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- WineFi Weekly: The History of Bordeaux, and Syndicate Sourcing Updates đ·
WineFi Weekly: The History of Bordeaux, and Syndicate Sourcing Updates đ·
16/09/2024

In this edition of WineFi Weekly, weâre talking about:
As part of our series on The Fine Wine Collection, this week we will be taking a closer look into the Bordeaux portion of this syndicate, and the historical significance of investing in this region.
We will also be sharing an insight into the sourcing for our current syndicates, The Champagne Collection and The Burgundy Collection.
Letâs uncork this.
(estimated read time: 3 minutes. Capital at Risk)
Syndicate Sourcing
The Champagne Collection

We are pleased to announce that sourcing for The Champagne Collection is complete. We have sourced the portfolio at a total of 3.56% below the current lowest price on the market, and are pleased to be able to pass these discounts on to syndicate members.
Investors in The Champagne Collection will shortly receive a detailed breakdown of the wines in their collection.
The Burgundy Collection

We recently began deploying capital for the first tranche of The Burgundy Collection, so far achieving a 3.66% discount to the lowest market price available.
Syndicate members in both of these collections will be receiving a further update from the WineFi team.
As the introduction states, The Fine Wine Collection is a diversified portfolio across a number of different regions.
We have previously covered Burgundy and Champagne in depth with our posts on their dedicated syndicates, so itâs time to shine some light on Bordeaux!
The History of Investing in Bordeaux
For those unfamiliar with the concept, it may come as a surprise to learn that people have been investing in the wine of Bordeaux for hundreds of years.
As early as 1787, American statesman Thomas Jefferson noted in his diary that a premium was being charged for Bordeaux wines from the more mature 1783 vintage versus the more recent 1786.

The (supposed) Thomas Jefferson bottles - initialled Th.J
The lesson here â that fine wine improves with age, and will therefore be worth more in the future than it is today â remains the central pillar of wine investing.
Since Jeffersonâs time, investing in wine has become an increasingly mainstream pursuit for investors seeking uncorrelated, attractive risk-adjusted returns.
This trend shows no sign of slowing, with HSBC reporting in 2023 that 96% of UK wealth managers expect allocations to fine wine to increase.
For many years, Bordeaux was the âonlyâ truly investment-grade region. Even as other regions like Burgundy, Champagne and Tuscany have emerged, Bordeaux retains a 30-40% share of secondary market trading volumes.
The History of Bordeaux
History of Bordeaux
As perhaps the single most prestigious wine region, the history of wine-making in Bordeaux stretches back nearly 2,000 years.
Following Julius Caesarâs conquest of what was then Gaul, vines were planted to keep Roman legionary and native alike well-supplied.
As the Roman Empire expanded, what is now Bordeaux had easy access to an important shipping route to new colonies in Britannia â thanks to the favourable position of the Gironde estuary.

Roman Wine Amphorae
Following the collapse of the Roman Empire, wine continued to be made â but almost entirely with âdomesticâ consumption in mind.
In the 12th Century, the marriage of Henry Plantagenet (later King Henry II of England) to Eleanor of Aquitaine meant Bordeaux passing into English hands.
Unable to grow vines themselves, it did not take long for Britons to rediscover their love for what was quickly termed âclaretâ â an English bastardisation of a Latin term used to describe âclearâ (e.g. light red or yellow) wines.
Even during the medieval period, export volumes from Bordeaux to the British Isles are astonishing. At the turn of the 14th century, a single Bordelais Town â Libourne â was exporting 11,000 tons of wine to London a year. The same area provided 1,152,000 bottles for the wedding of Edward II.

Libourne - Bordeaux
Trade disruption caused by the near constant wars between France and England in the centuries that followed meant that other export markets were sought.
In the seventeenth century, the arrival of Dutch engineers led to the draining of the marshland around the MĂ©doc, and the planting of vines to make the sugary, sweet wine that appealed to Dutch palates â of which Chateau dâYquem is the shining example. That meant that, in turn, Bordeaux wines flowed out through Dutch trade routes and across the world.
As tensions with France cooled following the Napoleonic Wars, the British Empire followed suit.
The enduring appeal of Bordeaux is much due to marketing. Savvy estate owners â notably those of Chateau Haut-Brion â realised the importance of developing a brand centuries before the term was in common use.
Amusingly, English diarist Samuel Pepys wrote on April 10, 1663 that he had âdrank a sort of French wine called Ho Bryen that hath a good and most particular taste I never met withâ. Realising the value of differentiating themselves, other Chateaux quickly built brands of their own.

A bottle of âHo Bryenâ - as Samuel Pepys would call it
Bordeaux's status as the premier wine region globally was enhanced in 1855, when Napoleon III ordered the wines of France to be ranked according to a classification system. The intention behind this was to ensure that only the finest were presented to a global audience at the 1855 Exposition Universelle de Paris.
The classification of the finest wines of Bordeaux wines into five separate categories, with four (later five) âFirst Growthsâ â Premier Grand Crus â at the top and âFifth Growthsâ at the bottom, immediately inflated the prestige of those lucky enough to be included.
Interestingly, in what would be a harbinger for the emergence of wine as an asset class, the âpriceâ of the individual wines played a key factor in the selection criteria.
To this day, the first growths â Chateaux Latour, Lafite, Haut-Brion, Mouton and Margaux â remain amongst the most beloved by drinkers, collectors and investors, alike.
Fine wine is an alternative and illiquid asset class and should only form a small part of a well-diversified portfolio. The value of your investment can go down as well as up and you may not get back the full amount you invested.