CHINA> Taiwan, HK, Macao
|
HK takes over as top slot among world's wine markets
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-10-06 10:33 HONG KONG: Hong Kong took the top slot among the world's major wine markets at weekend auctions where Sotheby's sold $8 million worth of fine wine. Hong Kong has grown as a wine hub, taking over from London and New York, after the city abolished wine duties. And auction houses such as Sotheby's and Christie's have been pushing Asian buyers for new business as prices drop in the wake of the global economic downturn and as luxury spending dwindles.
"Asian buyers represented 99 percent of buyers in this two-day sale," said Serena Sutcliffe, head of Sotheby's international wine department. "Hong Kong has become Sotheby's most important wine center, ahead of very successful auctions in New York and London," she added. The top lot on Sunday was a Chateau Petrus 1982 6-litre Imperial that fetched around $93,000, a world auction record for that size of Petrus vintage. Meanwhile, a 12-bottle case of 1995 Domaine de la Romanee-Conti fetched $93,077, while a case of 2002 Domaine de la Romanee-Conti fetched $85,000. Last month, US wine merchant Acker Merrall & Condit sold $6.4 million worth of fine wine in a Hong Kong sale that Acker President John Kapon said indicated Hong Kong's role as "arguably the fine wine world's most important market". Christie's said Asian buyers accounted for 61 percent of its global wine sales in New York, London and Hong Kong this spring, up from just 7 percent in 2005. Of these, buyers from China grew over 200 percent between fall of last year and this spring. David Elswood, Christie's international head of wine, said that with the US market still weak, its nascent Hong Kong sales were encouraging. Average lot values of wines sold in Hong Kong were now relatively high at around $19,000, though sales volumes were not yet up to the same level as the West. But the Asian market for wine was also "in danger of overheating", Elswood said, after 18 months of hyperactivity and instances of inflated prices for top wines paid by overzealous Asian buyers that could be acquired more cheaply in the West. "It needs to level off," he said. Reuters |