【France】Exotic Investments: The Real Risk Is Often Hidden From You

Editor’s Note

This article examines the marketing of “real assets” like fine wines and collectibles as safe investments, cautioning readers to scrutinize claims of scarcity and guaranteed returns often promoted by sellers.

Sur la période 1983 - 2023, les actions ont généré une performance de 12,4%.
The Illusion of Safe “Real Assets”

Fine wines, precious stones, forests, or collectible watches… While there is nothing illegal about marketing such goods, presenting them as promising investments is another matter. Scarcity, safety, guaranteed returns: according to some of their promoters, these exotic products combine all the advantages. Arguments that, through constant repetition, eventually hit home.

“While this type of investment rarely exceeded 5% of asset values, their share now reaches 30% for some savers,”

laments Jean-Pierre Rondeau, president of the Compagnie des CGPI, an association of financial advisors.

None
No Authority Regulates the Valuation of These Goods

By straying too far from the beaten path, these investors expose themselves to severe disappointments, as the harsh reality almost never matches the polished sales pitch. The first argument put forward: “Demand is stronger than supply, it can only go up”!

“Diamond is a safe-haven investment whose value increases over time and is impervious to market volatility,”

one can read, for example, on Diamants-invest.com, a website selling this precious stone online. The same ingrained optimism is found among wine sellers, provided they are renowned châteaux (Latour, Pétrus, or Romanée-Conti), prized by Chinese consumers.

“High profit potential,”

promises the Patriwine website, which allows, for a €10,000 investment, to build a “turnkey” cellar. It must be said that these prestigious vintages, which some enthusiasts still dare to drink, can only become rarer… But here’s the thing.

“Like any asset, these products remain sensitive to the economic situation,”

reminds Jean-Pierre Rondeau. Diamond, which had already experienced a crash in 1985, saw its price drop by 10% in 2008, at the height of the financial crisis. As for wines, after years of a crazy surge, their prices have more than stabilized, including for the great appellations.

“My cellar has lost 22% of its value since February 2012,”

testifies a Patriwine customer. As for her case of Lafite Rothschild 2008, bought for €14,835, it is now worth only €10,043, a decrease of 32.30%. Not to mention yellow metal (gold), which saw its value plummet by 29% in 2013. We’ve seen better crisis investments!

None

And that’s if the announced prices were truly transparent. But that’s the other problem with these “real assets”: unlike stock markets, their prices are not monitored by any independent authority and are, to say the least, opaque. In wine, for example, valuations are sometimes based on the Liv-ex, a UK index dedicated to Bordeaux, and sometimes on a rating established by the French broker iDealwine. When not based on the hard-to-verify results of auction sales, as in the case of the Luxembourg fund Nobles Crus, suspected of overvaluing its vintages to show positive performance. The same debate exists with diamonds, for which intermediaries rely either on the Rapaport or the Idex Polished Diamond, both equally private indices. On the Investdiamond.com website, which offers the purchase of diamond shares, it is the sellers who set their prices.

“By injecting or withdrawing stones from the circuit, we ensure we stay within +/- 2% of the Rapaport,”

promises its founder, Jean-François Faure. In the end, the result is the same.

“These unregulated prices offer only a relative guarantee,”

summarizes Natalie Lemaire, in charge of investor relations at the AMF (French Financial Markets Authority).

Chaque année, en France, 500 millions d’euros sont détournés vers l’étranger via des arnaques aux faux placements.
The Worst: Illiquidity When the Bubble Bursts

But the worst is when the speculative bubble that had until then allowed these investments to be sold finally bursts. Unlike stocks, which can be sold quickly and in large volumes, most of them are indeed… illiquid.
Result: you see their price collapse without being able to get rid of them. The savings invested by Nobles Crus investors have been blocked since mid-2013, by decision of the Luxembourg stock market regulator. Time for the manager to liquidate, if possible while limiting the damage, its stocks. As for recovering the goods directly, rather than their cash equivalent, it’s better not to count on it too much.

“You would have to remove the stones from the free ports of Geneva where they are stored, which would automatically trigger the payment of 20% VAT,”

warns Jean-François Faure of Investdiamond. And even then, these small problems are nothing compared to those promised by the latest fashionable investment: forests, preferably tropical ones. Artal Forest thus sells plots of teak forests in Costa Rica, supposed to yield at least 8% per year, while Forest Finance promotes acacia (5-6% yield) or cocoa trees (5-7%). A great deal, when you know that the first harvests (and therefore hypothetical income) do not occur before three to twenty years…

Full article: View original |
⏰ Published on: July 24, 2014