, with a 1997 “Abstraktes Bild” in purple, red and blue fetching a record $20.8 million. The buyer was Bernard Arnault, chairman of LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA, dealers with knowledge of the matter said.
Contemporary Surge
Sales at Sotheby’s and Christie’s evening auctions of contemporary art surged to $1.7 billion in 2011, an increase of 35 percent on the previous year.
“The climate for funds is as favorable as it’s been for some time,” Anders Petterson, founder of ArtTactic, said. ”The sense that art is an asset class is gaining momentum. The funds are now being tuned to be part of the ecosystem rather than a parasite. They give wealthy people the opportunity to be part of the lifestyle.”
About 25 such investment vehicles, mostly based in China, came to market in the first half of 2011, according to the Deloitte report. These include the Brazil-based Golden Art Fund.
Luxembourg is an emerging hub of such investment. Gokelaere’s Art Collection Fund will join similar vehicles devoted to wine, watches and jewelry run by Elite Advisers in the country’s low-tax economy. Fine Art Transports Natural Le Coultre SA, a Swiss-based company specializing in the storage and shipping of artworks, is planning to open a Freeport there in 2014.
“This is the back office part of the art world,” Gokelaere said. “It’s something that Luxembourg consciously wants to develop. London and New York will remain the front.”
Information: www.artcollectionfund.com/
(Scott Reyburn writes about the art market for Muse, the arts and culture section of Bloomberg News. Opinions expressed are his own.)
--Editors: Mark Beech, Farah Nayeri.
To contact the writer on the story: Scott Reyburn in London at sreyburn@hotmail.com.

China's billionaires: Liu Yiqian, China's biggest art collector


Liu Yiqian was born into an ordinary working class family in Shanghai and from a young age proved himself a savvy investor
From the younger generation of super-rich, Liu Yiqian is China's biggest art collector.
Chinese media have dubbed him "the eccentric Mr Liu" because he wears T-shirts to work and shaves only occasionally, but his investment style suggests he is highly savvy.

Special Report: One in a Billion

Born in 1963 into an ordinary working class family in Shanghai, Liu left school at 14 to help his mother with her handbag business.

As my crew fussed around his office preparing for the interview, Liu appeared unfazed, intently studying a huge screen of stock prices, a cigarette in one hand, and a mug of tea by his side.
Initially, he made the bags which she sold from a stand on the street. But Liu worked out a way of making the bags cheaper than the other street vendors. By undercutting them he outsold them.
It was the beginning of the 1980s, and the earliest roots of China's move to capitalism were being put in place. Small but significant fortunes were being made.
At the time there was a phrase in Shanghai: "becoming a 10,000 yuan person.
" The average wage was 300 yuan per year at that time and the people earning 
10,000 in Shanghai were all street traders like Liu.
He became a 10,000 yuan person aged 17. But although his fortune was on the
 rise, he and his family were still living hand to mouth.
Stock trading
Liu's big break came when he was 27, and his on-the-job schooling finally proved 
useful. He was visiting the Shenzhen economic zone to buy materials for bags
 when he met a former classmate, who told him about a new thing called stock
 trading.
He bought his first holding in a company that operated very near his bag stall, 
so he knew all about them.

yuan. He eventually sold his stake for more than two million yuan.
The shares cost 100 yuan and within a year their value increased to 10,000 
Liu Yiqian
His wealth is based on that one transaction. Liu invested the profit in companies across a wide range of industries, all of which grew sharply. His holdings still are very diversified.
Art collecting
Liu's art collecting is done in conjunction with his wife, Wang Wei. She acts as curator and concentrates on Chinese art.
When 60 of their Chinese paintings and calligraphy works dating back to the Song dynasty were shown at Beijing's Poly Art Museum in December 2010, 
they were insured for a reported ten billion yuan (£0.94bn; $1.5bn).

Highlights of the collection included two Song Dynasty (960-1279) pieces and another five from the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368).
There was an ancient brush painting featuring rare birds, believed to be the only existing hand-drawn painting by Emperor Huizong of the Song Dynasty.
During the Cultural Revolution many ancient Chinese artworks were destroyed, making the remaining ones exceedingly rare and valuable.
In October 2010, Mr Liu paid about $11m for a Qing Dynasty imperial throne with carved dragons at Sotheby's Hong Kong.
Liu and his wife plan to build their own museum in Shanghai, a massive venue to display their complete collection.

