Sotheby’s Sees Art Market Bottom: Profit Declines 87%

Aug. 5 (Bloomberg) — Sotheby’s Chief Financial Officer William Sheridan said art prices and sales have stabilized, after the New York-based auctioneer reported a worse-than- expected 87 percent drop in second-quarter earnings. “Unless there’s some external event we’re not aware of, we believe the market has bottomed out,” Sheridan said in an interview last night.
Auction houses including Sotheby’s and Christie’s International abandoned the practice of guaranteeing minimum prices at the end of 2008. Sellers were reluctant to offer works at auctions when prices were falling. The average auction price of contemporary art dropped 76.2 percent since May 2008, London- based ArtTactic said in May.
Sell-through rates — the percentage of lots sold at auction — jumped to 81 percent in May from 64 percent in November at Sotheby’s New York evening Impressionist and modern art auctions, Chief Executive William Ruprecht said in a conference call.
Yesterday, Sotheby’s reported its first quarterly profit in a year. Net income fell to $12.2 million, or 18 cents a share, from $95.3 million, or $1.41 a year earlier, the company said in a statement. Analysts had estimated on average a profit of 29 cents, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Sheridan said higher taxes contributed to the drop in net income.
Commission Revenue
Sotheby’s made $21.30 in commission revenue for every $100 in auction sales in the quarter, up 41 percent from $15.10 a year earlier, Sheridan said. The increase was due to fewer sales of high-priced lots. Commissions are on a sliding scale, with lots over $1 million garnering lower fees as a percentage than cheaper works.
To reduce costs, Sotheby’s has fired staff, cut pay and required unpaid furloughs. Excluding restructuring charges and a nonrecurring benefit recorded last year, the company reduced operating expenses by $73.5 million, or 39 percent.
The shares fell 73 cents to $14.99 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange trading before the results were released. They’re up 68 percent this year and 74 percent below their closing high of $57.64, on Oct. 10, 2007.
Auction-related revenue declined by more than half in the first six months, to $197 million.
“I don’t see it get any worse than those first-half volumes,” Ruprecht said. He remained equivocal about forecasts. In answer to an analyst who requested guidance on when the market would recover, Ruprecht said: “How many qualifiers do you want before I answer that question?”
To contact the reporter on this story: Philip Boroff in New York at pboroff@bloomberg.net;

About visionsart

Visions Art is a premium gallery for Modern and Contemporary Art. Established in 2001 in Mumbai, advising private and corporate collectors on predominantly Indian Contemporary Art. Since 2003, the gallery opened up its new space in heart of south Mumbai, India. The permanent gallery space is designed as a private art space where both changing and its permanent collections are shown. The gallery’s program draws upon a diverse range of disciplines and intellectual perspectives while maintaining a clear progressive thread. Supporting mid-career and historic figures, as well as launching emerging artists. The gallery represents works by artists who are considered to be at the forefront of Indian contemporary art and is constantly looking to establish a roster of the more progressive artists from India and abroad. Indianartnews.info is a news post blog providing a viewers updates on the latest news and events related to indian art from across the world

View all posts by visionsart →

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.