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ART IS WEALTH / DIGITAL NOMADS
Citizenship Navigation - summer 2019
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Editor’s Preface ................................... p.3
Nomad Cruise ............................... p.6-7
DIGITAL NOMADS, A Rising Trend ............................... p.8-9
DIGITAL DISRUPTION - our nation - e-residency ESTONIA by Kaspar Korjus .......................p.11-13
Prince Albert of Monaco's "Top Cars Collection" ...............p.14-15
Tax-Free Storage Wars by Atossa Araxia Abrahamian ....................p.16-19
The true “value” of art by Karolina Blasiak ............................................p.20-21
Global Citizen: Dr. Juerg Steffen , CEO Henley & partners .............p.22-23
DESTINATION FOR DIGITAL NOMADS (Freelancers, Entrepreneurs and the wealthy people) .............p.24-25
Asia Consolidates Its Passport Power JAPAN - SINGAPORE - SOUTH KOREA p.26
Japan Begins Experiment of Opening to Immigration .................p.27
Euorpe’s Migration Lessons for Japan by Irina Angelescu .........................p.28
Japanese Citizenship - Naturalization to Japan by Hyong-Jin KWON ......p.29
Where do Multi-Nationals call home? .. ..........................................................p.30 Citizenship-by-Investment Programmes with Eric Major, Ceo of Latitude Consultancy .....................................p.31-33
At the heart of the Atlantic, in the footsteps of a mythical crossing, QUEEN MARY 2 ........................ p.34-35
USA EB-5 project - Become an american movie producer & get your U.S. VISA! by Kat Conway ...... p.36-37
Taxation of gifts under UK law by Dmitry Zapol ...............................p.38-39
WHAT IT TAKES TO BUILD AN Efficient RCBI Programme by Stéphane Tajick .. .................................................... p.40-41
GRENADA, E-2 Visa: Grenada to U.S.A. ......................p.42-45
Portugal’s Attractive Tax Regime for Newcomers by Rosa Freitas Soares ..............................................p.47
POST OFFERING OBLIGATIONS FOR EB-5 ISSUERS “YOU CLOSED, NOW WHAT?” by Bruce C. Rosetto & Bracha Pollack .......................... p.48-49
FRANCE THE NEW STAY "TALENT PASSPORT" French castle golden visa ................................ p.50-51
BREXIT: THE FREEDOM TO END FREEDOMS? by Malcolm Dowden p.53
Sovereign Equity: A Paradigm Shift by Dr. Christian H. Kälin .................p.54-55
Proposed Changes to Bulgarian Citizenship Law Would Make Program Similar to EB-5 by Ivan Petrov ......p.57
Malta, The Blockchain Island – Then and Now by Chris Borg & Dr Chris Agius .................................p.61
renounciation US Citizenship Is Divorcing Uncle Sam Right for You? by Alexander F. Marino ..............p.62-65
A Qualified Difference, IMCET Education & Training .................p.68-69
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2nd Quarter 2019 - 5
Tax-Free Storage Wars
by Atossa Araxia Abrahamian
Arcis is a new art storage facility in Harlem that offers its clients a Foreign Trade Zone. But are they selling the art world a luxury tax haven, or just banking on confusion?
On September 17, 2014, the art world’s upper crust convened in Luxembourg City to fête Le Freeport, a warehouse where the ultra-rich hoard paintings, cars, jewelry, wine, and other luxuries in duty-free comfort. Waiters in red uniforms dodged oversize bouquets of white lilies to pass around trays of champagne, and an orchestra played an overture written especially for the occasion before an audience that included the Grand Duke of Luxembourg and top executives at Deloitte.
That evening, two American businessmen mingled among the government ministers, gallerists, and local bigwigs. Kenneth Cayre, a wealthy real estate developer, and Tom Sapienza, an accountant who’d worked for years in art shipping and handling, were planning their own entrée into the fine art storage business. But instead of operating in the luxury tax haven of Luxembourg, they would open their storage facility in a place not known for its low taxes: New York City.
This story is published in collaboration with Artsy Editorial. Artsy is a global platform for readers to learn about, discover, and purchase art.
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The terms “free port,” “free trade zone,” and “foreign trade zone” are used interchangeably in the art world. They generally denote a place that’s free of customs duties and other taxes— but the extent of that freedom depends largely on the jurisdiction of the facility. That’s why most of these warehouses tend to be in existing tax havens, like Luxembourg or Switzerland.
