COUTTS INDEX REVEALS
PASSION INVESTMENTS HAVE RISEN 77% SINCE 2005, OUTPERFORMING SHARES
·
Classic cars rise 257%
·
Classic watches up 176%
·
Billionaire property doubles in value
Passion investments
returned 77% (local currency terms)* since 2005, outperforming shares,
according to the first edition of The Coutts Index: Objects of Desire. Launched
today, the new Coutts Index aims to provide the global benchmark for monitoring
the performance of passion assets.
Mohammed Sayed |
The Index, developed
in conjunction with Fathom Consulting, captures the price return in local
currency (net of the holding costs) of 15 passion assets across two broad
categories: trophy property and alternative investments. Alternative
investments can be further broken down into fine art, collectibles and precious
items.
Of all the
alternative investments Coutts examined for the Index, classic cars have
returned the most since 2005, rising by 257%, outpacing all other investments
by more than 80 percentage points over the seven and-a-half-year timeframe.
Classic watches have also proved they can stand the test of time, rising by
176% from 2005 to 30 June 2013.
Jewels returned 146%
in comparison, while the standout performer in the fine art space is the
traditional Chinese works of arts sector, which rose by 163% between 2005 and
30 June 2013.
Over the past seven
and a half years, the Coutts Index, based in US$ terms, has risen by 82% – over
the same period, the MSCI All Country Equity Index has risen by 53%, based in
US$ terms.
The Coutts Index
incorporates a real estate component supplied by Savills World Research. Trophy
property comprises ‘billionaire’ residential properties in the ten prime global
city locations and ‘leisure’ properties in the world’s most desirable leisure
destinations associated with these cities. Both measures lost value in the
run-up to the global recession, but billionaire property values have risen
strongly since, rising 100% from 2005 to 30 June 2013.
Mohammad Kamal Syed , Head of Strategic
Solutions at Coutts, said: “The Coutts
Index has been created to measure passion assets, or objects or desire, in
terms of performance, cost of storage and currency. But while many alternatives
have provided spectacular returns, there is more to investing in these assets
than price appreciation. For many people, profit is furthest from their
mind."
He added that for
many ultra-high-net-worth individuals, it is less about investing and more
about purchasing – purchasing assets driven by their emotions.
"The benefit is
more than just profit. Owners can bond with like-minded people in an elite
network, with assets offering escapism and a chance to re-enact history.
Indeed, there is one thing that the Coutts Index, for all its robustness, can’t
measure – and that is happiness. The idea of someone paying $50m for an
uncomfortable old car, with windows that don’t work and a noisy engine, seems
illogical. In many ways it is. But the happiness such a car can bring is
immeasurable.”
Coutts commissioned
articles and interviewed experts for its first edition of the Coutts Index.
They included Stanley Gibbons, the world’s leading stamp dealer, Berry Bros.
& Rudd, and the auction houses Sotheby's and Christie's.
Quentin Willson, broadcaster and classic car
specialist, looked under the
bonnet of the classic car market. He wrote: “If you had bought a 1970s Ferrari
Daytona for £50,000 in 2003, it would be worth £250,000 today. A 1960s Aston
Martin DB5 bought for £60,000 a decade ago would now command £350,000.”
“The question is
whether the classic car market has peaked. I’ve been wondering whether the
bubble will burst ever since prices started to rise in 2009. But they have kept
on rising and were up 27% in the first half of 2013.”
Nick Foulkes, author, historian and watch
enthusiast, revealed why he has been fascinated with watches since he was a child. He wrote:
“I can still remember writing an article in the 1980s, saying that the price of
an old ‘Paul Newman’ Rolex Daytona was about to overtake the price of a new
one. Now you will be lucky to find one for under £70,000.”
“But not all watches
will burn a hole in your pocket. Rolex recently launched some particularly
attractive Day-Date models with brightly coloured dials. These recalled the
original ‘Stella’ dialled Rolexes and are now creeping up in value, but these
Day-Date models can still be purchased for four figures. And I still think that
vintage Cartier watches are hugely undervalued.”
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