Close Menu
Finance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne no longer interested in Reform-Tory pact | Politics
  • Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne ‘no longer’ interested in Reform-Tory election pact | Politics
  • OKX Unveils Orbit: A New Era of Social-Driven Cryptocurrency Trading
  • Leading Finance Podcasts for Beginners in the UK (2026 Guide)
  • Hockney scrolls through Bayeux, Brideshead gets revisited and Stubbs leads the field – the week in art | Art and design
  • Southampton-born artist’s honour as major exhibition opens art gallery
  • The Best Cryptocurrency to Buy With $500 Right Now (If You’re Thinking Long Term)
  • Locke in at Camden Art Centre
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
Finance ProFinance Pro
  • Home
  • Art Gallery
  • Art Investment
  • Art Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Finance
  • Investing in Art
  • Investments
Finance Pro
Home»Art Investment»Why art and sneakers usually fail to make the investment grade
Art Investment

Why art and sneakers usually fail to make the investment grade

July 8, 20216 Mins Read


I have just bought an original Vernon Ward – a large and beautiful oil painting of a vase of roses completed in the 1930s or 1940s. How can you possibly afford an original Ward on a journalist’s salary, I hear you say?

Or perhaps I hear you say nothing of the sort. After all, I suspect you haven’t the faintest idea who Vernon Ward is. He was one of the most recognisable English painters of the second half of the 20th century. He painted harbours, swans, flowers, birds and the odd slightly soppy Edwardian drawing room scene.

Not everyone could afford an original Vernon, but everyone could still enjoy him. His paintings were reproduced in huge volume. Think postcards, trays, jigsaw puzzles and thousands upon thousands of high-quality prints. Even now you’d be hard pushed to attend a house clearance that did not involve a Vernon Ward print.

His star rose as he aged (art critics being the relentless snobs they are, he was tainted by his commercialism in mid-career) and by the time he was being shown in a top gallery his health was deteriorating.

Anyone watching the market at that point might have thought that was the time to buy. A fabulous, extremely popular artist on the cusp of not just fame, but establishment acceptance, in ill- health?

Well, hello supply and demand. They would have thought wrong. My new painting cost me £250 — and I might have overpaid. As you read this, one of Ward’s sweet swan paintings is being auctioned. The estimate is £400-£500. They’ll be lucky. And the prints? There are 138 for sale on Ebay at the moment and many more elsewhere.

Vernon is popular with the Etsy sellers who turn house clearance odds and ends into “vintage” treasure. I am toying with one of his flying duck prints embedded in a “vintage handled serving tray” (£10) and my favourite of his prints (“Polruan Landing”) safely housed in a “oval frame convex glass bubble” (£19).

I’d have the latter hanging at home by now if I could find a courier willing to bring a fragile glass thing to me from Coventry for less than its purchase price.

Recommended

Auction room at Christie’s Paris

The point here is that if you had bought into Vernon as a long-term art investment, based on his fame and momentum, it will not have worked.

You will hear a lot about how investing in art is a great way to diversify your investments and to raise your long-term returns. London’s Maddox Advisory suggests that “blue-chip art” has outperformed the FTSE 100 by 402 per cent over the past 20 years (an annualised return of 8.43 per cent).

Masterworks, a US art investment firm, reckons that between 1995 and 2020 contemporary art prices rose 14 per cent a year. That’s more than the S&P 500, more than global equities, more than houses and more than gold.

No wonder everyone wants in. All art investment websites like to point to a Deloitte report which found that 85 per cent of wealth managers suggest art should be part of a balanced portfolio. This makes a lot of sense when you run your eye down another Deloitte report pointing out potential revenue streams available to those that facilitate it. Think 10 per cent of the transaction value for representing a client at auction.

And no wonder that with everyone wanting in, the market has become increasingly financialised. Back to Masterworks. This is not just an art investment company, it is a fractional art investment company. It says it has compiled the “most complete database of paintings that have been resold throughout history”.

That allows it, the website tells us, to identify which artists are gaining momentum. It then buys work by those artists, creates shares in each piece and flogs those shares to investors, who can then trade them in a secondary market.

Sounds good, doesn’t it? After all, if fractional momentum investing works in the stock market, why shouldn’t it work in the art market? Or indeed the sneaker market? Become a client of Rares, an investing platform, and you can buy a share of a shoe (sorry, “investment-grade sneaker”) which you can then trade with users of the same platform.

There’s a problem with all this, of course. It is the idea that you can create an art price index of any kind in the first place (let alone a sneaker index). Art price indices only include pictures that have actually traded publicly at auction. This is a small fraction of the whole, but mostly the part which is rising anyway, since we are more likely to sell assets that have gone up in value than those that have gone down.  