In the United States, these areas are called Foreign Trade Zones, and they’ve existed under the protection of Customs and Border Patrol since the first opened on Staten Island in 1937. Today, they’re located in airports, in seaports, and on waterfronts, but also in warehouses and urban centers. They’re a big part of the U.S. business landscape: There were 263 of these zones in 2016, employing 420,000 people across the country, with hundreds of billions of dollars worth of merchandise, from car parts to pharmaceuticals, moving into and out of them. The zones typically take advantage of what’s known as an inverted tariff. When there are federal duties on the imports of raw materials, like steel, but not on the import of a finished product, like a tractor, it makes sense to bring the steel into the duty-free zone, manufacture the vehicle there, then formally import it without incurring the taxes.
None of this applies to artwork, though, because there are no federal import duties on art. Nor are FTZs home to any art studios engaged in manufacturing. Until recently, there was only one American FTZ dedicated to art, and it was in Delaware, which from a tax perspective is as close to a Luxembourgish freeport as you can get in the continental United States, so the facility was not only free of customs duties, but also most local and state taxes.
A few inside the Arcis art storage facility in Harlem. (Zoe Wetherall for Artsy)
What Delaware lacks is prestige and proximity to auction houses, museums, and galleries, so Cayre and Sapienza recognized potential in a New York competitor. “We saw the attention at the opening,” Sapienza recalled at a 2017 art business conference, “and we decided we’re coming to market with a 21stcentury storage facility. Why not, as the icing on the cake, add a Foreign Trade Zone?”
Their facility, which opened in April 2018 on a proletarian Harlem block on West 146th Street, is called Arcis Art Storage. “Arcis” is Latin for “fortress” — a fitting name for what’s essentially a museumquality bunker, currently insured to store up to $3 billion worth of goods. Like Luxembourg’s Le Freeport, which is armed to the teeth and admits next to no one, security is tight: Guests at Arcis must have their retinas scanned to go through the first door, then present their bare forearms for a vascular scan at a second door.
Instead of operating in the luxury tax haven of Luxembourg, Arcis would open their storage facility in a place not known for its low taxes: New York City.
Once inside, visitors to the building will be wedged — geographically, at least — between a historic black church and a daycare center. But as far as the U.S customs agents are concerned, once goods are imported into Arcis — whether they’re coming from Shanghai or the Upper East Side — they are no longer within U.S customs territory.
This was going to be Cayre and Sapienza’s edge over a crowded New York art storage market. But there was a reason no one else had done it yet: Even though customs duties don’t apply, New York State taxes do. This means
a painting bought at Christie’s and stored uptown would not get preferential treatment when it came to sales and use tax over a painting going anywhere else. Arcis got the competitive, insular art storage world wondering exactly what its executives were selling.
*** Kenneth Cayre, 74, has had a varied and eccentric career. His associates at Arcis, as well as friends and former colleagues, describe him as a sharp, family-oriented hustler. (He declined to be interviewed
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Arcis got the competitive, insular art storage world wondering exactly what its executives were selling.
for this article.) Cayre began his importexport career in 1959 as a teenager, operating a floating duty-free store with his two brothers, sailing back and forth from Miami to the Bahamas with cigarettes, alcohol, perfume, and watches to sell to passengers who wanted to avoid high import duties. Over the years, he helped a cousin run a textile factory in Puerto Rico; operated a pantyhose manufacturer called Kandy Mills, in Hialeah, Florida; and, inspired by the rhythms of the Miami Beach club scene, started a record label with his brothers called Salsoul. In the early 1980s, the Cayre brothers started Good Times Entertainment, which distributed VHS copies of Jane Fonda exercise tapes, knockoff Disney movies, and other videos whose copyrights were in the public domain. An early encounter with Walmart founder Sam Walton led to a long-standing distribution deal, but the company was eventually sold to a private equity firm in 2003. The company filed for bankruptcy in 2005.
