Investment in early American art: the impact of transaction costs and no-sales on returns

Art, along with other "treasure assets," has become a central object for investment opportunities. Investment return studies using hedonic and resale price regressions on different artistic periods and styles produce estimates of varying rates of return, predominately low rates with high s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cultural economics 2016-08, Vol.40 (3), p.335-357
Hauptverfasser: Anderson, Seth C., Ekelund, Robert B., Jackson, John D., Tollison, Robert D.
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container_end_page 357
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container_start_page 335
container_title Journal of cultural economics
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creator Anderson, Seth C.
Ekelund, Robert B.
Jackson, John D.
Tollison, Robert D.
description Art, along with other "treasure assets," has become a central object for investment opportunities. Investment return studies using hedonic and resale price regressions on different artistic periods and styles produce estimates of varying rates of return, predominately low rates with high standard deviations. The present study employs a new sample of American art sold at auction between 1987 and 2011—art created before 1950 by 33 artists born prior to 1900. Our study, unlike those that preceded it, considers works that are no-sales (those "bought-in" for failing to sell at auction at or above a predetermined and negotiated minimum price), in addition to full transaction costs—buyers and sellers premia on hammer prices. We conclude that investment return calculations are biased upward and may be negative when these factors are considered and that the "consumption utility" of art may be higher than previously thought. However, using a variant of the capital asset pricing model, we find that investment in early American art may still be desirable in a diversified portfolio of assets for when the price of stock assets falls, the price of art does not fall in the same proportion.
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subjects Abstract expressionism
American art
Analysis
Art dealing
Art galleries & museums
Art markets
Art periods
Artists
Arts
Asset acquisitions
Auctions
Bid prices
Capital assets
Contemporary art
Costs
Cultural Economics
Economic Policy
Economic theory
Economics
Economics and Finance
Investment
Investment returns
Investments
Investors
Microeconomics
Modern art
Music
Original Article
Portfolio diversification
Price premiums
Regional and Cultural Studies
Sales
Studies
Transaction costs
title Investment in early American art: the impact of transaction costs and no-sales on returns
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