Art

Stored Away: There's So Much Art Available For Market

Tom Burroughes Group Editor London 19 August 2020

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We talk to Overstone Art Services, a UK-based organisation, about the state of the world's fine art market and how so much potential material is stored away and available for being transacted or lent against.

(This is part of a series of features and interviews about the intersection of fine art and wealth management.)

As many as a third of art collectors keep their works in storage and out of view, suggesting that a sizeable chunk of the $1.74 trillion privately held art could be lent against and used to drive liquidity in the market, a European specialist firm argues.

London-based Overstone Art Services, a firm providing risk scores for family offices, private banks and wealth managers, reckons that the current arena for lending and borrowing art does not go much further than scratching the surface of what is potentially achievable. 

“We think this market is going to [to be worth] $100 billion in the next four to five years,” Harco van den Oever, Overstone’s founder and chief executive, told this publication in a recent call. The business was formed in 2012. 

Overstone helps to help identify the financial risk and opportunity of an artwork or a collection so that UHNWs can use art as an asset. The business works with wealth managers to help them leverage art for their UHNW clients to use as collateral for loans.

The market in which Overstone works has been obviously affected by the COVID-19 pandemic – there has been an accelerated shift to digital auctions and online “viewing rooms” as happened in the Hong Kong Art Basel fair at the start of the year, to give just one example. A few players have sought to blend investment banking savvy with art to capture value, with mixed results. In 2019, for example, New York-based investment platform YieldStreet bought Athena Art Finance from its owners, Carlyle Group and Pictet for far less than what was originally pumped into it. That transaction raised questions of how deep and liquid the fine art market is and how applicable investment banking models are to the space.

There are plenty of reasons to understand why private banks and other advisory firms like the art market. While small compared with the US equity market, for instance - estimated at more than $30 trillion - the art market’s size at around $64 billion (source: UBS, Art Basel, report on 2019, issued here) is not to be sneezed at. (There is a need to tread carefully, as this article explains.)

Van den Oever has plenty of experience in finance and art. He served for 12 years at Christie’s as Continental European head and global managing director of the Impressionist and Modern Art Department prior to founding Overstone. With 12 years in debt capital markets under his belt at Paribas, Bankers Trust, and Credit Suisse First Boston, Van den Oever also founded Fredfinds.com, the UK's first online mortgage brokerage business, acquired in 2001 by Netwindfall. Van den Oever has an MBA from the University of Hartford and is an INSEAD alumnus.

Van den Oever said that his firm often works with family offices, and one reason for starting Overstone was a sense that the market potential was not being fulfilled: “There were not many offers in terms of [art] lenders and we found there was something fundamentally wrong with the market,” he said. “We were approached by one of the big global private banks to right its art lending policy.”

Out of the total $1.74 trillion art market in private hands, about $24 billion is lent against. That is a relatively tiny amount of leveraged art buying compared with other asset classes, he said.

Van den Oever said that firms had been reluctant initially because of the risks involved, but his business has developed analytical tools and algorithms to map and track art investment/lending risk more precisely, and remove some of the mental blockages associated with it. Overstone has created data-driven risk metrics.

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