A client viewing room at Arcis. (Zoe Wetherall for Artsy)
Today, Cayre owns and manages property with his sons, Jack and Nathan,
including a million-square-foot chain of self-storage warehouses in the New York tri-state area called Treasure Island. In 2014, real estate heavy Steven Guttman made a splashy transition from cheap self-storage to high-end warehousing with Uovo, which now has branches in Rockland County and Long Island City, Queens — home to a burgeoning gallery scene and the contemporary art museum MoMA PS1. During this time, the art market was growing fast: Between 2005 and 2015, annual sales doubled to reach $63.8 billion, and more contemporary art is being produced and sold every day. Nearly 80 percent of all artwork is in storage, according to one storage executive, and since new art is made every day, demand for storage facilities — at least in theory — will grow continuously.
In an application for property tax breaks from the city of New York, Cayre describes himself as “an artist at heart” and claims that after Superstorm Sandy ravaged the downtown gallery scene, he felt compelled to enter the art storage business. “Ken witnessed more and more galleries and Fine Art storage facilities vacating Manhattan for locations in New Jersey like Newark and Jersey City,” the application reads. A desire to clean up his image may have also provided motivation: In 2006, Cayre was accused by New Jersey con man-turned-FBI informant Solomon Dwek of having received stolen assets worth $2.2 million. Although he was never charged, Cayre was kicked off the board of a New Jersey medical marijuana foundation in the aftermath.
"Guests at Arcis must have their retinas scanned to go through the first door, then present their bare forearms for a vascular scan at a second door."
In mid-2013, less than a year after the storm, Cayre spent $4.5 million on the Harlem parking lot where Arcis now stands and an adjacent property housing a childcare and eldercare center. Six months later, one of his sons ran into a real estate developer friend at a Super Bowl party, who offered to introduce the family to someone in the art storage business.
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That someone turned out to be Tom Sapienza, now a 48-year-old dad of three from Long Island with dusty blond hair and the wholesome, slightly stiff demeanor of a Little League coach. An accountant by training, he’s a khakis-andblazer kind of guy, which makes it hard to imagine him at a glitzy art opening in Luxembourg. But Sapienza had a Rolodex of potential clients at museums, galleries, and family offices — fruits of a decade working as a consultant and CFO at Crozier Fine Arts, one of the world’s biggest art storage firms. Sapienza’s tenure there ended on a sour note: According to legal documents, he was fired in 2012 and subsequently sued the company for allegedly denying him his share of equity. His ex-colleague, Simon Hornby, declined to comment on the termination and the lawsuit; Sapienza also declined to comment on the suit, which was settled in 2017.
Cayre and Sapienza hit it off, and before long, were en route to a castle in Maastricht for a business seminar designed to educate art world professionals about finance and to educate financiers about the art world. “It was to expose Ken to the new global art world,” Sapienza says. In the class, they heard a presentation by a business professor about Le Freeport and the business of Free Trade Zones for art. “We left with binders and binders of information,” says Sapienza.“He loved it.”
The first free ports were established in early modern Europe as way stations for goods like grain, coffee, or spices. Their extraterritorial status saved traders time and money, but since the contents of these warehouses were perishable, the facilities weren’t intended for longterm storage, let alone keeping valuables like paintings and sculptures. But as globalization made more and more types of business transnational, these facilities evolved too. Today, free ports are a crucial cog in the global art trade. Their contents are fiercely guarded, top secret, and largely tax-free. But which exact taxes they incur depends on their location.
“The term ‘free port’ really does mean something phenomenal in Europe and Asia,” says Jason Kleinman, a partner and art-tax-law expert at Herrick Feinstein LLP. Those free ports exempt buyers and sellers from VAT and income taxes, and because of their clear perks, they have courted art collectors for decades. “These locations confer great tax advantages to the people who use them to store or conduct business,” Kleinman says, adding that when sales take place within a foreign free port, sellers also save 18 - Citizenship Navigation
on shipping and handling costs. For speculators flipping Picassos, free ports specializing in art and luxury items offer an attractive deal.
American FTZs, by contrast, have more limited benefits and have historically served the automotive, electronics, and oil industries. The art world got one of its own in 2015, when Austrian art shipper Fritz Dietl opened the 36,000-squarefoot Delaware Freeport. His art-centric outpost allows clients who buy pieces in New York or Miami to avoid state sales taxes if they ship their pieces directly there — but the saving is due to the tax breaks offered by the state, not because it’s a FTZ.
"For speculators flipping Picassos, free ports specializing in art and luxury items offer an attractive deal."
