Art Market Today
An Intro to Artist Benchmarking
Previously, we described the power of Artist Market Value
(“AMV”) and then introduced the AAA 100 as the S&P 500 of the
art market. Institutions and high-end
collectors will want to know two things: How did I do? and How did I
do against the market? Here, we are
focusing on the second question and comparing the performance of our unnamed blue-chip
artist’s AMV to that of the AAA 100. Benchmarking has many uses, but it’s
best at bringing matters of risk and return into focus.
How does benchmarking work and what it tells us
In this case, the results are surprising, even
counterintuitive. You would think that a blue-chip artist’s performance would
closely align with that of the AAA 100 Index and not exhibit much volatility. That is not the case here; instead, we get the
performance profile more typical of emerging, less established artists.
The chart highlights the blue-chip artist’s riskiness:
- A pattern of below-market performance, with AMV at a 12% discount to the AAA 100 at the end of 2020.
- Volatility atypical of an established, blue-chip artist.
- Little, if any, correlated movement with the market.
Next up, using sub-indexes to provide more direct
comparisons and add color. In the meantime, if there are any artists, indexes, or
topics you want to see, let us know.
No comments:
Post a Comment