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Selling the very rare, collectible wines of the world, Adam Bilbey, SVP, Global Head of Wine & Spirits for Christie’s, has a unique view into the state of the wine collector. Adam maps the thought processes and changes in attitude of buyers and sellers of rare wine globally, and he is seeing “green shoots” in the market by mid-2025.
Detailed Show Notes:
Adam’s background - started w/ Berry Bros out of high school (2000) at Heathrow Airport shop, moved to Hong Kong in 2010 w/ Berry Bros, Sotheby’s in 2015, Christie’s in 2021
Christie’s is known for fine art, and wine is part of the luxury group (jewelry, handbags, cars), which is 20% of sales, and wine is 10-20% of luxury sales
2025 wine auction market
Burgundy has taken share from Bordeaux last 5-6 years, Champagne came up and leveled off, Italy is strong in the US but not in Asia, Burgundy is strong in Asia, but leveled off
Interest in more mature vintages, particularly Bordeaux, is still valued there
Focus on provenance, people won’t bid on poor provenance anymore
With a more global market than ever, people buy from anywhere
Liv-ex shows -10% pricing last year, -20% last 2 years; auction prices move gradually, often lots don’t sell
More Millennials and Gen Z customers (45% 2025 from 30% 2022)
Female customers have been consistent last 4-5 years, a slight dip in the US, and growing in Asia
Younger generations are drinking younger wines, they like the security of younger wines, have a fear of disappointment in older bottles
Online auctions require ease of use
Provenance is improving with more communication (e.g., purchase & storage records), people working together (merchants, auction houses), and technology (digital microscopes, UV light, carbon dating)
Provenance is critical, as people remember the bad bottles sold to them over the good ones
Believes China will make a comeback in the next 2-4 years
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Selling the very rare, collectible wines of the world, Adam Bilbey, SVP, Global Head of Wine & Spirits for Christie’s, has a unique view into the state of the wine collector. Adam maps the thought processes and changes in attitude of buyers and sellers of rare wine globally, and he is seeing “green shoots” in the market by mid-2025.
Detailed Show Notes:
Adam’s background - started w/ Berry Bros out of high school (2000) at Heathrow Airport shop, moved to Hong Kong in 2010 w/ Berry Bros, Sotheby’s in 2015, Christie’s in 2021
Christie’s is known for fine art, and wine is part of the luxury group (jewelry, handbags, cars), which is 20% of sales, and wine is 10-20% of luxury sales
2025 wine auction market
Burgundy has taken share from Bordeaux last 5-6 years, Champagne came up and leveled off, Italy is strong in the US but not in Asia, Burgundy is strong in Asia, but leveled off
Interest in more mature vintages, particularly Bordeaux, is still valued there
Focus on provenance, people won’t bid on poor provenance anymore
With a more global market than ever, people buy from anywhere
Liv-ex shows -10% pricing last year, -20% last 2 years; auction prices move gradually, often lots don’t sell
More Millennials and Gen Z customers (45% 2025 from 30% 2022)
Female customers have been consistent last 4-5 years, a slight dip in the US, and growing in Asia
Younger generations are drinking younger wines, they like the security of younger wines, have a fear of disappointment in older bottles
Online auctions require ease of use
Provenance is improving with more communication (e.g., purchase & storage records), people working together (merchants, auction houses), and technology (digital microscopes, UV light, carbon dating)
Provenance is critical, as people remember the bad bottles sold to them over the good ones
Believes China will make a comeback in the next 2-4 years
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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