That’s because while American FTZ rules do waive federal customs duties when they are applicable, they don’t eliminate state or city sales and use taxes; in that respect, FTZs are part of the state they’re in, but not part of the country. Federal law further stipulates that goods can’t be bought and sold within the zones, so under-the-radar handoffs aren’t possible either. And New York’s sales and use taxes on art are levied based on the location where the buyer gains possession of the item, whether it’s acquired at a domestic sale or at an auction abroad — so the most an FTZ could possibly do is defer that cost while the item is in storage.
In other words, if a $10 million painting ends up hanging on a billionaire’s wall in New York after passing through an FTZ, the FTZ alone will not save its owner from the state’s 8.875 percent tax on sales and use. It might be more convenient or indeed more prudent to store a painting bought in Manhattan just a few miles uptown from the auction house than in Delaware or Long Island, because moving art is risky, but an FTZ won’t save money. And in the event that a painting was bought in London and brought to New York, the most the FTZ would do is defer tax until the piece leaves the zone. Since artwork isn’t dutiable, there’s nothing to gain from avoiding customs. “I spent hours researching it,” Kleinman says, “and I concluded that Arcis is a taxfree zone in search of a tax.”
Nevertheless, a tax-free anything sounds good to a certain clientele, even
if the actual benefits are limited (or, as Kleinman suggests, virtually nonexistent). “People toss the term around all the time,” Kleinman says. “It’s P.R.”
After the Maastricht seminar, Sapienza called a former Crozier colleague, Kevin Lay, who joined Arcis as director of operations in 2016. For Lay, a rakish former punk rocker who is more visibly artsy than Sapienza, art preservation is a matter of philosophical import. “Art storage is time travel,” he says. “When you look at a painting you’re standing where the painter stood, and as custodians of culture it’s up to us to return this in the same condition it came in.” Now complete, the warehouse looks a bit like a steely blue iceberg: monolithic, windowless, and blank. There’s no obvious signage save for a large purple A, for Arcis, on the north face of the building, about 10 feet above a 16-feet-high and 40-feet-wide loading dock that opens onto 146th Street. “If your art doesn’t fit here, it won’t fit anywhere in the city,” says Sapienza. (The largest dock at Uovo’s New York City facility is 13 feet 7 inches high and 11 feet 10 inches wide.) A discreet black car entrance leading into the loading area and visible only from one-way mirror windows in the executives’ offices will accommodate the rich and wary.
Detail of the Arcis storage facility. (Zoe Wetherall for Artsy)
Inside, the newly painted facility smells disconcertingly like an Ikea stockroom and looks, at first glance, like an ordinary industrial warehouse: exposed beams, large metal columns, huge mechanical doors, and stark white walls. The ground floor is divided into viewing rooms with $1,000-a-bulb lighting, per the company, and ceiling rigs for moving heavy sculptures. There’s also a loft-like space where artwork will be inventoried, and, on the higher levels, private storage units in different sizes, along with larger shared spaces.
Lay and Sapienza can — and do — talk for hours about the building’s technical specs. If a storm surge were to occur, a protective envelope of panels made of insulated metal panels between its inner and outer walls would help protect it from the elements. Its power supply is uninterruptible, with every function intentionally redundant in case a power source goes out. The generators have backups located on the roof, which run on natural gas; in theory, they will keep the building going until any emergency is over. The faint whir of the air-conditioning system, which filters the air three to six times an hour, is a constant presence; otherwise, it’s completely quiet. “They’re not taking any chances,” says Lawrence Bovich, a partner at Mechanical Technologies, LLC, one of the firms that installed part of Arcis’ HVAC system. “These guys are many folds more riskaverse than any museum might be.” Arcis would be a great place to hide during a natural disaster, or allergy season.
"Cayre applied for and received $13 million in tax breaks on construction by promising the warehouse would bring six full-time and 10 part-time jobs to East Harlem."
Serious protection costs serious money. The price of storing a painting at Arcis can range from just a bit more than at your average self-storage facility to thousands of additional dollars a month depending on the size of the unit, whether there’s custom shelving, and where in the building it’s located, says Lay — but he won’t say by how much.
Cayre applied for and received $13 million in tax breaks on construction by promising the warehouse would bring six full-time and 10 part-time jobs to East Harlem and calculating that its benefit to the city, mainly in other taxes, would total $20 million. But employment at art storage facilities typically goes to aspiring artists who know how to handle, crate, and transport the art; even Arcis’s own filings note that the business will require “employees with specialized skills sets similar to those of a museum registrar.”
