OK, the old fisherman was another guy, but I had to share.
I saw a post on a BB tonight that brought a little tear of nostalgia to my eye. To wit:
Re: RUDY KURNIAWAN SPECTRUM / VANQUISH WINE AUCTION FRAUD THREAD (MERGED)
Post Number:#1816 by Maureen Downey » Fri Mar 16, 2012 1:11 pm
I know its my business - but I really think the auction houses and retailer/brokers that deal in fine & rare have to move to NAMED third party expert authenticators. You have to remove the incentive to 'overlook' and have outside oversight. And Naming the expert puts their reputation on the line as well. No more 'secret' experts like in this spectrum/vanquish debacle. Then the buyers can chose to trust the third parties based on their credentials or not - but the vendors will have fulfilled as much diligence as they possibly can.
The only way this will happen is if it is demanded by the consumers.
---
www.chaiconsulting.com
I AM IN THE BUSINESS OF PRIVATE WINE COLLECTION MANAGEMENT - INCLUDING AUTHENTICATION!
I don’t know Maureen at all, and I totally concede her sincerity, but she really needs to read up a bit on the position S&P, say, was in during the run up to the CDO crisis in 2005-2008.
Limited number of auction houses, many diffuse and unempowered buyers. Auction houses (read Goldman, Merrill, my old shop Lehman, etc.) shop among rating agencies to find the lenient ones. Rating agencies compensated by (conflicted) sellers, not by (many, diffuse) buyers. Rating agencies who are too tough on one (CDO issue, DRC auction) are not chosen for the next. Rating agencies utterly corrupted over time, or out of business. I’m sure she is totally honest and would opt for the latter, but that is the way this situation plays out.
In fact, it’s the way it still plays out.
Bon ap, all,
J, feeling like an old fisherman in a different pond.
I saw a post on a BB tonight that brought a little tear of nostalgia to my eye. To wit:
Re: RUDY KURNIAWAN SPECTRUM / VANQUISH WINE AUCTION FRAUD THREAD (MERGED)
Post Number:#1816 by Maureen Downey » Fri Mar 16, 2012 1:11 pm
I know its my business - but I really think the auction houses and retailer/brokers that deal in fine & rare have to move to NAMED third party expert authenticators. You have to remove the incentive to 'overlook' and have outside oversight. And Naming the expert puts their reputation on the line as well. No more 'secret' experts like in this spectrum/vanquish debacle. Then the buyers can chose to trust the third parties based on their credentials or not - but the vendors will have fulfilled as much diligence as they possibly can.
The only way this will happen is if it is demanded by the consumers.
---
www.chaiconsulting.com
I AM IN THE BUSINESS OF PRIVATE WINE COLLECTION MANAGEMENT - INCLUDING AUTHENTICATION!
I don’t know Maureen at all, and I totally concede her sincerity, but she really needs to read up a bit on the position S&P, say, was in during the run up to the CDO crisis in 2005-2008.
Limited number of auction houses, many diffuse and unempowered buyers. Auction houses (read Goldman, Merrill, my old shop Lehman, etc.) shop among rating agencies to find the lenient ones. Rating agencies compensated by (conflicted) sellers, not by (many, diffuse) buyers. Rating agencies who are too tough on one (CDO issue, DRC auction) are not chosen for the next. Rating agencies utterly corrupted over time, or out of business. I’m sure she is totally honest and would opt for the latter, but that is the way this situation plays out.
In fact, it’s the way it still plays out.
Bon ap, all,
J, feeling like an old fisherman in a different pond.