Fine Art and High Finance
Expert Advice on the Economics of Ownership
Herausgeber: McAndrew, Clare
35,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
Melden Sie sich
hier
hier
für den Produktalarm an, um über die Verfügbarkeit des Produkts informiert zu werden.
Fine Art and High Finance
Expert Advice on the Economics of Ownership
Herausgeber: McAndrew, Clare
- Gebundenes Buch
Art and finance coalesce in the elite world of fine art collecting and investing. McAndrew and a highly qualified team of contributors explain the most difficult financial matters facing art investors.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Edwin J. EltonModern Portfolio Theory and Investment Analysis354,99 €
- Phil HarkinsPowerful Conversations: How High Impact Leaders Communicate23,99 €
- Kentaro AsaiCorporate Finance and Capital Structure60,99 €
- Constance BrownFibonacci Analysis29,99 €
- Jared DillianNo Worries16,99 €
- Guillaume CoqueretPerspectives in Sustainable Equity Investing46,99 €
- Santosh RaikarRenewable Energy Finance65,99 €
-
-
-
Art and finance coalesce in the elite world of fine art collecting and investing. McAndrew and a highly qualified team of contributors explain the most difficult financial matters facing art investors.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Bloomberg
- Verlag: Bloomberg Press
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Februar 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 622g
- ISBN-13: 9781576603338
- ISBN-10: 1576603334
- Artikelnr.: 26615819
- Bloomberg
- Verlag: Bloomberg Press
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Februar 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 622g
- ISBN-13: 9781576603338
- ISBN-10: 1576603334
- Artikelnr.: 26615819
Dr. Clare McAndrew is a cultural economist, investment analyst, and published author. Clare completed her PhD in economics at Trinity College Dublin in 2001, where she also lectured and taught economics for four years. She then led a number of research projects for the Arts Council of the U.K., publishing studies on the effects of regulation, taxation and other issues in the visual arts market. In 2002, Clare joined U.S. firm Kusin & Company, a boutique investment banking firm specializing in art investment, as chief economist where she worked for three years. She returned to Ireland in 2005, and continued her work in the art market in a private consulting capacity with a global client base. Clare founded Arts Economics in 2007 to focus her efforts on art market research and analysis, and works with a network of private consultants and academic researchers in providing research and consulting services to the global art trade and financial sector.
1 An Introduction to Art and Finance (Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
2 Art Appraisals, Prices, and Valuations (Elizabethvon Habsburg and Rachel Goodman, Gurr Johns; and Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
How, where, and when people buy art and what they do withit.
The economics of the art market: supply, demand, and pricedetermination.
Valuation and appraisal issues; art as a financial asset;quantitative and qualitative issues.
3 Art Price Indices (Dr. Roman Kräussl).
Investment returns to art; assessment of performance betweenassets and over time.
Art price indices--methods and debates.
Art data.
4 Art Risk (Dr. Clare McAndrew and Dr. RachelCampbell).
Investment risk.
Portfolio diversification.
Risk management.
Credit default swaps.
Derivatives and structured products.
5 Art Banking (Suzanne Gyorgy, Citi; and Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
Art as collateral and downside risk.
Art lending: history and current practices.
Art financing solutions: comparative review of banks, auctionhouses, galleries, and others.
The future of art banking.
6 Art Funds (Jeremy Eckstein, Randall Willette, andDr. Clare McAndrew).
Art funds: history and motivations.
Art funds today: different methods and approaches.
Strategies: sector allocation, opportunity funds, and hedgefunds.
Current status of the market.
Future outlook.
7 The Government and the Art Trade (Dr. ClareMcAndrew; Rena Neville, Sotheby's NY; Anthony Browne,BAMF).
Role of the government in the art market.
Art and the national patrimony.
Trade restrictions and investment issues.
U.S. relationship between art and government.
U.K. relationship between art and government.
8 Insurance and the Art Market (Christiane Fischer andJill Arnold, AXA).
Art as a real asset: risk issues and the insurance market.
Insurance and the art market: history, practice, andmethods.
Art appraisal and valuation issues.
9 Art and Taxation in the United States (Ralph E.Lerner, Withers).
Tax and the art market: global investment and the tax nexus.
Income tax implications.
Transferring wealth: capital gains and inheritance tax.
Wealth taxes.
VAT and trading taxes.
Estate planning and the legal implications of inheriting,selling, and bequeathing art; divorce situations; prenuptialagreements; division among heirs.
10 Art and Taxation in the United Kingdom and Beyond(Pierre Valentin, Philip Munro, and Samantha Morgan,Withers).
The UK tax system.
Direct taxes: income tax, capital gains tax and corporatetax.
Indirect taxes: VAT.