That could explain why an administrator at a community organization on the south side of the block called Street Corner Resources, which does job placement for young people as part of its larger mission of reducing gun violence, said on a recent afternoon that he’d heard nothing about
Arcis, let alone the possibility of jobs there. Staff at neighboring bodegas, a barbershop, and a local diner were aware of the facility because they’d served chatty construction workers from the job site; none of them knew they would soon share a block with million-dollar paintings. At the senior center next door to Arcis, whose building Cayre’s company acquired, a coordinator said they’d received assurances from the newcomers that they would not be displaced.
Because FTZs are regulated by the federal customs agency, local elected officials don’t participate in the approval process. When asked how Arcis might affect this part of his district, City Councilman Bill Perkins grew aggressive, demanded more information, and directed questions to his predecessor, current State Assemblywoman Inez Dickens, who didn’t respond to requests for comment.
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Art is not a dutiable good. There are no duties
on art in the U.S.,” he says. “So what’s the point of a FTZ for art if there’s no duty in the first place and it’s designed to suspend duty?
In April 2017, Arcis was a sponsor of the Art Business Conference, a glitzy annual networking event for the fine art world, at the Time Warner Center in Manhattan. “Kevin and I both keep getting calls from people pushed from locations in Manhattan,” Sapienza told the crowd during a panel about freeports. “People wanted us to commit space. We have a warehouse reservation binder, with clients signing up for the space.”
In the audience were Delaware Freeport founder Fritz Dietl and Crozier president Simon Hornby. Hornby says Crozier also consulted with advisors on the utility of an FTZ, and the benefits came up short. “Art is not a dutiable good. There are no duties on art in the U.S.,” he says. “So what’s the point of a FTZ for art if there’s no duty in the first place and it’s designed to suspend duty?”
Even Dietl says the free port part of the Delaware Freeport saves little money. But branding something as a free zone or free port sends a powerful — if empty — message to potential clients. “It absolutely works because it’s a term that’s so widespread in the art world,” he says.
A freight elevator at Arcis. (Zoe Wetherall for Artsy)
Self-storage king–turned–fine art protector Steven Guttman says his team studied the possibility hard before they opened Uovo and found no significant benefits. “We did not take this lightly,” Guttman says. “We knew about this a long time ago and kept saying this makes no sense. I’ve been in the business for three years, and never heard a tenant request an FTZ.” He adds of Arcis, “They may be onto something just by confusing people.”
Sapienza declined to comment on tax hypotheticals, insisting that it’s the client’s responsibility to obtain appropriate counsel and follow the law. Kevin Lay insists there’s some tax value to the FTZ — though that depends on how you define “art.” “Antique furniture that’s a hundred years old can be imported dutyfree, but if you have a lamp from 1921 that you bought in Paris at auction for $1 million, if you were to bring it here, you would avoid those duties,” he says. The idea is that the lamp could hang out in storage until duties weren’t due. Other valuables, like some jewelry, also carry duties. In those scenarios, an FTZ can also be useful to avoid or defer them.
Herrick’s Jason Kleinman, whose job it is to help collectors manage (or as he puts it, “control”) their U.S. tax bill, says Arcis “doesn’t change anything for me or present me with any tax-planning opportunities.” Some of his clients were curious about Arcis, he says, but none had serious plans to relocate their assets. “I’d suggest anyone look at Arcis and apply to it criteria you’d demand of any other facility,” he says. In the end, the biggest draw might be to collectors looking to keep their art close to home, and eventually sell at a New York auction. If there’s one thing everyone can agree on, it’s that the less you move art, the better. And the taxaverse, art-collecting global elite? They’ll always have Luxembourg.
Atossa Araxia Abrahamian is a journalist and the author of The Cosmopolites: The Coming of the Global Citizen.
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The true “value” of art
by Karolina Blasiak
The art industry attracts more and more HNWI in the allocation of their portfolios in art investments and art funds. One can only draw a conclusion that all is well and we thrive in the era of wealth and wonders. Yet in the political context charged with historic urgency we do have recourse to the transparency and moral standards that art embodies.
An Art Advisor is to identify the right works at the right time and the right place and with the best terms and create the cultural and educational bridge between the collector and the piece of art.
wealth managers surveyed for the Art & Finance report, said they were looking to incorporate art into their overall wealth reporting, signalling a stronger focus on art as a viable asset class within the private wealth management community.
