HONG KONG: Asia's thirst for rare and fine
wine is moving beyond the dining table as the industry seeks to tickle
the region's capital markets as well as its taste buds.
China is already the fastest-growing wine consumption market globally,
and industry experts say wealthy Chinese business people are now also
developing an appetite for the investment opportunity that wine offers.
"Wine is a very passionate subject, much more so than stocks and shares.
It's a passion as well as an investment for our clients," said Stephen
Wickens, the managing director of Wickens & Co, a Hong Kong-based
wine investment firm.
"It's a very safe investment and it's very attractive at this time when
people are uncertain about the stock and property markets."
Two thirds of the 18-month-old company's clients, totalling about 500,
come from China and Hong Kong. Wickens reckons his client base will
double next year.
"Right now Asia is really driving the demand. The traditional markets of
Europe and America are very slow," he said on the sidelines of a wine
trade fair in Hong Kong this month, which drew a record 934 exhibitors.
Hong Kong has capitalised on the rapid expansion of personal wealth in
China to become the dynamic centre of Asia's wine trade since it
abolished duties on wine imports in 2008.
Wine imports are poised to set a new record after surging nearly 60 per
cent year-on-year in the first nine months of 2011 to US$940 million.
The figure stood at $895 million in 2010, up 73 per cent from $517
million in 2009.
The wine industry council in the French region of Bordeaux says local
producers saw a 92 per cent surge in export volumes to China in the 12
months to July, and a 69 per cent increase to Hong Kong.
To capitalise on this, businesswoman Ling Zhijun has just launched
Dinghong, mainland China's first investment fund specialising only in
wine -- available only to those with one million yuan (US$160,000) or
more at their disposal.
She is waiting for the green light from authorities to start raising
money, but says she already has investment pledges from a dozen people
and will be able to collect 200 million yuan by the end of the year.
"We're banking on a return on investment of 15 per cent a year," she
said, adding she chose to focus only on French wines because those from
the New World are "more standardised, a bit like Starbucks coffee".
Hong Kong's Wing Lung Bank, meanwhile, launched a wine financing
service, the first in the southern Chinese city, in April this year to
allow investors to borrow to buy wine at designated merchants.
Buyers can borrow up to HK$5 million (US$650,000) with a repayment
period between one and five years, and the response has been
"overwhelming", said assistant general manager William Tang.
"Like many other businesses, the wine industry takes advantage of Hong
Kong as the gateway to mainland China, where increased prosperity and
changes in lifestyle have led to a significant rise in the demand for
wine," he said.
"People in Hong Kong and China have become more knowledgeable over their
favourite wines. All of these help raise people's interest in investing
or purchasing wine, resulting in the growing demand on wine financing
services."
But if they are looking for a place to shelter from the headwinds
buffeting the global economy, Asia's new wine speculators might be
disappointed. Wine prices have fallen about 15-20 per cent this year,
according to Wickens.
"This is a market correction. It's not a bubble bursting or another
disaster in the market, and we still see some wine going up in value,
such as the Domaine de la Romanee-Conti and Petrus," he said.
"Wine is not just a piece of paper, it's a physical item. It has some tangible value, it's unlikely to go zero," he added.
Investors are advised to put their money away for the medium to long
term, and target batches of young wines at their initial release price.
Wickens said certain "blue-chips" like the Mouton Rothschild 2006, which
currently fetches about HK$6,300 (US$800) per bottle, and Chateau
D'Yquem 2007, at HK$4,000 a bottle, could return 25-30 per cent after
three years in a cellar.
"For a 2004 bottle of Lafite, which is not a great vintage -- two years
ago it was selling at 5,000 pounds (US$8,000) a case and now it's about
8,000 pounds.
Even though it's not a great vintage, it has good return," he said.
The wine can also be bought "en primeur", where a specific vintage of
wine is bought before it is bottled and sold in the market two or three
years later.
"It's becoming increasingly interesting to consumers, it's an
alternative investment," said Geordie Willis from the Hong Kong unit of
Britain's oldest wine and spirit merchant, Berry Bros & Rudd, which
has supplied wine to the British royal family.
He said the tight supply of fine wine, due to the limits of how much can be produced each year, make it a scarce commodity.
"It is a product which is improving in terms of quality, diminishing in
terms of quantity and the market is enlarging in terms of the size of
the customers," he said.
"There are more companies coming to us and there are more private
investors who are trying to diversify their portfolio. It's growing all
the time."
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