Leslie Wexner

Leslie Wexner


Leslie Wexner

Art collection: $700 million
Ohio State law school dropout started women's sportswear store in 1963 with a $5,000 loan from his aunt. Took Limited Brands public six years later. Established the Wexner Foundation in 1984 and the Wexner Center for the Arts, a contemporary gallery and "research laboratory for the arts," in 1989. Personal collection includes pieces by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Edgar Degas and Willem de Kooning.

Samuel Newhouse Jr Art Collection

Samuel Newhouse, Jr.


Samuel Newhouse, Jr.

Art collection: $700 million
Condé Nast chairman broke some early records bidding for art. Reportedly paid more than $17 million in 1988 for Jasper Johns' "False Start," a then-record price for artwork by a living artist. Later sold to David Geffen who flipped it for $80 million. Board member of the Museum of Modern Art for more than a quarter of a century. Apparently resigned in 2000 after buying a cubist painting by Pablo Picasso "Man with Guitar," (pictured), from a dealer selling it on behalf of the museum; trustees are prohibited from buying its art.

Henry Kravis Art Collection

Henry Kravis


Henry Kravis

Art collection: $700 million
Co-founder of leveraged-buyout firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts has an eye for deals. Reportedly auctioned off Edgar Degas' "Danseuse au Repos" (pictured) through Sotheby's in 2008 for an estimated $37 million, $9 million more than he paid for it in 1999. Arts' patron who favors impressionist and contemporary art has a wing of the Metropolitan Museum named after him. Kravis served on Sotheby's board from 1997 to 2003. His wife, Marie Josée-Kravis, is president of the Museum of Modern Art board of trustees.

Steven Cohen Art Collection

Steven Cohen


Steven Cohen

Art collection: $750 million
Hedge fund titan has been a prolific buyer of art, said to have spent upward of $500 million in recent years. He paid David Geffen a record $137 million for a de Kooning, a month after having paid him $63.5 million for another de Kooning. He agreed to pay $139 million for a Picasso, but the sale fell apart after seller Stephen Wynn put his elbow through the painting. Also owns Damien's Hirst's 13-foot shark (pictured); encased in formaldehyde, it reportedly rotted and was replaced. His SAC Capital bought a stake in Sotheby's auction house earlier this year.

Leon Black Art collection

Leon Black


Leon Black

Art collection: $750 million
Private equity specialist reportedly paid $27 million in 2005 for Constantin Brancusi's "Bird in Space" (pictured), at the time a record for a sculpture. Today his collection includes works by old masters, impressionists and contemporary artists. He sits on the boards of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art. He also helped fund a biography of Pablo Picasso. Love of art runs in his blood: According to reports, his mother was an artist and an aunt ran a Manhattan art gallery.

Paul Allen Art Collection

Paul Allen


Paul Allen

Art collection: $750 million
Microsoft co-founder has an impressive collection of art by French impressionists, post-impressionists and 20th century masters. Reportedly owns Claude Monet's "Rouen Cathedral: Afternoon Effect" (pictured), Pierre-Auguste Renoir's "La Liseuse," Roy Lichtenstein's "The Kiss" and Jasper Johns' "Numbers." Secretive collector unveiled some of his collection for the first time in 2006 at the Experience Music Project at Seattle Center, a museum dedicated to innovation in popular music, which he co-founded

Leonard lauder Art collection

Leonard Lauder


Leonard Lauder

Art collection: $800 million
Chairman of Estee Lauder, founded by his mother. Has one of the finest private collections of Cubist art in the world. Collection said to include Picasso's 1909 "Nude Woman in an Armchair" (pictured) and Braque's "Fruit Dish and Glass." Got his start collecting postcards and posters as a child; gifted his collection of 25,000 20th century Japanese postcards to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in 2002. Chairman emeritus of the Whitney Museum of Modern Art, gave them $131 million in 2008.

