Wealthy People Are Raising Cash From Their Art Collections

A week ago Monday, as oil prices dropped 30% and equities plummeted, a New York client of Fine Art Group requested financing against a $10 million painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat.

Days later, with equities tumbling to the largest single-day decline since 1987, a major London gallery called for fast capital to opportunistically buy a contemporary art collection. A Swiss client asked for a loan against $30 million worth of rare diamonds.

As global stocks took another tumble Monday, a collector, who recently bought about 15 million pounds ($18 million) worth of art during the London auctions, asked Fine Art Group to help settle upcoming payment obligations on some works through art financing.

“We were already having a busy first quarter, but the last two weeks have seen an approximate two-fold increase in inquiries,” said Freya Stewart, who heads the art-financing division at Fine Art Group.

The desire, or need, for loans comes as the spread of coronavirus creates the wildest market swings since the financial crisis. While stocks rallied on Friday after President Donald Trump declared a national emergency, the recovery was short-lived: Equities globally tumbled Monday after a massive emergency move by the Federal Reserve failed to calm fears among investors about the rapidly escalating economic hit from the virus.

The ructions are pummeling fortunes across the globe. Some clients want to free up cash for investment opportunities, lenders said. Others to offset the cost of margin calls after borrowing against stock holdings. UBS Group AG and Credit Suisse Group AG are among banks asking clients to provide additional collateral, according to the Financial Times.