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Liquid Assets 2021 Q1: A year to forget ends with the fine-wine trade embarking on the slow road to recovery

Sign up to our email newsletter Be the first to know about the latest in luxury lifestyle news and travel, delivered straight to your inbox each week. Email Adress Sign up Home | Auctions & Fine Wine Market | Liquid Assets 2021 Q1: A year to forget ends with the fine-wine trade embarking on the slow road to recovery Liquid Assets 2021 Q1: A year to forget ends with the fine-wine trade embarking on the slow road to recovery By Chloe Ashton |  March 18 2021 2020’s most expensive lot: DRC 1985 in 6-liter Methuselahs sold through Baghera for $1,009,350. Photography courtesy of Baghera The World of Fine Wine ’s auctions and secondary market correspondent,

A year to forget ends with the fine-wine trade embarking on the slow road to recovery

A year to forget ends with the fine-wine trade embarking on the slow road to recovery The World of Fine Wine’s auctions and secondary market correspondent, Chloe Ashton, finds cause for cautious optimism after the first 12 difficult months of Covid-19 Against a frightening global backdrop, fine-wine prices managed to climb in 2020. While an uphill struggle logistically, with merchants navigating digital adaptation as well as licking old wounds (Brexit uncertainty, US tariffs, Hong Kong’s political instability), heightened interest and activity from collectors propped up the market, finally ending an historic year with positive gains. Liv-ex indices show that the market did stumble at the initial, global impact of Covid-19 the Liv-ex 50, comprising Bordeaux first growths, dropped 3 percent in the first quarter of the year (fig.1). “Fear began to set in as sales for Chinese New Year were drastically down on previous years,” explains Justin Gibbs, Co-founder and Director of

Bordeaux: Château du Tertre sold in Margaux

Decanter Bordeaux: Château du Tertre sold in Margaux Château du Tertre, the fifth growth estate in Bordeaux’s Margaux appellation, has been sold by the Albada Jelgersma family as part of a strategic shift. Château du Tertre in order to focus on its other estates, which include nearby Margaux-based estate It said the buyers were the Helfrich winemaking family and also a ‘French institutional investor’, which has purchased the land at the 80-hectare fifth growth estate. A fee for the deal was not disclosed, but the sale of a classified winery in Médoc is still relatively rare.

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