by Wine Owners
Posted on 2014-06-10
We launched the Exchange a year ago this month, and we thought it would be interesting to have a look back at the very first that went through the platform, and see how it has performed and traded over the last 12 months.
The first trade we put through was a case of 2001 Leoville Poyferre, which was picked up at £570 by a private buyer, from a private seller. The current market level is £575, which with Bordeaux’s relatively undramatic market performance this last year is perhaps unsurprising, though the most recent offers on the Exchange have been slightly north of that figure at £625.
No great fortunes were made on that first case over the last 12 months, then, but trading wine is at least as much about pleasure as profit, and the case was requested for home delivery…
by Wine Owners
Posted on 2014-06-06
The most noticeable aspect to many of the 2011s is the hole in the middle. Sappy, fresh flavours upon entry, bland characteristics and dry finishes with a tendency to fade away. Red Graves seems to have had a particularly poor time of it, whilst many St Emilion wines suffer from especially dry finishes. Margaux hit the heights for the vintage, as well as some of the depths.
The wine that proved to be my fine wine initiation was Prieuré Lichine 1986, a young wine in 1989 bought for £6.80 from Laytons. I was happy that their 2011 was so pretty, floral and aromatic: near-term drinking in a well constructed package that’s the epitome of what the vintage can offer. There was no shortage of elegant examples from the Margaux appellation including Rauzan-Ségla and Siran.
St Julien flew the standard for homogeneity as it so often does. Léoville Poyferré was exceptional, St. Pierre svelte, integrated and very smart. Gloria, Lagrange, and the Bartons showing some complexity and all very pleasant. Beychevelle was forward, cheeky and easy-going.
Pauillac excelled in the vintage; the Pichons both lovely, with a delicious Lynch-Bages occupying the next rung down.
Finally, a special mention for La Conseillante, which stood out from the blandness and dry finishes of so may of the Libournais. A superb wine. Still too expensive at £680, so worth waiting for the secondary market to wreak its inevitable damage on a vintage, like 2012 and 2013, that nobody really wants or needs.
by Wine Owners
Posted on 2012-03-04
Around 9am on Friday 2nd March 2012 my inbox lit up with wave after wave of 2009 Bordeaux offers from wine merchants. (Congratulations to Flint Wines for refreshingly focusing on an up-and-coming Burgundian grower.) In the weeks leading up to last Friday, merchants had taken the opportunity to inform private customers that RP's new scores were imminent, and that now was a good time to pick over market prices, many of which had fallen from their release price and 2011 highs.
I'd already done all my 2009 'business' during 2010/11 so stood by and watched. Parker duly came out with his new 2009 scores and a glowing recommendation - like 1982 (on which he made his reputation) but better thanks to advances in wine making, a return to traditional vineyard husbandry, and greater de-classification of parcels into second and third wines (in fairness common arguments trotted out regularly by the regisseurs and chateau owners in Bordeaux). What surprised everyone was how many high points he awarded his favourite wines - 18 wines getting 100 points; in comparison to just 6 wines in each of the two great vintages of 2000 and 1982.
Here are the final 100 pointers thanks to Ditton Wine Traders
wine |
bottle |
barrel |
Beausejour Duffau Lagarosse |
100 |
96-98 |
Bellevue Mondot |
100 |
95-100 |
Clinet |
100 |
97-100 |
Clos Fourtet |
100 |
95-98 |
Cos d'Estournel |
100 |
98-100 |
Ducru Beaucaillou |
100 |
96-98 |
L'Evangile |
100 |
96-100 |
Haut Brion |
100 |
96-100 |
La Mission Haut Brion |
100 |
98-100 |
La Mondotte |
100 |
95-98 |
Latour |
100 |
98-100 |
Le Pin |
100 |
95-98 |
Leoville Poyferre |
100 |
97-100 |
Montrose |
100 |
96-100 |
Pavie |
100 |
96-100 |
Petrus |
100 |
96-100 |
Pontet Canet |
100 |
97-100 |
Smith Haut Lafitte |
100 |
96-98 |
And Friday's price increases vs the previous day's prices ranked from high to low
Wine |
prior |
after |
% change |
Beausejour Duffau Lagarosse |
£1,000 |
£2,400 |
140% |
Clos Fourtet |
£750 |
£1,800 |
140% |
Smith Haut Lafitte |
£680 |
£1,600 |
135% |
Clinet |
£1,500 |
£2,200 |
47% |
Le Pin |
£18,000 |
£25,000 |
39% |
Montrose |
£1,900 |
£2,550 |
34% |
Leoville Poyferre |
£1,350 |
£1,800 |
33% |
Pontet Canet |
£1,350 |
£1,800 |
33% |
L'Evangile |
£2,300 |
£2,750 |
20% |
La Mondotte |
£2,550 |
£3,000 |
18% |
Petrus |
£25,000 |
£29,000 |
16% |
Cos d'Estournel |
£2,800 |
£3,200 |
14% |
Pavie |
£2,200 |
£2,500 |
14% |
Ducru Beaucaillou |
£2,000 |
£2,200 |
10% |
Haut Brion |
£7,400 |
£8,000 |
8% |
Bellevue Mondotte |
£2,550 |
£2,750 |
8% |
La Mission Haut Brion |
£5,600 |
£6,000 |
7% |
Latour |
£11,700 |
£11,800 |
1% |