Max Beckmann’s “Hölle der Vögel” (Birds’ Hell) (1937-1938) Sells for US$45,834,365

Max Beckmann’s “Hölle der Vögel” (Birds’ Hell) sold for US$45,834,365 at Christie’s London Tuesday evening (June 27).

The painting, executed in oil on canvas in 1937 – 1938, drew three bidders and sold to Larry Gagosian. It is understood that Mr. Gagosian was bidding on behalf of the New York collector Leon Black.

Art dealer Richard Feigen acquired the painting in 1983. Hölle der Vögel” (Bird’s Hell) has remained in his collection until now.

See:

Boosted by Gagosian’s Record Bid on Beckmann, Christie’s Notches a $190 Million Impressionist and Modern Sale” | Colin Gleadell, Artnet.com, 27 June 2017

Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale, London, 27 June 2017, Results | Christie’s

Max Beckmann Hölle der Vögel, 1937-38 (special catalogue) | Christie’s

 

#art #artcollections #artmarket #MaxBeckmann #BirdsHell #HöllederVögel #Christie’s #LarryGagosian #LeonBlack #realestate #resilience #luxury #urbanluxury #NewYork #London

climate risk, credit, bonds, & real estate: AAA is AAA? … or, move to high ground

For more than a century, rating companies have published information helping investors gauge the likelihood that companies and governments will be able to pay back the money they borrow. Investors use those ratings to decide which bonds to buy and gauge the risk of their portfolio. For most of that time, the determinants of creditworthiness were fairly constant, including revenue, debt levels and financial management. And municipal defaults are rare: Moody’s reports fewer than 100 defaults by municipal borrowers it rated between 1970 and 2014.

Climate change introduces a new risk, especially for coastal cities, as storms and floods increase in frequency and intensity, threatening to destroy property and push out residents. That, in turn, can reduce economic activity and tax revenue. Rising seas exacerbate those threats and pose new ones, as expensive property along the water becomes more costly to protect — and, in some cases, may get swallowed up by the ocean and disappear from the property-tax rolls entirely.

When asked by Bloomberg, none of the big three bond raters could cite an example of climate risk affecting the rating of a city’s bonds.

This is climate risk: risk to fundamental variables such as economic activity, property values, and tax bases caused by natural factors (such as storms and floods)  that may be exacerbated by our changing climate.

Climate risk has yet to be fully and sytematically incorporated into investigations into municipal creditworthiness.

Will your municipality will be be able to make timely and full payments on its then current debt load after a storm or flood, or repeated storms or floods, negatively influences economic activity?

What happens when the storms or floods are so severe that they “wipe out the taxation ability? I think this is a real risk” observes Bob Buhr, a former vice president at Moody’s who recently retired as a director at Societe Generale SA.

Predictions are imperfect, especially about the future; no one, no algorithm, no model can perfectly predict the future. The pace of climate change remains uncertain. What climate change, and concomitant effects on communities, community tax revenues, and the likelihood of any community being able to pay back bonds “is not a simple calculation.”

To date, the major ratings agencies are not asking questions about the expected effect of climate change on the economic activity and future tax revenues of US municipalities that look to “cheap money” (municipal bonds) to finance government.

Last September, when Hilton Head Island in South Carolina issued bonds that mature over 20 years, Moody’s gave the debt a triple-A rating. In January 2016, all three major bond companies gave triple-A ratings to long-term bonds issued by the city of Virginia Beach, which the U.S. Navy has said faces severe threats from climate change.

Investors, including 117 investors with $19 trillion in assets, say it would be prudent to include “systematic and transparent consideration” of environmental and other factors in order to identify systemic ESG risks in debt capital markets.

In other words, bond buyers should be warned. If storms and floods decrease property values and tax revenues while increasing spending on mitigating infrastructure such as sea walls, storm drains and flood-resistant buildings, pay back to bond buyers may be impacted.

Property owners – both residential and commercial – might take note.

Should your municipality meet a storm or flood that significantly impacts economic activity and the ability to collect tax revenues, it might be stressed and its ability to make scheduled payments on its municipal debt obligations might be impacted.

This will influence the municipality’s credit. If the credit is downgraded, the municipality will have to pay greater interest on its debt. To pay higher interest, it will have to collect more tax revenues. That means greater economic activity and/or higher taxes.

And/or, the municipality might have to reduce services. Municipal services include physical infrastructure (such as roads, bridges, water) and civic benefits such as fire departments and schools.

If such services are reduced, how prepared are you in your private capacity to initiate efforts and implement necessary steps towards the robust resilience (basically the ability to bounce back after a shock  or multiple shocks to the system) and operability of your real estate holdings (residential, commercial, …)?