Art indices, then, are less overall price indices than momentum measurers — and the majority of art purchases end up being, at best, Vernons and at worst, actual rubbish. It’s also impossible to say what any collectible is actually worth. In the end a genuine asset has a residual value. The price may be bid up way beyond that, but the value remains the same.

The value of an equity is the sum of the dividends it will eventually pay you or someone else. The value of a sovereign bond is about the coupon it pays and that of a house its potential rental income. They represent business, government and land respectively.

Momentum, buzz and fear of missing out can vanish as fast as they come

Art, sneakers and for that matter NFTs (non-fungible tokens) have no potential income stream for us to value them on. Successful ones have done nothing more than won a short to medium term popularity contest (with the exception, of course, of the very few pieces of art that have won a very long-term popularity contest).

They represent momentum, buzz and FOMO (fear of missing out). Note a survey from consultancy Oxford Risk out this week suggesting that 36 per cent of those who have bought cryptocurrencies in the last few years have done so despite knowing almost nothing about them.

These drivers can be intense. They can also lose you an awful lot of money. Momentum, buzz and FOMO can vanish as fast as they come – and when they do, equity investors will still have something, but fractional sneaker investors will not.

My advice? To the sensible, I would say if you are going to buy sneakers or artworks, at least skip the financialised version and buy a whole one (preferably two if they are shoes). Then at least you can look at it at home – which gives it some residual leisure value, at least.  

To the not-so sensible I would say, if you want something pretty undervalued at the moment, I can do you a fractional share of an NFT of an original Vernon. Just email.

Merryn Somerset Webb is editor-in-chief of MoneyWeek. Views are personal. merryn@ft.com. Twitter: @MerrynSW





Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Fine art investments under scrutiny

February 14, 2026 Art Investment

Art Investment Platform Masterworks Sues Key Former Staffer

February 13, 2026 Art Investment

Zeon Corporation Makes Strategic Investment in Chemify to Accelerate Digital Chemistry Innovation and Drive Development of New Materials Through State-of-the-Art Automated Molecular Design and Synthesis – The AI Journal

February 12, 2026 Art Investment

Souvenirs, Gifts & Folk Art Travel Fair Joins Athens International, Thessaloniki Tourism, Crete, Greek Hospitality Investment Forum and More as Greece Ignites February with a Power-Packed Tourism Trade Takeover – Travel And Tour World

February 7, 2026 Art Investment

Andre Pier Rischar | "Golden Pulse of Color", Abstract Art, Contemporary Abstract, Mixed Media, Gold Leaf Accents, Textured Painting, Color Field, Expressive Abstraction, Modern Art, Large Scale Abstract, Statement Piece, Interior Art, Luxury Art, Investment A – Artsy

February 1, 2026 Art Investment

Governor Shapiro Secures Historic $3.5 Billion Investment from Lilly to Build New, State-of-the-Art Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Facility in Lehigh County, Creating 850 New Jobs – PA Department of Community & Economic Development (.gov)

January 30, 2026 Art Investment
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne no longer interested in Reform-Tory pact | Politics

March 6, 2026 Cryptocurrency 3 Mins Read

Christopher Harborne, the ultra-wealthy political donor who has given £12m to Reform UK, has told…

Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne ‘no longer’ interested in Reform-Tory election pact | Politics

March 6, 2026

OKX Unveils Orbit: A New Era of Social-Driven Cryptocurrency Trading

March 6, 2026

Leading Finance Podcasts for Beginners in the UK (2026 Guide)

March 6, 2026
Our Picks

Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne no longer interested in Reform-Tory pact | Politics

March 6, 2026

Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne ‘no longer’ interested in Reform-Tory election pact | Politics

March 6, 2026

OKX Unveils Orbit: A New Era of Social-Driven Cryptocurrency Trading

March 6, 2026

Leading Finance Podcasts for Beginners in the UK (2026 Guide)

March 6, 2026
Our Picks

Why Cryptocurrency OKB Skyrocketed More than 18% Higher Today

March 5, 2026

Got $1,000? This Cryptocurrency Is a No-Brainer Buy for Long-Term Holding

March 5, 2026

The AI maturity model for audit and finance: Your step-by-step path to meaningful AI adoption

March 5, 2026
Latest updates

Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne no longer interested in Reform-Tory pact | Politics

March 6, 2026

Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne ‘no longer’ interested in Reform-Tory election pact | Politics

March 6, 2026

OKX Unveils Orbit: A New Era of Social-Driven Cryptocurrency Trading

March 6, 2026
Weekly Updates

How can the tidal wave of passive investments be stopped?

August 8, 2024

From Sydney Road to the walls of an art gallery

October 27, 2024

Activewear brand Tala secures £5m investment for US launch

July 17, 2024
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Get In Touch
© 2026 Finance Pro

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.