Nasser David Khalili

Nasser David Khalili


Nasser David Khalili

Art collection: $900 million
Iranian-born academic and former art dealer has one of the largest private collections of Islamic art with over 20,000 items; includes rare paintings, textiles and manuscripts (like the one pictured). Bought his first piece, a 19 century Qajar lacquer pen box, as a teenager. Also collects Japanese Art from the Meiji period, Indian and Swedish textiles, Spanish metal works. Nicknamed the secret sultan, left Iran before the 1979 revolution and now lives in London.

Ronald Lauder Art Collection

Ronald Lauder


Ronald Lauder

Art collection: $1 billion
Son of cosmetics maven Estee Lauder, bought his first artwork, a self-portrait by Egon Schiele, with $10,000 given to him at his bar mitzvah. Has said that there are three categories of art: "Oh," "Oh, my" and "Oh, my God." Claims he only collects the latter. Paid reported $135 million for Gustav Klimt's "Portrait of Adele Block-Bauer" (pictured), at the time the largest sum paid for a single painting. Today he reportedly owns 4,000 pieces including one of world's best collections of Medieval Art and European armor. Honorary chairman of the Museum of Modern Art, exhibits some of his collection at the Neue Galerie in New York, which he opened in November 2001.

David Geffen Art Collection

David Geffen


David Geffen

Art collection: $1 billion
Hollywood mogul has proved to be an astute buyer and seller of art. In a period of months in 2006, well before the current slump in contemporary art prices, he reportedly sold four paintings for $420 million including Jasper Johns' "False Start" to Citadel's Kenneth Griffin for $80 million and Willem de Kooning's "Police Gazette" and "Woman III" to SAC Capital's Steve Cohen for $63.5 million and $137 million, respectively. His still vast art collection includes more works by all three artists and others, including Jasper Johns' "Target with Plaster Casts" (pictured).

Eli Broad Art Collection

Eli Broad



Eli Broad

Art collection: $1 billion
A billionaire who made his fortune in home building, Broad has been collecting art for four decades, amassing nearly 2,000 works by more than 200 artists including Robert Rauschenberg, Donald Judd and Andy Warhol. His favorite piece is Jeff Koons' "Rabbit" (pictured). Broad ran out of wall space in 1984, prompting him to create the Broad Art Foundation, a lending library that makes his artwork available to institutions around the world. Still an active buyer, Broad says he's probably bought about 10 to 15 works in the past year: "We don't buy anything that's ordinary."

Francois Pinault Art Collection

Francois Pinault


Francois Pinault

Art collection: $1.4 billion
French luxury goods titan whose business empire includes auction house Christie's. His personal art collection encompasses 2,000-plus works by over 80 artists including Pablo Picasso, Piet Mondrian and Jeff Koons as well as new talents such as Swiss-born Urs Fischer. Displays some of his key works, such as Maurizio Cattelan's "Untitled 2007" (pictured), at his two museums in Venice: the Palazzo Grassi, which opened in 2006; and the Punta della Dogana, a former customs house that opened in June. Once told Forbes: "I am interested in art that challenges me, that disturbs the calm and reassurance of the bourgeois lifestyle."

Esther Grether?!? Forbes’ List of Collectors With $700 Million-Plus in Art


Grether.jpg
Esther Grether, mega-collector

It's a lot more select than the ARTnews 200.

Forbes Magazine
 has come up with a story and slide show devoted to the world's Top Billionaire Art Collectors. It's mostly the usual cast of characters, with one surprising wild card.

Keren BlankfeldCristina von Zeppelin and Susan Adams report:

During our quest to pin down these extraordinary collections, we discovered a new fortune belonging to Esther Grether, a little-known Swiss cosmetics heiress whose 7.5% stake in Swatch and art collection of more than 600 pieces, including ones by Paul CézanneSalvador Dalí and Francis Bacon, make her not only a billionaire but also the only woman in our list of top art collectors.
Actually, there would be more women if Forbes did what ARTnews does in its 200-collector list (which includes Grether)---list wives who are partners with their husbands in forming the family collection. ARTnews publishes a Top Ten drawn from its 200, but those, according to Milton Esterow, the magazine's editor and publisher, are the year's "most active" collectors, not necessarily the ones with the highest-valued collections. Six collectors appear on both lists.

