High-end Properties and Artistic Synergy Mirror Fine Art Market is a marketplace for fine art.
The desire to buy a trophy home and decorate it with world-class artwork is not recent. Both, if purchased wisely, combine a rewarding lifestyle with a profitable investment. According to new data from Christie's International Real Estate, the symmetry in demand for these two asset classes is so similar that rates for each have increased by more than 20% in the last year. Emerging-market buyers are joining forces with buyers in more mature markets to keep fine art and luxury homes prices high. qatar real estate
Luxury Defined: An Insight into the Luxury
Residential Property Market, a study published by Christie's International Real
Estate (CIRE) in April 2014, reveals that luxury real estate has a far stronger
association with the elite end of the fine art market than it does with the
general housing market.
Luxury-real-estate-fine-art-and-general-housing-growth-rates-2011-and-2013.jpg
"Like luxury real estate, the top end
of the fine art market has seen a revival in recent years as the world's
wealthiest have turned to investments that deliver individuality,
craftsmanship, and experiential luxury," says Joachim Wrang-Widen, Senior
VP at CIRE. "Both markets are assets of passion and lifestyle, with small
stock and strong demand. The provenance and nature of a coveted home, like a
masterwork of art, drives prices at the very top of the market."
Christie's, the only real estate network
operated entirely by a fine art auction house, contrasted the three-year
compound growth trend in fine art sales and residential sales of assets worth
more than $1 million to the overall growth rate in house prices.
Luxury home sales increased by 24%, while
fine art sales increased by 22%, according to these estimates. In contrast,
general housing sales in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia increased by 6% over
the same timeframe, while the S&P/Case-Shiller 10-City US House Price Index
increased by 3%.
The Art Market in the World
Last year's global art sales totaled €47.42
billion, making it the second-best year on record. According to data from the
European Fine Art Foundation's TEFAF Art Market Study, this amount was only
slightly lower than the €48.07 billion highs set in 2007.
The two most expensive works ever sold at
auction were Francis Bacon's triptych "Three Studies of Lucian
Freud," which sold for $142.4 million in New York in November, going to an
anonymous buyer for $50 million more than the pre-auction estimate, and Edvard
Munch's "The Scream," which sold for $119.9 million in May.
The Luxury Real Estate Market
According to Bonnie Stone Sellers, CEO of
CIRE, property sales in the top price brackets have continued to increase,
owing to restricted inventory, low interest rates, and pent-up demand. "If
2012 was the year when the top end of the luxury market came back to life, 2013
was the year when the majority of the luxury market thrived," she says.
With 70% of high net worth individuals
investing directly in cities, international buyers demonstrated their
commitment to buying in urban areas in particular. This pattern was established
in PwC and The Urban Land Institute's Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2014
study, which stated that 61% of millionaires live in cities and prefer a home
in a "walkable, urban environment." According to Christie's report,
the annual unweighted average growth rate in London, Los Angeles, New York,
Paris, and San Francisco is 31%.
Newcomers to the market The Stock Exchange
New York, according to art market data
company Artprice, is the "epicentre" of high-end art purchases,
hosting 39 of the top 50 auctions last year. The United States has dominated
the art industry for the past two decades, and while it still holds a 39
percent share of the market in terms of revenue, China now accounts for nearly
a quarter of all art sales. According to TEFAF, despite the fact that Chinese
buyers' meteoric rise in the market slowed in 2012, they remain the most
important of the newer art markets.
Sales of Old Masters at Christie's and
Sotheby's increased by 56.5 percent in 2012, with emerging markets such as the
United Arab Emirates, Mexico, and Brazil joining China in contributing
significant numbers of new buyers to the market. Chairman of Sotheby's North
and South America, Lisa Dennison.
In their latest World Wealth Report,
consulting firm Cap Gemini notes, "Looking forward, the art market,
especially at the upper end, is expected to remain high." "Demand
outstrips supply not only because masterpieces are rare, but also because their
owners are often hesitant to sell due to the difficulty in finding assets with
comparable return of characteristics."
That is also true of top-end global land,
according to CIRE's Wrang-Widen, which is why he believes luxury residential
real estate, which is seen as a "safe haven" investment, has
especially strong growth potential.
Comments
Post a Comment