Sotheby’s said it borrowed $250 million and cut guarantees it will offer sellers for the rest of the year by one-third as global economic turmoil threatens the bull market for trophy art.
In a filing late yesterday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Sotheby’s said it sought the money from Bank of America Corp. “as a defensive step to ensure additional liquidity in response to the recent turbulence in the global financial markets.”
Its cash on hand of $290 million “was more than adequate to meet our needs,” Sotheby’s spokeswoman Diana Phillips said in an e-mail. The additional money “puts us in a very strong position” during the current crisis.
The largest publicly traded auction house said it reduced guarantees to $306.1 million on Oct. 10 from $458.5 million a year ago. Sotheby’s didn’t put up all the money itself. It increased guarantees from undisclosed third parties by almost 10-fold to $63.3 million this month from $6.8 million a year ago, according to filings.
Sotheby’s described those guarantees in yesterday’s filing as “risk-sharing arrangements with unaffiliated partners.”
At its Impressionist sale in New York next month, Kazimir Malevich’s 1916 “Suprematist Composition” is expected to fetch more than $60 million. The Malevich will carry a new “irrevocable bid” symbol in the catalog. That indicates a third-party guarantee, in which an external guarantor provides the first bid on a lot at auction.
“If there’s only one bid, then the guarantor buys the work at a price that includes premium,” said Matthew Weigman, a London-based Sotheby’s spokesman. “If the work sells for more, the guarantor gets a cut of the upside.”
Sotheby’s shares have plunged 78 percent in the past year, compared with a 36 percent drop in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. (Bloomberg)
SOTHEBY’S CUTS ART AUCTION GUARANTEES, LANDS $250 MILLION LOAN
October 15 2008
Category :Flashnews 
Finarte
Gerhard Richter
Moma
Yves Klein
Vittorio Sgarbi
Guggenheim Museum
Milano
Sotheby's
New York
India
Lucian Freud
Banksy
Christie’s
Christie's
Willem de Kooning
Takashi Murakami
Metropolitan Museum
Giorgio de Chirico
Piero Manzoni
Bonhams
Roy Lichtenstein
Jeff Koons
Mark Rothko
Lucio Fontana
Anish Kapoor
Richard Prince
Andy Warhol
Vincent Van Gogh
Still
Damien Hirst
Brescia
Madrid
Art Basel
Francis Bacon
Pablo Picasso
 
 






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