LONDON, Jan 8 ― Three cases of 2009 Chateau Lafite Rothschild, a Medoc first-growth wine, sold for £6,600 (RM35,536) each in the past month, matching the Liv-ex exchange’s record low in October amid subdued Bordeaux demand.
Two transactions took place on December 13 and December 27 on Liv-ex, while a third case of the vintage sold for the same amount on January 2 on the UK-based Cavex wine market, data on the two markets’ websites showed.
The Liv-ex Fine Wine 50 Index tracking top Bordeaux wines fell 3 per cent last year after a 10 per cent decline in 2012 and a 17 per cent drop in 2011. The index gained in the first quarter last year and then fell about 10 per cent since mid-March as investors and collectors shunned the market or diversified.
The price is “a little bit lower than we have seen,” Stephen Maunder, chief executive officer of Cavex, said by e-mail. It’s “too early to tell if Bordeaux prices are continuing to soften as they did in December.”
A case of the same wine also sold on Liv-ex last month at £6,700 while another 12 bottles fetched 6,800 and a further 12 bottles £6,920, according to data on Liv-ex’s Cellar Watch website.
Auction trading
The Lafite 2009 vintage peaked on Liv-ex in February 2011 at £14,350 a case, and has declined 54 per cent since then, according to Cellar Watch data. It is down 34 per cent from the £10,000 price at which it first traded in May 2010.
Two cases sold at a Hart Davis Hart Wine Co. auction in Chicago in September, one for US$11,950 and the other US$10,755, while a case fetched £8,225 at a Sotheby’s sale in London in October, according to data on the auction houses’ websites.
The 2009 Lafite is the estate’s second-most expensive of the past 15 years, trailing only the 2000 vintage, according to merchant data compiled by Liv-ex. The 2009 wine was rated 99+ on a 100-point scale by US critic Robert Parker in a February 2012 online tasting note, making it the highest-rated vintage on that measure since the 2003 wine.
Chateau Lafite Rothschild has more than 100 hectares planted with red-grape vines. Cabernet Sauvignon typically makes up 80 per cent to 95 per cent of its wine, with Merlot 5 per cent to 20 per cent, and smaller quantities of Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot. ― Bloomberg