Do you have the means (financial, intellectual, technical, etc.) and the time to “do it yourself” (e.g., water, energy, transportation)? How do you use your real estate holdings? How long do you expect to own them? What are your expectations of resale value?

Moving to high ground might help manage the risk.

Food for thought.

See:

Rising Seas May Wipe Out These Jersey Towns, But They’re Still Rated AAA” | Christopher Flavelle, Bloomberg, 25 May 2017

Credit ratings agencies embrace more systemic consideration of ESG” | PRI, Principles for Responsible Investment, 26 May 2016

#climatechange #climaterisk #creditrisk #risk #finance #municipalfinance #bonds #credit #realestate #resilience #luxury #smartluxury #urbanluxury

Rethinking Downtown San Diego | Luxury, Tech, Demand

Downtown San Diego is seeing significant developments.

Nat Bosa
, recognizing that downtown has some very special attributes (weather, proximity to the sea, proximity to the airport, proximity to great schools and research institutions, entirely walkable, …), is very active in downtown San Diego.

Bosa Development’s KPF-designed Pacific Gate is well underway.

Savina is a next project by Bosa. Savina will be close both to the water and to Little Italy. Price points have not yet been released. More information about Savina will become available next week, on May 4.

The downtown San Diego economy, further, is shifting. A growing number of tech firms are choosing to situate themselves downtown.

  • UCSD is taking permanent space downtown

With members of the tech cohort amongst the highest earners in San Diego, this may well have a significant impact on both the economy and the demand for downtown real estate.

See:

The Man Behind the Bosa Brand” | Bosa Development

Kohn Pedersen Fox, Pacific Gate

Savina

Tech Organizations in Downtown San Diego by Category | Carto

San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation, Technology

Downtown San Diego, The Innovation Economy’s Next Frontier” | Downtown San Diego Partnership & the UC San Diego Extension Center for Research on the Regional Economy, April 2016

UC San Diego Sees Downtown as Innovation’s Next Frontier” | UC San Diego Extension Blog, February 2017

San Diego’s Technology Cluster | San Diego Regional Economic Development Corporation

#realestate #tech #luxury #smartluxury #SanDiego #downtownSanDiego #education #KohnPedersenFox #KPF

smart luxury | private museums & the sharing of art & knowledge

“We wish to share and interact with more people and encourage our friends to share their collections too. Only thus we can grow and learn from each other.”

Wanwan Lei and Li Han of Beijing share their motivation for opening their collection to the public through the establishment of a private art museum.

Larry’s List predicts that private museums,  70% of which have been founded since the year 2000 and whose resources and funding do not rely on public support, will increasingly cooperate with each other in the future.

Networks have been founded to increase partnerships between private museums in support of the loaning of works of art, the presentation of traveling exhibitions, and the sharing of knowledge.

See:

Private Art Museum Report” | Larry’s List, December 2015

Larry’s List is launching the Private Art Pass 2017 – The Ultimate Privilege Card for the Art World” | Larry’s List

#art #collections #collectors #privatemuseums #realestate #resilience #finance #smartluxury #luxury #urbanluxury

urban luxury | crisis & opportunity

Urbanist Richard Florida posits a “new urban crisis.” He defines the new urban crisis as the “back-to-the-city movement of the affluent and the educated.”

The New Urban Crisis is a “fundamental feature of larger, denser, richer, more high-tech, more creative-class cities and metro areas.”

A central contradiction stands at the heart of today’s urbanized form of knowledge capitalism writ large. The very same clustering of talent, business, and economic capability in large, dense, knowledge-based places also carves deep divisions into our cities and society.

In next posts, we’ll work to de-code Professor Florida’s thinking, the term “urban crisis,” and the state and economies of our cities.

“Crisis” may point towards opportunity. Opportunity both on the individual level for reflection, growth, learning, and change and for collaborative work amongst individuals, companies, and institutions towards creative solutions.

See:

Mapping the New Urban Crisis” | Richard Florida, CityLab, 13 April 2017

#urbanluxury #smartluxury #luxury #resilience #realestate #education #urbancrisis #urbanism

non-smart luxury | investors & retailers slug it out on Madison Avenue

The Real Deal points out that as of May 2016, the amount of available retail space along Manhattan’s Madison Avenue had been growing. Retailers with financial wherewithal were looking elsewhere.

New owners had  bought Madison Avenue properties at record prices. Investors, partners and banks were preventing the new owners from leasing to retailers below certain “pro-forma” numbers. Rents were increasing steeply.

