|
|
2008 Auction Napa Valley Raises More Than $10 Million
Monday, June 09, 2008 |
|
|
Magnum-Size Fun
Friday, June 06, 2008 |
|
|
Acker Merrall & Condit’s Hong Kong Premiere Brings $8.2 Million
Tuesday, June 03, 2008 |
|
|
Domaine Ponsot Proprietor Halts Sale of Fake Bottles
Friday, May 16, 2008 |
|
|
Hong Kong to Become Hotspot for Fine-Wine Sales?
Thursday, February 28, 2008 |
|
|
Naples Wine Auction Rakes in $14 Million for Charity
Tuesday, January 29, 2008 |
Romanée-Conti Wines Fetch Record Prices at Sotheby’s Auction
Sales totaled $4.68 million, with bids reaching well above estimates
Peter D. Meltzer
Posted: Monday, November 07, 2005
The largest selection of Domaine de la Romaneé-Conti (DRC) wines ever offered at auction fetched more than $2.7 million at Aulden Cellars-Sotheby's in New York on Nov. 5. The consignment hailed from a private collection that also included treasures from Burgundy and the Rhône. Altogether, the 1,496-lot sale brought in $4.68 million and was 96 percent sold. The DRC contingent was 100 percent sold.
The DRC lineup included a dizzying 1,530 750ml bottles, 152 magnums, 54 jeroboams and 35 methuselahs. According to the Sotheby's wine department, that theoretically worked out to 14,000 glasses of Romanée-Conti at about $200 a glass. It’s no surprise that the sale attracted a bevy of Burgundy aficionados, many of whom were relentless in their bidding tactics, setting numerous records in the process.
The 80 top-grossing wines of the sale all hailed from Romanée-Conti. A case of DRC Romanée-Conti 1989 brought a record $85,188 (175 percent above its Wine Spectator second-quarter 2005 Auction Index average). A methuselah of DRC Romanée-Conti 1999 fetched a record $76,375 (up 197 percent), as did a dozen bottles of DRC Romanée-Conti 1996 (up 141 percent). A case of DRC Montrachet 1996 was snapped up for $41,125 (up 133 percent), yet another record. Other highlights included a case of Domaine Ramonet Montrachet 1997 at $7,931 (up 74 percent), a dozen bottles of Emmanuel Rouget Échézeaux 1990 at $7,638 (up 52 percent), and a case of Guigal Côte-Rôtie La Turque 1990 at $10,575 (up 42 percent). Although many wines sold well above estimate, there were several buying opportunities for savvy bidders. Four cases of J. J. Confuron Clos Vougeot 1999 were snapped up for $588 (down 37 percent), and a case of Clos Vougeot Le Grand Maupertui 1999 from Anne Gros sold for $1,058 (down 25 percent).
View all news articles from the past 30 days
Currently on Wine Spectator Online:
- Court Throws Out St.-Emilion Classification
Ruling negates 2006 reclassification of grand cru estates—says tasting process was biased - Collecting Q&A: Finding Auction Houses
- Scientists Say Red Wine Chemical Helps Fight Ravages of Age
Resveratrol staves off age-related degeneration in mice, but the rodents didn't live longer - Brunello Cleared for U.S. Import
Italian government creates certification process to guarantee wines are 100 percent Sangiovese - Unfiltered: Prince Charles' Aston Martin Runs on Wine
Plus, the world's largest Champagne glass in Italy, tiger bone wine in China, vegetables on Mars and bubbly for a good cause in New York
Advertisement