Wealth tax.
11 Art Conservation and Restoration (Barbara A. Ramsayand John K. Jacobs, Artex).
Conservation versus restoration versus preservation.
Cost and return implications.
Methods, practices, and services.
12 The Illegal Art Trade (Charles T. Danziger andThomas C. Danziger).
The black and grey markets for works of art.
Provenance, fakes, and forgeries.
Illegal import and export, repatriation, export licensing, andthe national patrimony.
Art theft and stolen art: issues and anecdotes.
The global movement of works of art: legal and illegal,repatriation, art and conflict.
Index.
2 Art Appraisals, Prices, and Valuations (Elizabethvon Habsburg and Rachel Goodman, Gurr Johns; and Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
How, where, and when people buy art and what they do withit.
The economics of the art market: supply, demand, and pricedetermination.
Valuation and appraisal issues; art as a financial asset;quantitative and qualitative issues.
3 Art Price Indices (Dr. Roman Kräussl).
Investment returns to art; assessment of performance betweenassets and over time.
Art price indices--methods and debates.
Art data.
4 Art Risk (Dr. Clare McAndrew and Dr. RachelCampbell).
Investment risk.
Portfolio diversification.
Risk management.
Credit default swaps.
Derivatives and structured products.
5 Art Banking (Suzanne Gyorgy, Citi; and Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
Art as collateral and downside risk.
Art lending: history and current practices.
Art financing solutions: comparative review of banks, auctionhouses, galleries, and others.
The future of art banking.
6 Art Funds (Jeremy Eckstein, Randall Willette, andDr. Clare McAndrew).
Art funds: history and motivations.
Art funds today: different methods and approaches.
Strategies: sector allocation, opportunity funds, and hedgefunds.
Current status of the market.
Future outlook.
7 The Government and the Art Trade (Dr. ClareMcAndrew; Rena Neville, Sotheby's NY; Anthony Browne,BAMF).
Role of the government in the art market.
Art and the national patrimony.
Trade restrictions and investment issues.
U.S. relationship between art and government.
U.K. relationship between art and government.
8 Insurance and the Art Market (Christiane Fischer andJill Arnold, AXA).
Art as a real asset: risk issues and the insurance market.
Insurance and the art market: history, practice, andmethods.
Art appraisal and valuation issues.
9 Art and Taxation in the United States (Ralph E.Lerner, Withers).
Tax and the art market: global investment and the tax nexus.
Income tax implications.
Transferring wealth: capital gains and inheritance tax.
Wealth taxes.
VAT and trading taxes.
Estate planning and the legal implications of inheriting,selling, and bequeathing art; divorce situations; prenuptialagreements; division among heirs.
10 Art and Taxation in the United Kingdom and Beyond(Pierre Valentin, Philip Munro, and Samantha Morgan,Withers).
The UK tax system.
Direct taxes: income tax, capital gains tax and corporatetax.
Indirect taxes: VAT.
Wealth tax.
11 Art Conservation and Restoration (Barbara A. Ramsayand John K. Jacobs, Artex).
Conservation versus restoration versus preservation.
Cost and return implications.
Methods, practices, and services.
12 The Illegal Art Trade (Charles T. Danziger andThomas C. Danziger).
The black and grey markets for works of art.
Provenance, fakes, and forgeries.
Illegal import and export, repatriation, export licensing, andthe national patrimony.
Art theft and stolen art: issues and anecdotes.
The global movement of works of art: legal and illegal,repatriation, art and conflict.
Index.
1 An Introduction to Art and Finance (Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
2 Art Appraisals, Prices, and Valuations (Elizabethvon Habsburg and Rachel Goodman, Gurr Johns; and Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
How, where, and when people buy art and what they do withit.
The economics of the art market: supply, demand, and pricedetermination.
Valuation and appraisal issues; art as a financial asset;quantitative and qualitative issues.
3 Art Price Indices (Dr. Roman Kräussl).
Investment returns to art; assessment of performance betweenassets and over time.
Art price indices--methods and debates.
Art data.
4 Art Risk (Dr. Clare McAndrew and Dr. RachelCampbell).
Investment risk.
Portfolio diversification.
Risk management.
Credit default swaps.
Derivatives and structured products.
5 Art Banking (Suzanne Gyorgy, Citi; and Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
Art as collateral and downside risk.
Art lending: history and current practices.
Art financing solutions: comparative review of banks, auctionhouses, galleries, and others.
The future of art banking.
6 Art Funds (Jeremy Eckstein, Randall Willette, andDr. Clare McAndrew).
Art funds: history and motivations.
Art funds today: different methods and approaches.
Strategies: sector allocation, opportunity funds, and hedgefunds.
Current status of the market.
Future outlook.
7 The Government and the Art Trade (Dr. ClareMcAndrew; Rena Neville, Sotheby's NY; Anthony Browne,BAMF).
Role of the government in the art market.
Art and the national patrimony.
Trade restrictions and investment issues.
U.S. relationship between art and government.
U.K. relationship between art and government.
8 Insurance and the Art Market (Christiane Fischer andJill Arnold, AXA).
Art as a real asset: risk issues and the insurance market.
Insurance and the art market: history, practice, andmethods.
Art appraisal and valuation issues.
9 Art and Taxation in the United States (Ralph E.Lerner, Withers).
Tax and the art market: global investment and the tax nexus.
Income tax implications.
Transferring wealth: capital gains and inheritance tax.
Wealth taxes.
VAT and trading taxes.
Estate planning and the legal implications of inheriting,selling, and bequeathing art; divorce situations; prenuptialagreements; division among heirs.
10 Art and Taxation in the United Kingdom and Beyond(Pierre Valentin, Philip Munro, and Samantha Morgan,Withers).
The UK tax system.
Direct taxes: income tax, capital gains tax and corporatetax.
Indirect taxes: VAT.
Wealth tax.
11 Art Conservation and Restoration (Barbara A. Ramsayand John K. Jacobs, Artex).
Conservation versus restoration versus preservation.
Cost and return implications.
Methods, practices, and services.
12 The Illegal Art Trade (Charles T. Danziger andThomas C. Danziger).
The black and grey markets for works of art.
Provenance, fakes, and forgeries.
Illegal import and export, repatriation, export licensing, andthe national patrimony.
Art theft and stolen art: issues and anecdotes.
The global movement of works of art: legal and illegal,repatriation, art and conflict.
Index.
2 Art Appraisals, Prices, and Valuations (Elizabethvon Habsburg and Rachel Goodman, Gurr Johns; and Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
How, where, and when people buy art and what they do withit.
The economics of the art market: supply, demand, and pricedetermination.
Valuation and appraisal issues; art as a financial asset;quantitative and qualitative issues.
3 Art Price Indices (Dr. Roman Kräussl).
Investment returns to art; assessment of performance betweenassets and over time.
Art price indices--methods and debates.
Art data.
4 Art Risk (Dr. Clare McAndrew and Dr. RachelCampbell).
Investment risk.
Portfolio diversification.
Risk management.
Credit default swaps.
Derivatives and structured products.
5 Art Banking (Suzanne Gyorgy, Citi; and Dr. ClareMcAndrew).
Art as collateral and downside risk.
Art lending: history and current practices.
Art financing solutions: comparative review of banks, auctionhouses, galleries, and others.
The future of art banking.
6 Art Funds (Jeremy Eckstein, Randall Willette, andDr. Clare McAndrew).
Art funds: history and motivations.
Art funds today: different methods and approaches.
Strategies: sector allocation, opportunity funds, and hedgefunds.
Current status of the market.
Future outlook.
7 The Government and the Art Trade (Dr. ClareMcAndrew; Rena Neville, Sotheby's NY; Anthony Browne,BAMF).
Role of the government in the art market.
Art and the national patrimony.
Trade restrictions and investment issues.
U.S. relationship between art and government.
U.K. relationship between art and government.
8 Insurance and the Art Market (Christiane Fischer andJill Arnold, AXA).
Art as a real asset: risk issues and the insurance market.
Insurance and the art market: history, practice, andmethods.
Art appraisal and valuation issues.
9 Art and Taxation in the United States (Ralph E.Lerner, Withers).
Tax and the art market: global investment and the tax nexus.
Income tax implications.
Transferring wealth: capital gains and inheritance tax.
Wealth taxes.
VAT and trading taxes.
Estate planning and the legal implications of inheriting,selling, and bequeathing art; divorce situations; prenuptialagreements; division among heirs.
10 Art and Taxation in the United Kingdom and Beyond(Pierre Valentin, Philip Munro, and Samantha Morgan,Withers).
The UK tax system.
Direct taxes: income tax, capital gains tax and corporatetax.
Indirect taxes: VAT.
Wealth tax.
11 Art Conservation and Restoration (Barbara A. Ramsayand John K. Jacobs, Artex).
Conservation versus restoration versus preservation.
Cost and return implications.
Methods, practices, and services.
12 The Illegal Art Trade (Charles T. Danziger andThomas C. Danziger).
The black and grey markets for works of art.
Provenance, fakes, and forgeries.
Illegal import and export, repatriation, export licensing, andthe national patrimony.
Art theft and stolen art: issues and anecdotes.
The global movement of works of art: legal and illegal,repatriation, art and conflict.
Index.