The effect did other than than satisfy investment requirements. As asking rents broke $2,200 per square foot in prime stretches of Madison Avenue, retailers who might otherwise have taken space there were looking for alternative locations.

Retail insiders said some of the buyers who acquired properties over the last year or two at eye-popping prices have their hands tied by investors, partners or banks who won’t let them lease to retailers below certain target amounts or “pro forma” numbers. That, they say, is exacerbating availabilities.

“New owners who bought at record prices that required record rents are less likely to cut pricing because they can’t satisfy their investment returns,” said Jeremy Ezra, a broker at RKF.

But brokers said this slowdown is different from the recession in 2009 and 2010 when retailers did not have the financial wherewithal to make deals. That’s not the case today.

See:

Madison Avenue retail empties out” | retail spaces on the tony stretch are clearing out as rents get too high and tenants look for cheaper options, Adam Pincus, The Real Deal, 1 May 2016

#luxury #urbanluxury #smartluxury #realestate #retail #resilience #MadisonAvenue #Manhattan #finance

smart luxury | Tesla surpasses Ford & GM in market value

Tesla has surpassed Ford and GM in market value.

Investors investors are betting that the world’s appetite for electric vehicles will continue to grow and that Tesla will grow with it.

Although the big automakers are financially healthy and produce the best-selling types of vehicles, like trucks and sport utility vehicles, they are perceived as lagging in cutting-edge technology like alternative power and autonomy.

See:

Tesla Hits a New Milestone, Passing G.M. In Valuation” | The New York Times, 10 April 2017

Tesla

#luxury #urbanluxury #smartluxury #energy #smartenergy #alternativepower #Tesla #resilience #finance #automobiles #transit #smarttransit #urbanplanning #design #climatechange #art #smartart #collectionsmanagement #realestate

art & architecture | Selldorf Architects designs new premises for Berlin’s Esther Schipper

New York’s Selldorf Architects is designing the new gallery in Berlin’s Potsdamer Strasse gallery district for Esther Schipper.

The new Esther Schipper gallery address is:

Esther Schipper
Potsdamer Strasse 81
10785 Berlin

The gallery will be newly situated in a former printing and warehouse facility. The premises offer a 5,800-square-foot exhibition space split into a large primary room and a smaller, 1,500-square-foot space.

See:

New Project: Esther Schipper gallery in Potsdamer Strasse” | Selldorf Architects, 1 March 2017

We are moving!” | Esther Schipper

#art #artcollections #luxury #urbanluxury #architecture #realestate #Berlin

smart art | collections storage

The American Alliance of Museums will meet on Sunday, May 7 to discuss “sustainable collections storage, strategies for our future.”

Facing increased energy costs, changing standards, and issues brought about by climate change, institutions are reevaluating their facilities, collections storage, and operations.

The May 7 discussion will include a review of building site and architecture, environmental control systems, lighting, and waste.

Speakers will explore practical, pressing, and efficient measures to reduce carbon footprints while maintaining the paramount goal of preserving collections.

See: “Sustainable Collections Storage: Strategies for our Future” | American Alliance of Museums, 2017 Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo

#art #artcollections #collections #collectionsmanagement #artstorage #collectionsstorage #smartart #luxury #smartluxury #urbanluxury #resilience #realestate #museums

smart art | preventive conservation in China

Based on a nationwide investigation of the current state of preservation of museum objects in China, around 51% of the 35 million museum objects show different degrees of deterioration.

In China’s present situation, preventing damage to museum objects is much more cost-effective than allowing damage to happen and then treating it.

By 2013, the number of museums in China had increased to 3354 from 3055 in 2012, among which the number of private museum is 811. The number of museum visitors annually is 600 million.

Based on China’s national long-term outline plan for museum development (2011‒2020), we expect that by 2020 there will be one museum for every 250 000 people, compared to one per 400 000 in 2014, and that 20% of museums will be privately funded.

Owing to the impressive number of museums opened in the twentieth century, a large number of objects has been accumulated and has often been left in unsuitable environments, resulting in irreversible damage. Treatment of individual objects cannot meet the ever-increasing demand.

Rather than treatment after they show signs of degradation, looking for preventive conservation solutions becomes the most important museum function.

See:

Overview of preventive conservation and the museum environment in China” | Nan Feng, Research Center for Chinese Frontier Archaeology, Jilin University, Changchun, China, published online on 12 August 2016

#art #artcollections #smartart #smartluxury #urbanluxury #collectionsmanagement #China #museums #preventiveconservation #realestate #airpollution #climatechange #risk #riskmanagment