Skate’s Latest Art Investment Report Shows Top-Heavy Market Trend
Skate’s Art Market Research, which has observed the sector since 2004, recently published the first part of its ‘2012 Annual Art Investment Report’, which examines its Top 5000 ranking of the world’s most valuable works of art as determined by public auction price. In this latest report, the Skate’s team address the various changes that occurred in this premium segment of the art market by comparing the sector’s performance to 2011 as to artist rankings, sales volume and value, investment performance, and general changes in the ranking structure.
As reported by Forbes earlier this month, the Skate’s findings point at a new trend in the art investment sector. The conclusion of the Skate’s analyst team is that fewer yet wealthier people are buying more expensive art from a limited selection of established names. Confirming the trend, the total capitalisation of artworks in the research firm ranking climbed nine per cent in 2012, while the number of new artists appearing in the ranking declined to 38 in the past year from 81 in 2011.
Returns on Repeat Sales Down
Sales for the priciest of artworks ranked in Skate’s Top 5000 fetched $2.3 million (£1.4 million) and above, totalling $33.3 billion (£21.1 billion), with painters Gerhard Richter, Pablo Picasso and Andy Warhol leading the pack for most auction sales overall. Joining Richter, Warhol and Picasso, Jean-Michel Basquiat was amongst the artists in the category of most repeat sales above the $2.3 million mark in 2012, where only 118 sales of artworks in the ranking had appeared at auction before. The weighted average return on those repeat sales was 4.87 per cent, down from 7.2 per cent in 2011, with an average holding period for those works of 9.3 years.
2012 Biggest Gains and Losses
Skate’s art investment report also tracked the repeat sales in 2012 which generated the greatest financial gains or losses for their former owners. The highest return on a repeat sale was produced by Italian-born painter Giuseppe Castiglione whose work “An Imperial portrait of Consort Chunhui” generated a return on investment of 46 per cent after a seven-year holding period, selling for $4.5 million (£2.8 million). Not everything made money though. One notable loss was produced by Marc Chagall’s “La Musique” which sold for $2.1 million (£1.3 million) in 2012, producing for its vendor a 25 per cent loss after a one-year holding period.
As announced earlier this month, Skate’s will publish its ‘2012 Annual Art Investment Report’ in three parts. Towards the end of this month, the research group is set to publish the second volume which will focus on the global art industry, while the final part is expected to cover Skate’s predictions for 2013.
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