Zoeken in WijnWijs.eu

Weekdeals (300x250)
Eten & kookboeken (300x250)
Navigatiesytemen (300x250)

Wie is online?

We hebben 15 gasten en geen leden online

RSS-feed

Please update your Flash Player to view content.

Klik op de foto's voor een vergroting.


 

Wijnveiling valt tegen

altIn Hongkong is de allereerste wijnveiling van het jaar op een teleurstelling uitgelopen. De veilingbezoekers zijn aanzienlijk minder happig op aangekondigde ‘zeldzame’ aanbiedingen dan eerder het geval was.Veel top-Bordeauxs van jongere jaargangen bleven onverkocht staan. Daardoor werd de veilingopbrengst aanzienlijk gedrukt. Het veilinghuis Sotheby's meldde 44 miljoen Hong Kong dollar, in plaats van de verwachte 50 tot 70 miljoen. Het meeste bracht een kist (van 12 flessen) Romanée Conti 1990 op:1,8 miljoen Hong Kong dollar. We ontvingen het volgende bericht over de veiling:




“Sotheby's first wine auction of the year fetched HK$44 million ($5.6 million), falling short of its HK$50-70 million estimate, the auctioneer said in a statement.

The sale -- called Finest and Rarest Wines -- trailed 983 lots including the Bordeaux Winebank Collection, but sold only 85 percent on offer, the auction power house said,

Robert Sleigh, head of Sotheby's Wine, Asia, attributed the disappointing sale to a tailing-off in demand for younger Bordeaux vintages, after buyers flocked to the wine over the last two years.

"(But)Burgundy, Champagne and Californian wines continued to perform very strongly, along with mature Bordeaux," he added.

The top of the lot was a case of Romanee Conti 1990 which sold for HK$1.8 million.

Other sale highlights include three magnums of Veuve Clicquot Champagne, 1921, 1929 and 1947, which Sotheby's said were bought by a mainland Chinese connoisseur.

The disappointing results may slightly tarnish Hong Kong's status as a leading wine market which has been spurred by buyers from China -- the world's fastest-growing wine consumption market.

In recent years, Hong Kong has emerged as the world's third-largest auction centre after New York and London, thanks in large part to China's rapidly growing number of millionaires.
Mainland Chinese are regular buyers of the top lots at sales of art, jewellery and wine and Hong Kong has positioned itself as a wine hub for Asia as well as the gateway to China's vast market”.

Plaats reactie


Beveiligingscode
Vernieuwen