FIN-01-012

NYU Stern School of Business


Art as an Investment and the Underperformance of Masterpieces

August 2001

Jiangping Mei and Michael Moses

ABSTRACT


This paper constructs a new data set of repeated sales of artworks and estimates an annual index of art prices for the period 1875-2000. Contrary to earlier studies, we find art outperforms fixed income securities as an investment, though it significantly under-performs stocks in the US. Art is also found to have lower volatility and lower correlation with other assets, making it more attractive for portfolio diversification than discovered in earlier research. There is strong evidence of underperformance of masterpieces, meaning expensive paintings tend to under-perform the art market index. A further study reveals that the underperformance could be consistent with overbidding at auctions. The evidence is mixed on whether the "law of one price" holds in the New York auction market.

Classification: G14, Z10

Jianping Mei
Institution: Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University

Michael Moses
Institution: Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University


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