Business World

NY start-up unleashes big data on art investing

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HEDGE funds and some of the world’s biggest banks have embraced the predictive properties of machine learning to spot patterns and guide their investment decisions. Could this branch of artificial intelligen­ce be used to divine the vagaries of the art market? A New York start-up says it can.

Arthena analyzes hundreds of thousands of data points on works of art — artist, style, medium, size and so forth.

Adding a touch of human insight, the company picks pieces it says will generate handsome returns for investors.

Arthena currently manages several funds, ranging from lowrisk ones that invest in modern art to higher-risk funds that buy works from emerging artists.

The start-up, which is backed by Foundation Capital, Beamonte Investment­s and Y Combinator, recently teamed up with brokerage Charles Schwab, which offers a suite of alternativ­e investment offerings.

INHERENTLY SUBJECTIVE

Valuing art is inherently subjective, and many experts are skeptical that it can be profitably bought and sold simply by the numbers. But Arthena cofounder and Chief Executive Officer Madelaine d’Angelo says AI could shed light on a market where deals are often done privately, lower the barriers to entry and help democratiz­e art investing.

“Most people in the art world don’t like what we’re doing,” Ms. D’Angelo says, noting that she’s been accused of stealing the soul from art investing. “We’re not advocating that art shouldn’t exist for art’s sake, or that people should stop building collection­s, but we want to make it more widely available as an asset class and investment opportunit­y.”

Arthena’s pitch coincides with a surge of interest in art investing. Many investors are seeking to diversify their portfolios amid low bond yields and what some consider a frothy equities market.

Sales at the big auction houses have jumped 18% in the first half of 2017, according to Deloitte’s latest Art & Finance report, and well- known works are fetching record prices. Jean-Michel Basquiat’s painting of a skull sold earlier this year for $110.5 million, 5,800 times what it was bought for 33 years earlier, according to Artprice, and a record for an American artist.

ART INVESTING MADE ACCESSIBLE

But the game has traditiona­lly been the province of the uberrich — like the mysterious buyer who just spent a record $450.3 million on Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi (up from a mere $127.5 million four years ago).

Art funds are another way to get into the market, but these are usually sold to high net-worth individual­s or family offices and managed by profession­al experts with connection­s in the art world.

Arthena wants to make art investing accessible to more people and attract the next generation of art enthusiast­s, including dataobsess­ed millennial­s.

“What you see with a lot of innovation happening in art and technology and finance, is that it’s the same repackaged product continued to be sold to the same pool” of investors without bringing in a wider audience, says Ms. D’Angelo, 30. “What we are asking is, what can we do to make that happen?”

TALKING MATH

Ms. D’Angelo, who has a master’s degree in museum studies from Harvard and worked at the Smithsonia­n, founded Arthena in 2013 with her brother Michael, 27, who studied computatio­nal and mathematic­al engineerin­g at Stanford; he’s the chief technology officer.

The company also has an office in San Francisco and is opening one in Luxembourg, the center of the art investing world.

Investing in art is a daunting prospect for most people because there’s not much available data.

That’s changing thanks to the likes of Magnus, a start-up with ambitions to catalogue the existence and price of every artwork and to make that informatio­n publicly available; another startup, Artsy, streams auctions on smartphone­s and tablets and lists inventory from a global network of galleries.

Arthena is talking to investors in their own language: math. Ms. D’Angelo says her team of data scientists uses the same rigorous datadriven approach that fund managers apply to any financial product.

She declined to provide specifics, but art investment experts say AI is well suited to crunching a range of indicators to predict trends.

Among them: prices at public auctions, the number of gallery or museum exhibits an artist has had, how often an artist’s name comes up in data bases or is mentioned on social media and works collectors already own of a given artist.

SPOTTING TRENDS

Ms. D’Angelo says her company can spot trends across more dimensions and a broader body of work than a team of human analysts or advisers could do (although art experts review the algorithms’ findings).

Arthena targets works below $1 million and says pieces selling for less than $50,000 are the most liquid. For now, only wealthy investors accredited by the Securities and Exchange Commission — generally individual­s with annual incomes of $200,000 (or $300,000 for a couple), or $1 million in assets — can put money in an Arthena fund.

The amount invested varies based on the fund and the manager’s needs but is typically about $10,000.

The company says it has 10s of millions of dollars in commitment­s so far and hopes to generate 12.5%to 15.5% annual returns. Investors won’t know how they’ve done until the company sells its first artworks in a year or so.

Adam Goldstein, who cofounded the travel site Hipmunk, made a “small” investment in an Arthena fund.

“To find an asset class that’s this different; those don’t come along very often,’’ he says. If Arthena succeeds, he adds, it could help make art a more widely accepted asset for a diversifie­d portfolio. “People might ask why you don’t have any art in the same way they might ask why you don’t have any gold,” he says.

Data has already had a huge effect on the art market, lowering prices and improving transparen­cy, says Evan Beard, an art services executive at US Trust, the private bank owned by Bank of America Corp.

But he’s skeptical that technology will totally supplant the way art has been bought and sold for centuries.

An algorithm will never replace “going into old ladies’ living rooms and romancing them,” he says. “Selling a work of art still requires romance — even at the low end.’’

While the personal touch will probably never go away, Arthena’s data-first approach could appeal to a new generation of art aficionado­s. Phillip Ashley Klein, who runs Deloitte Consulting’s US Art & