This week’s Sotheby’s wine auction in London the day before
yesterday trumpeted
the chance to buy a handsome, gold-embossed jeroboam of Mouton 2000.
There was a photograph it on the cover of the sale catalogue and a
further full-page colour photograph of a jeroboam inside. In both
photographs the image, perhaps rather surprisingly, was cut off at
the
bottom of the jeroboam (below where it reads Appellation
Controlée).
The
text in the catalogue stated that the first six jeroboams to
be sold
had been auctioned at a charity dinner and that the five offered in the
catalogue were the only others to have been released by the
Château. The text
reads "No further jeroboams have been put on the market, so
this is a special event" and strongly suggests that this
is a unique opportunity to buy Mouton 2000 in
jeroboam.
Thanks
to all this hype, the first two lots went for £3,000, plus the usual 15
per cent buyer’s premium, so £3,450 or the equivalent of £6,210 per
case of 12 bottles. Mouton 2000 is currently widely available in the
trade at around £2,400 per case.
Within minutes of the jeroboams’ selling
at the auction, at 2pm on Wednesday, the
Château
announced that they had in fact produced 5,000 jeroboams of which
1,000 they were immediately releasing to Bordeaux negociants at a
huge
premium over the regular price but with the justification
that they had
sold at a high price in Sotheby's. By 5pm I was being emailed offers of
these jeros at around £2,000 each from the UK fine wine
traders.
It
now seems rather clearer exactly why those photographs were cut off
where there were. If the whole bottle had been shown, we could have
read that that particular jeroboam was number xxxx of 5000
which of
course seriously reduces the rarity and would have
seriously reduced
the price.
This
morning the following breathless account of the auction, Sotheby’s most
successful so far this season, reaches me: “A fabulous selection
of
Mouton Rothschild 2000 - direct from the Chateau - caused great
excitement, with each of the 29 lots offered selling far in excess of
their pre-sale estimates.” Yet more evidence that this was very much a
two-pronged attack on the wine
market.
In
fact, at a recent tasting of Mouton, I was decidedly underwhelmed by
how Mouton 2000 was tasting and thought the 2001 was showing just as
well. See tasting
notes for the full
story.