How Forbes managed to pinpoint the values of these large, far-ranging collections in today's careening market is anyone's guess. But for what it's worth (or not), here's the Forbes Fourteen, with the magazine's rough estimate of each collection's worth:

All of them get close-ups in the slide show, which includes photos of the collectors and more details on their backgrounds and holdings. But the press-friendly Eli Broadhas pride of place: He also gets to star in his own video, where he boasts of paying peanuts for works by emerging artists who went on to become today's megabucks art stars.


Philip Niarchos, $2 billion
François Pinault, $1.4 billion
Eli Broad, $1 billion
David Geffen, $1 billion
Ronald Lauder, $1 billion
Nasser David Khalili, $900 million
Leonard Lauder, $800 million
Paul Allen, $750 million
Leon Black, $750 million
Steven Cohen, $750 million
Henry Kravis, $700 million
S.I. Newhouse Jr., $700 million
Esther Grether, $700 million
Leslie Wexner, $700 million

Top Billionaire Art Collectors


Keren Blankfeld, Cristina von Zeppelin and Susan Adams,07.24.09, 10:00 AM EDT

Despite one of the worst art market slumps in years, these individuals all have collections worth $700 million or more.


Suffering from one of its worst years in recent memory, the art world got a boost in June when French billionaire François Pinault opened his new modern art museum, the Punta della Dogana, in Venice's former customs house at the entrance of the Grand Canal. In what some called the "Dogana effect," the opening was also seen as having helped boost attendance at Art Basel, the respected contemporary art fair in Switzerland later that month. While sales for the toned-down fair are hard to come by, a record crowd of 61,000, including billionaires Mitchell Rales, Eli Broad and Roman Abramovich showed up at the event.
Wealthy patrons and collectors have been the lifeblood of the art world for centuries, from Italy's Medici family to American industrialists Henry Clay Frick and Andrew Mellon. That is still true today even as art valuations drop. Indeed, in a downturn like this one, billionaires are some of the only people who can still afford to buy expensive art or help prop up museums.
Broad, for instance, spent $30 million in December bailing out the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art to prevent the museum from having to sell off artwork and leave its current headquarters. Several months earlier, Estée Lauder Chairman Leonard Lauder gifted $131 million to New York City's Whitney Museum, of which he is chairman emeritus, in part to help it keep its Upper East Side location. (See "Most Powerful Billionaire Boards.")
Art is a passion for these billionaires, but it is also a valuable asset. So how did their personal collections hold up in the past year, and who among the rarefied rich owns the most valuable works?
Forbes recently scoured the art world to find out, spending weeks consulting with collectors, art appraisers, insurers, auction houses and gallery owners around the globe. We decided not to include members of the art trade, like dealer Larry Gagosian, or corporate collections, such as Bill Gates', which belongs to Microsoft ( MSFT - news people ). We decided not to include members of the art trade, like dealer Larry Gagosian, or corporate collections.
Since the art world trades on closely held information, most experts who spoke with us requested anonymity in discussing private art collections. While some disagreed on exact figures, almost all agreed on the top billionaire collectors. The final list includes 14 individuals who hold private collections worth $700 million or more. The estimates are purposefully conservative and should be considered "at least" numbers.
Topping the ranks is Philip Niarchos, son of the late shipping magnate Stavros Niarchos and father of Stavros III, who was linked in the past to American heiress Paris Hilton. He is said to have the most valuable collection, worth at least $2 billion. Philip's father began collecting art in 1949 and over his lifetime acquired many well-known masterpieces including Vincent van Gogh's "Self-Portrait with a Bandaged Ear" and Pablo Picasso's self-portrait "Yo, Picasso." Since his father left him the collection, Philip has quietly added such contemporary works as Jean-Michel Basquiat's "Self-Portrait" and Andy Warhol's "Shot Red Marilyn."
During our quest to pin down these extraordinary collections, we discovered a new fortune belonging to Esther Grether, a little-known Swiss cosmetics heiress whose 7.5% stake in Swatch and art collection of more than 600 pieces, including ones by Paul Cezanne, Salvador Dali and Francis Bacon, make her not only a billionaire but also the only woman in our list of top art collectors. She keeps the works in a printing factory that she converted, and where she also lives.
Valuing art is an obvious challenge, and even more so today with the art market affected by the same liquidity crisis as any other product or service. "The confusion [in valuations] has to do with the lower number of sales," said Dr. Beverly Schreiber Jacoby, a fine art adviser and former head of Old Master Drawings at Christies in New York. "Theoretically, there are fewer points of reference since last fall." With fewer buyers in the market and a healthy supply of new art, the contemporary art market took a precipitous fall in the last year, with some pieces depreciating in value by up to 90%.
Entertainment mogul David Geffen, for instance, made the list although the value of his collection was a matter of heated debate. Some argued his collection, comprised of seminal works by Jasper Johns, Willem De Kooning and Jackson Pollock, could be worth up to $2 billion. One person said the entire collection is worth only $400 million, due to the plunge in contemporary art prices. We pin the value at $1 billion.
Regardless, most agreed that Geffen proved to have impeccable timing in selling some of his collection three years ago. In a period of months in 2006, he apparently sold four paintings for $420 million including Jasper Johns' "False Start" to Citadel's Kenneth Griffin for $80 million and de Kooning's "Police Gazette" and "Woman III" to SAC Capital's Steve Cohen for $63.5 million and $137 million, respectively.
Cohen also makes the cut with a collection valued at $750 million, even though he likely couldn't sell his de Koonings for anything close to what he paid for them. Still, he has earned a reputation as a prolific, adventurous collector. He is the buyer, for instance, of British artist Damien Hirst's piece, "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"--a 13-foot tiger shark in a glass tank of formaldehyde. The creature reportedly rotted and was replaced. It also was the inspiration for a book, The $12 Million Stuffed Shark, by economist Don Thompson, who used it as a symbol of greed in the contemporary art world.
Cohen's passion for art may even surpass his love of business: SAC Capital bought a stake in Sotheby's BID -news people ) auction house earlier this year, even as the auction house reported losses of $34.5 million for the first quarter of 2009.

