Sotheby’s Holdings: First Quarter Results

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, July 5, 2024


Sotheby’s Holdings: First Quarter Results



NEW YORK.- Sotheby’s Holdings, Inc., the parent company of Sotheby’s worldwide auction business, art-related financing and real estate brokerage activities, today announced results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2003.  Net loss for the first quarter of 2003 was ($27.6) million, or ($0.45) per diluted share, compared to a net loss of ($23.1) million, or ($0.38) per diluted share, for the first quarter of 2002.  Excluding net restructuring charges of $5.8 million, employee retention costs of $3.5 million and antitrust related special charges of $0.8 million, net loss for the first quarter of 2003 would have been ($21.2)* million, or ($0.34)* per share, which is flat when compared to the same period in 2002 when calculated on the same basis.
Due to the seasonal nature of the art auction market, Auction Sales (hammer price plus buyer’s premium) in the first quarter have historically represented approximately 9% - 13% of annual Auction Sales and the first quarter has historically been a loss period for the Company.  Consequently, first quarter results may not be indicative of expected full year results. 
"During the first quarter of 2003, auction and related revenues increased 7% to $38.1 million when compared to the same period in 2002" said William F. Ruprecht, President and Chief Executive Officer of Sotheby’s Holdings, Inc.  "These increases principally reflect the favorable impact of foreign currency translations, as well as improved February Impressionist and Contemporary art sales in London and the buyer’s premium increase that was implemented in January, partially offset by a decline in single-owner sales.  Other notable sales in the first quarter include our January Old Master Paintings sale in New York, which totaled $48 million and which was highlighted by the sale of Andrea Mantegna’s Descent into Limbo for $28.6 million, a record for the artist."
For the three months ended March 31, 2003 revenues from the Company’s Real Estate segment were $6.8 million, a decrease of $0.7 million, or 9%, as compared to the first quarter of 2002.  This decrease is partially a result of the current market conditions in certain real estate markets in which the Company operates.
"Our overall results were adversely effected by the foreign exchange impact of the weakening U.S. dollar," said Mr. Ruprecht.  "This resulted in a $1.7 million increase in the Company’s operating loss in the first quarter of 2003.  It is also important to highlight that the net restructuring charges of $5.8 million, employee retention costs of $3.5 million and antitrust related special charges of $0.8 million, which aggregated  $10.1 million in total in 2003, were significantly higher than the equivalent amounts in 2002, which aggregated $3.2 million.  Therefore, the net impact of these charges in the first quarter of 2003 resulted in an incremental expense of $6.9 million."
Second and Third Quarter Sales
"Our spring Impressionist & Modern art sales in New York performed well, despite the pressures of an uncertain economy and the war in Iraq, which made property gathering particularly challenging," said Mr. Ruprecht.  "Sotheby’s led the competition, achieving a sales total of $81.1 million.  Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s Dans les Roses (Portrait de Madame Léon Clapisson) sold for $23.5 million and was the highest individual price achieved among all Impressionist and Modern works sold last week. 
Three works offered by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston sold for a total of $16.3 million and were led by Edgar Degas’ Danseuse, which brought $10.6 million.  Among other highlights was Camille Pissaro’s La Route de Rocquencourt selling for $5.6 million, surpassing the high estimate of $5 million.
"Last night, we held our Part I sale of Contemporary Art in New York, which totaled $27.3 million," continued Mr. Ruprecht.  "85% of the lots sold and the highlight of the evening was Jackson Pollock’s drip painting Number 17, 1949, which brought $5.3 million and confirmed the resilience of the Contemporary market for fresh works of high quality that are fairly estimated."
"We were extremely pleased with the results of our annual spring Hong Kong sales, particularly considering the current health crisis in Asia, which prohibited many of our international clients from traveling.  The two days of sales totaled $18.6 million, which achieved the low estimate and our Fine Chinese Paintings sale totaled $4.9 million, above the high estimate of $4.7 million.  The World of Qianlong, a thematic offering of ceramics and works of art from the Qianlong Dynasty, brought $8.0 million and was highlighted by A copper-red and underglaze-blue ’Dragon’ vase, Tianquiping, seal mark and period Qianlong, which brought $1.3 million - doubling its pre-sale low estimate.
"Looking to the sales ahead, we have several exciting auctions that will take place this month.  On Thursday, Sotheby’s Paris will offer The Karl Lagerfeld Collection of 20th Century Decorative Arts, estimated to sell in the range of $3 million.  Next week in New York, single owner sales of American paintings, drawings and sculpture as well as furniture and decorative arts from the Collection of Meyer and Vivian Potamkin will be offered and are estimated in excess of $10 million.  And on May 22nd, our London sale of Music includes the working manuscript of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, arguably the most important musical work ever to appear at auction.  Prepared for Beethoven by two copyists, the manuscript is marked throughout by thousands of revisions by Beethoven and is estimated in excess of $3 million.
"London will also be offering a number of extraordinary paintings later in the season," said Mr. Ruprecht.  "A major landscape by the Austrian Expressionist painter Egon Schiele will be offered in Sotheby’s London sale of Impressionist & Modern Art on June 23rd.  Krumauer Landschaft (Stadt und Fluss), estimated at $8 to $11 million, was recently restituted to the heirs of the original Viennese collectors from whom it was looted by the Nazis in 1938.  On July 10th, in our London Old Master Paintings sale, a recently discovered Rembrandt self-portrait, estimated at $6.5 to $9.6 million, will be offered for sale.  The self-portrait, which has been hidden for over 300 years behind layers of over-paint, has recently emerged after years of painstaking cleaning.  It is only one of three Rembrandt self-portraits still left in private hands and the first to come to auction in 30 years."
Outlook
"Property gathering for our spring season was affected by the current economic environment, uncertainties related to the war in Iraq and the health crisis in Asia resulting from SARS," said Mr. Ruprecht.  "Those factors had an unfavorable impact on auction consignments for the Company’s spring sales, and will therefore negatively impact the second quarter of 2003.  In addition, management believes that the luxury real estate market will continue to remain soft, and may therefore negatively impact Real Estate revenues during the second quarter of 2003.  Nevertheless, with the strategic sale-leaseback of our York Avenue headquarters, the successful implementation of our recent restructuring plans, and the resolution of our remaining antitrust litigation, we are confident that Sotheby’s is today better positioned to weather this downturn."










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