Jonathan Loesberg
Jonathan Loesberg
originally posted by pab:
In France since 1981, there is ISF (impot sur la fortune) for people with a fortune more than 1 300 000 (real estate, portfolio...).
If somebody invest money in a vineyard, it's possible to have an "abattement" of 75% on ISF ("défiscalisation"). That's why vigneron try to seduce french individual investors.
But much of the "defiscalisation" are bad investement, not speculativ with too much fee. But, people prefer lose money than give to the State.
Here, I don't understand how "a new old" (sic) vineyards in St Julien en St Alban could be so speculativ. I don't understand what to do every year with thousand and thousand bootles of a middle-of-the road estate. Third, if you work on your own vineyard and farmer vineyard, I don't need to ask witch one will receive the best treatment...
Best regards
pierre-alain benoit
I agree that "new old" is an odd locution, but I took it to mean that they were old vineyards that would be new to the Texier portfolio (and, if they have not been maintained well, might need work in the vineyards to make them workable again, and would thus be in that sense new).
At least part of the speculation would be on Eric's skill as a winemaker and his success in selling St. Julien en St. Alban already at somewhat more, in the US, at least, than 5 Euros a bottle.
I am very bullish on Texier wines. But I would certainly attend to the old joke about how to make $100,000 in the wine business if you are really thinking of this as a business investment. I am guessing that people who are interested have other notions than just profit in mind.