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Buying Beauty: On Prices and Returns in the Art Market

TLDR
The resulting price index concludes that art has appreciated in value by a moderate 3.97% per year, in real U.S. dollar terms, between 1957 and 2007, similar to that of corporate bonds---at much higher risk.
Abstract
This paper investigates the price determinants and investment performance of art. We apply a hedonic regression analysis to a new data set of more than one million auction transactions of paintings and works on paper. Based on the resulting price index, we conclude that art has appreciated in value by a moderate 3.97% per year, in real U.S. dollar terms, between 1957 and 2007. This is a performance similar to that of corporate bonds--at much higher risk. A repeat-sales regression on a subset of the data demonstrates the robustness of our index. Next, quantile regressions document larger average price appreciations (and higher volatilities) in more expensive price brackets. We also find variation in historical returns across mediums and movements. Finally, we show that measures of high-income consumer confidence and art market sentiment predict art price trends.

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The price of wine

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THE PRICE OF ART: Uncertainty and reputation in the art field

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the value of an art work or artist originates in an intersubjective process of assessment and conferring of reputation by experts in the art field, such as gallery owners, curators, critics, art dealers, journalists, and collectors.
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Does It Pay to Invest in Art? A Selection-Corrected Returns Perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a sample of 32,928 paintings that sold repeatedly between 1960 and 2013 and found an asymmetric V-shaped relation between sale probabilities and returns.
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Is There a Bubble in the Art Market

TL;DR: This article applied a right-tailed unit root test with forward recursive regressions (SADF test) to detect explosive behaviors directly in the time series of four different art market segments (Impressionist and Modern, Post-war and Contemporary, American and Latin American) for the period from 1970 to 2013.
References
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Hedonic Prices and Implicit Markets: Product Differentiation in Pure Competition

TL;DR: In this article, a theory of hedonic prices is formulated as a problem in the economics of spatial equilibrium in which the entire set of implicit prices guides both consumer and producer locational decisions in characteristics space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Income Inequality in the United States, 1913–1998

TL;DR: The authors showed that the large shocks that capital owners experienced during the Great Depression and World War II have had a permanent effect on top capital incomes and argued that steep progressive income and estate taxation may have prevented large fortunes from fully recovering from these shocks.
Posted Content

Investor Sentiment and the Cross-Section of Stock Returns

TL;DR: This article examined how investor sentiment affects the cross-section of stock returns and found that when sentiment is low, subsequent returns are relatively high on smaller stocks, high volatility stocks, unprofitable stocks, non-dividend-paying stocks, extreme-growth stocks, and distressed stocks, consistent with an initial underpricing of these stocks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Giving Content to Investor Sentiment: The Role of Media in the Stock Market

TL;DR: The authors quantitatively measure the nature of the media's interactions with the stock market using daily content from a popular Wall Street Journal column and find that high media pessimism predicts downward pressure on market prices followed by a reversion to fundamentals.
ReportDOI

Prices of Single Family Homes Since 1970: New Indexes for Four Cities

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used data on nearly a million homes sold in four metropolitan areas (Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas and San Francisco) to construct quarterly indexes of existing home prices between 1970 and 1986.
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