Art-secured lending may be viewed as an effective way to enable collectors and investors to access the equity value in their artworks without having to sell them, and has a great appeal to many art collectors. As such, practitioners should familiarise themselves with the background and processes involved in the practice.
An artwork can sometimes be an asset with a value greater than a car, real estate or even an investment portfolio, so it can be helpful tool in terms of managing certain financial arrangements; we discuss this in detail in our article on art-secured lending.
Recent findings from the Deloitte Art & Finance Report 2017 estimates global UHNWI art and collectible wealth to be $1.62 trillion, with the potential to grow to $2.71 trillion by 2026. 69% of
Karolina Blasiak Rosemont Art AdvisoryMonaco email: k.blasiak@rosemont-mc.com Instagram: RosemontArtAdvisory
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Art-secured lending
Until recently, wealthy individuals and families have mainly been investing by directly purchasing art pieces for their investment value, hence creating a need for
• Appraisal: what is the lender’s appraisal process like? Find out if high-quality pictures and details will be required; if an appraiser will come to view the work first-hand; the price of any shipping if, for example, it is necessary to transport the piece to the lender.
• Loan-to-value ratio: what percentage of the value of the artwork is to be made available as a loan?
• Insurance policy: if the lender takes possession of the piece, make sure it remains properly insured; a specialist art insurer is advised. If arranged by the lender, take into consideration whether they charge extra for this.
• Location and storage: will the lender allow the artwork to be held outside of a protected warehouse, and if not will the loan costs include storage costs?
• Compliance and ownership: what will be extent of the lender’s documentary compliance requirements? Lenders will have differing requirements depending on the AML rules in their home jurisdiction, and on their own internal risk management. They may refuse the lend to beneficial owners based in high-risk jurisdiction.. They will look to identify the origin of the
funds used to purchase the artwork, as well as checking the paperwork to verify the ownership. Some lenders will insist on simple ownership structures with which they are familiar (personal ownership by one owner only, or a local “onshore” corporate vehicle). Other lenders will accept to lend to zero-tax corporate vehicles, partnerships or trusts, but they will need to ensure that they are comfortable with the legal structure and obtain the necessary supporting documents, which may be more or less cumbersome depending on this structuring. The lenders may require third party tax and/or legal opinions on the structure.
• Fees: pre-payment fees and late fees may also add to the cost of the loan, so enquire with lenders about fee structures.
• Default policy: Possibly the biggest thing to consider is the company’s default policy. With clients putting their prized artwork on the line, it’s important they fully understand the terms of a default, should it come to that. It was in 17th – century Holland when Baltic merchant Herman Becker had the idea to extend loans secured by pictures to Dutch artists like Rembrandt van Rijn and Jan Lievans. It has taken 350 years for this idea to mature into something you could begin to call an industry. A regulated, standardized art-backed lending industry will help grow the market and therefore the economy.
The "value" of art is in our daily lives. It is, for example, an "information" followed to discover the strength of exhibitions. Indeed,
it is rewarding to have seen an exhibition, and more and more. The exact same value enters into the dimension of the general culture. More and more artists are part of the spectrum of the qualitative dimension of art. It becomes necessary to know them. The value of information is endless, social networks have maintained this dynamic. Take a look for ex. at the Instagram accounts of some Museums to understand the weight of the value of information on art (Louvre, Orsay, Tate Moma), not to forget those of art galleries. The qualitative value thus feeds the evolution of the prices of the art market. Quantitative value has become another form of news. We are witnessing the evolution of demand with new buyer profiles compared to those of the 90’s. If art is a show, it’s news is a barometer of our world. On August 21, 2018, the S&P500* announced a record of 2873 points. The same day, the US stock market recorded the largest bull market .
The United States are doing very well, in any case the euphoria and confidence is present. The art market confirms it. The USA now holds 40% of the value of the auction market in the world. A notorious sight was in the recent event of the sale of the Rockefeller collection at Christie’s. At the same time, there is a return of American buyers around the world with an appetite for works priced over $ 1 million. Art does not lie, it is a mirror of our modern society. It continues to describe the behavioral evolution in society, it is flexible by it’s entries, it is a reflection of a purchasing power and an economy. Art is the new wealth.
2nd Quarter 2019 - 21