Art as an investment

When Francis Bacon’s Three Studies of Lucian Freud sold for $142.4m in 2013, it was a sign of the art market’s health. This may be the time to challenge the idea that art is an investment-grade asset

 
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Art is often viewed as a valuable asset, however the market is undermined by illiquidity, opacity, patchy supply and asymmetry of information. There is consensus in the art world that art’s ‘beautiful object’ status should be its most important feature

It seems to me that the best way to understand art’s distinct characteristics is through the prism of those assets with which it is often compared (but rarely in depth). It is understandable that wider market gloom has moved the debate about art as an asset into new territory. Art, claim its proponents, is not only a source of great value, but is also impervious to the world’s economic slings and arrows.

However, when looked at more carefully as an investment category, art falls short in relation to many of the other assets to which it is frequently – and favourably – compared. These include both traditional and alternative investments, such as public and private equity, gold, wine, and residential property.

The combination of the market’s illiquidity, opacity, patchy supply and asymmetry of information undermines art’s profile as an asset. This is reinforced by the unique qualities of each work – including its history of ownership, trading and display – which create enormous ranges of pricing and valuation, and preclude sensible data aggregation or comparison. The market’s opacity also opens it up to unchecked manipulation.

The market’s illiquidity, opacity, patchy supply and asymmetry of information undermines art’s profile as an asset

Price transparency is another huge problem facing those who would map art’s returns on a Bloomberg screen, alongside their other investments. Only 50 percent of an already small number of art trades are recorded (auction results are made public, dealers’ prices are not). To put this into perspective, Artnet, a database of auction sales, records that 1.8m works of fine art were offered at auction in 2012. By comparison, there were an average 1.5m trades per day through the London Stock Exchange alone in May 2012.

Risks and returns
Even if the limited, patchy and inconsistent available data on art sales could be put into a hypothetical basket of all segments of art, its financial profile is hardly compelling. Most such theoretical analyses of the art market find that the average compound return for works kept for between five and 10 years is around four percent.

Relatively speaking, this is already less than gold, wine and both public and private equity, and also lower than residential property – another market of unique goods, but with more trading volume and available data. And this is before considering the risk-adjusted return (the profits needed to make up for the peculiarities of any market). One investment professional I interviewed for my book said that, given the risks in the art market, anyone who is content with less than a 50 percent return on art “needs a lesson in investment”.

Meanwhile, art’s supposed lack of correlation with other markets is not entirely convincing. The price levels for art do not reflect its fundamental characteristics, but rather reflect the fortunes of its buyers. The art market as a whole crashed soon after the economic downturn began in earnest in 2008. Thereafter, only the top-priced works recovered as the wealthiest few emerged relatively unscathed from the credit crisis and new wealth was created outside the gloom of Europe and the US.

[T]he economists Erdal Atukeren and Aylin Seckin estimated the intangible joy of looking at a work of art… at around 28 percent

Spiritual joy
This is not to say that art doesn’t offer a different type of return, and even one with some grounding in economic analysis. In a 2007 paper, the economists Erdal Atukeren and Aylin Seckin estimated the intangible joy of looking at a work of art, which they term its ‘psychic return’, at around 28 percent. While it would be difficult to persuade a bank to lend money on the basis of this estimate (or indeed against most estimates of art’s value), owning and looking at art certainly offers something that a stock certificate or bar of gold cannot.

There is consensus in the art world (including the art market) that art’s ‘beautiful object’ status is what should be deemed its most important feature anyway. While there is an element of posturing in cutting out the investment aspects of art, it cannot be ignored that art offers a very different type of reaction to other investments, and one that is potentially very rewarding.

Of course, this is not to say that art isn’t an asset, per se, and that it can’t deliver superior returns. But I would advise that, rather than thinking of art as an investment of passion, would-be buyers should focus on it being a passion which, if they do their homework and get lucky, could also make some money.

Art as an investment – how does it measure up?

Art and stock markets
The closest thing in the art world to investment funds are, in fact, not the art funds that have based their business models on them, but rather private dealers of art. The comparison is even more pertinent with primary market dealers, who invest in the artist and the production of his or her work. They grow profits not just through sourcing supply and stimulating demand, but by adding value to the artists they believe in. The daily business of primary-market dealers involves building the reputation of artists, their works, and galleries, as well as trading their works. These galleries can be seen as the equivalents of what are known as incubator funds, a subset of private equity’s venture funds arena, designed to help businesses at an early stage develop their potential. Incubated companies rarely generate any revenue at all, but it is the fund’s job to turn them into independent companies, just as primary-market dealers slowly drive artists and their work to secondary-market standards.

Art and wine
Like the art market, wine investment has received a revitalising boost in the form of demand from new markets, after the credit crunch dampened enthusiasm elsewhere. Countries with new wealth and a growing middle class (in particular China, Russia and Brazil) have proved the most significant sources of confidence in both markets. In 2008, Hong Kong cut its duty on wine from 80 percent to zero, making it one of the only places in the world where wine is untaxed. Hong Kong also doesn’t have any sales tax. That this came at the same time that the traditional wine markets of North America and Europe were wobbling from the effects of the long debt crisis gave some much-needed succour to the industry. A similar dynamic underpinned the art market between 2008 and 2011.

Art and property
Much like the relationship of a dividend to a share price, the value of a property includes a quantifiable premium for the regular income it can provide (in the form of rent). At the very top end of the luxury property market, rent may be a more difficult income to guarantee, but on a like-for-like basis, a £5m apartment with views of Buckingham Palace or Hyde Park can generate considerably more income than, for example, a painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat, such as his 1983 work Five Fish Species (which sold for £5m in February 2013). Others believe that art does provide a form of rent already, in its aforementioned psychic return. This was summarised by Malcolm Gladwell: “The best illustration of psychic benefits is the art market. Art collectors buy paintings for two reasons. They are interested in the painting as an investment, the same way they would view buying stock in General Motors. And they are interested in the painting as a painting, as a beautiful object.”