Industry executives emphasise the need for expert advice when considering art investment.

Investors cautioned over art investment

Expert advice needed

Kate Kachor
By Kate Kachor
Fri 20 Jan 2012

Investors considering purchasing artwork through their superannuation funds should consult an expert before making an investment decision, industry superannuation executives said.

"There is no doubt that people have a specific interest and specific expertise [in art investment] and they do get some good returns but you've got to be able to do your due diligence on the product and on the provider," Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia chief executive Pauline Vamos said.

"There is always a risk in dealing with third parties. You've got to make sure they are legitimate, you've got to get verification but you've got to make sure they are ethical as well."

Self-Managed Super Funds Professionals' Association of Australia (SPAA) chief executive Andrea Slattery said investors should familiarise themselves with the investment so they can make informed decisions.

"They [investors] should get specialist advice," Slattery said.

"This is an investment [that could] provide them with an opportunity to have retirement income and therefore you must be very confident that the investments that you're making [are appropriate] and you're aware of all of the opportunities and pitfalls that might occur."

ASFA and SPAA made the comments after more than 40 investors, many believed to have used their superannuation monies to invest in artworks, were victims of more than $8 million in artwork investment fraud.
A spokesperson for the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) was unable to comment on whether any of the investors were involved in self-managed superannauation funds or Australian Prudential Regulation Authority regulated funds.

On Monday, a Sydney art dealer was arrested and charged with 77 counts of larceny and 10 counts of director cheat and defraud, a NSW police statement said.

The art dealer was arrested following investigations into artwork investment fraud by Fraud and Cybercrime Squad detectives, the statement said.

More than 400 paintings were seized by police with extensive inquiries conducted to determine the legitimate ownership of the paintings, it said.

In early 2009, NSW police formed Strike Force Glasson to investigate dealings relating to a number of art galleries in Sydney's north-west following complaints of alleged investment fraud.