Does Investing in Art Pay Off?
Many high-net-worth individuals have a strong interest in investing outside of the usual stock market. There are all kinds of things people can invest in, including luxury cars, real estate, horses, jewelry and of course artwork. The artwork is one of the most common collection items that the wealthy invest in and many high-net-worth individuals have increased their net worth through prudent investments in art. However, investing in the artwork is not cut and dry. It doesn’t always prove fruitful and there are arguments both for and against this endeavor.
Are the Return Numbers Actually Inflated?
In fact, according to a study released earlier this year, investing in the art may not be nearly as lucrative as those in the industry have led us to believe. In June of this year the Luxembourg School of Finance at the University of Luxembourg released the findings from research it did on the returns of fine art. That research indicated that even though the Index of Fine Art Sales has shown a 10 percent yearly average return on all art investments over the last 40 years, those numbers are in fact not nearly that high. Based on their research, which was taken from the Blouin Art Sales Index, which is the most complete auction database available, the actual average return from 1960 to 2013 was only 6.3 percent. The researchers also concluded that the mere fact of holding an art fund in an investment portfolio does not improve the likelihood that a given portfolio will outperform.
More Risk Investing in Art?
There is another possible downside for those considering investing in art. Based on the information gathered from the Blouin Art Sales Index, the researchers calculated a score of 0.11 on the Sharpe Ratio, which is used to calculate the risk-adjusted return. The previous value that had been reported was 0.27, which is much more favorable because the higher the value of the Sharpe Ratio the better the risk-adjusted return.
Why the Discrepancy?
So how are the estimated numbers from the art investing industry so far apart from the actual results? The researchers say the main cause is that investors and dealers have been guilty of selection bias. This happens because paintings that are in high demand usually end up being auctioned off more often and they sell for a lot more money, which gives them an upward bias. In addition, art owners typically sell their paintings that have increased the most in value. These numbers are then incorrectly applied to the value of paintings that sell less frequently or that don’t sell at all.
Make Sure You Love it
Of course, there are many arguments both for and against investing in art. Some investors have had a lot of success, while many others have ended up on the wrong side of art investment. If you are considering investing in art, then one simple rule to live by is to always purchase something because you love it and you know you’ll be happy with it even if you never do sell it.
//phys.org/news/2016-06-invest-art-fine-overestimated.html
//www.huffingtonpost.com/artinfo/does-investing-in-art-make-sense_b_2663745.html
Dawn LeBlanc – Managing Director at Hartford InsurTech Hub
Dawn is the Managing Director at Hartford InsurTech Hub. She has Diversified expertise across insurance/financial products, innovation, marketing, regulatory, actuarial, operations, distribution and technology. Prior to joining Hartford InsurTech Hub she was the Vice President Business Solutions at Prudential Financial. Dawn attended Central Connecticut State UniversityWhere she received her Bachelor’s in Science in Mathematics/Actuarial
Avishai Ben-Tovim | CEO of MDI Health
Avishai Ben-Tovim is a sales & business development executive with years of professional experience and a drive to succeed and to innovate. He holds an IT Engineering degree from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev as well as an MBA from Tel Aviv University. Over the course of his career, he has worked extensively within the sales and technology sectors and held a variety of technical and management roles with companies like Kenshoo, eToro, Google and Roundforest, the latter of which he acted as
How Ellipsis Health Will Change Behavioral Health Diagnosis | Steven Cupps
AlanI’m visiting here today with Steven Cupps, he is the head of Business Development for Ellipsis Health. Welcome to today’s show.Steven Thank you so much for having me.AlanSo Steven, I’d like to hear the background of how you got to the position that you’re in today. What led up to this?StevenBehavioral health has always been a passion of mine. If you think about the entire ecosystem, and in healthcare, it’s really the biggest unmet challenge today. And so what we’re doing at ellipsis is we’re
California LLC Laws And IRS Identity Theft Reporting
A discussion on the tax history of LLC entities i…