This is the guy who is planning on drilling for natural gas here in New York using hydraulic fracturing. Cheney gave him and all his friends exemption from the Clean Water Act. The possibility that this process will pollute the entire Catskill watershed (including New York City's water supply) is quite real.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Other than that it's dumb advice, I don't see the cause of ire. What human beings will make and sell, other human beings will attempt to trade for profit. Wine, pork bellies, first editions, none are exempt. Better wine, as far as I'm concerned, than hedge funds.
originally posted by SFJoe:
I love the idea that Bordeaux futures are a good place to be.
Can any of these people spell "counterparty risk"?
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Other than that it's dumb advice, I don't see the cause of ire. What human beings will make and sell, other human beings will attempt to trade for profit. Wine, pork bellies, first editions, none are exempt. Better wine, as far as I'm concerned, than hedge funds.
I don't agree, Prof. I have no great problem with the commodities market, as it represents the essence of market-based capitalism. But treating fine wine as no different from pork bellies ignores the highly regulated nature of the market for fine wine. It's really very much like the Dutch tulip economy wherein you create a luxury product out of whole cloth by exploiting scarcity to your advantage. I feel about these people much as I do about Ticketmaster and other institutionalized ticket scalpers: up against the wall, motherfuckers! The Revolution is upon ye!
Mark Lipton
Oh, absolutely, I don't worry about the funds. Unless they are fraudulent or some such. But their transaction costs will eat any yields. It's a dopey idea, really.originally posted by Yixin:
The counterparty risk which Joe refers to has typically manifested in the bankruptcy of wine merchants (c.f. Mayfair Cellars) rather than investment funds. Insofar as there continues to be parental support for captive operations, as would be the case for most wealth advisors, I do not anticipate significant counterparty risk, pace Joe.
originally posted by Yixin:
Price discoveryAs an ethnic Chinese wine collector working in the finance sector I am always interested in insightful analysis of this particular asset class.
The continued presence of these investment funds will provide the necessary liquidity in the fine wine market for price discovery of what some of us regard as a demurrage currency (in its sense as a store of value). Based on a proprietary benchmark index of collectible wines, I constructed a time series of yield curves stretching back to the 1855 classification. It is indisputable that greater transactional volume has provided more data than ever across various maturities, and I have recently been able to start tracking spreads between various classes, e.g. white Burgundy and Bordeaux 1st growths. This is an especially instructive example as spreads on implied forwards for a decade hence were unerringly accurate in predicting the demise for white Burgundies from premature oxidation when Lafite et. al. would just be entering the early portion of their drinking windows.
The counterparty risk which Joe refers to has typically manifested in the bankruptcy of wine merchants (c.f. Mayfair Cellars) rather than investment funds. Insofar as there continues to be parental support for captive operations, as would be the case for most wealth advisors, I do not anticipate significant counterparty risk, pace Joe.