Résumé

We use a unique and very deep database to examine the performance of wine investments during 2003–2014. Our results reveal that the returns stemming from those investments are important but can largely be explained by their exposure to common risk factors. As such and contradicting prior evidence, fine wines do not seem to offer abnormal returns. While explicitly accounting for non-synchronous trading, we indeed show that the market beta of wine is always positive and significant. Liquidity risk also turns out to be an essential determinant of wine returns. The fact that the liquidity factor, which is estimated on the basis of stock returns, can explain the returns on an exotic asset such as wine suggests that illiquidity is a common, cross-asset source of risk. Hence, this paper contributes to the literature on alternative investments and wine as an asset class and provides additional evidence regarding the nature of liquidity risk.

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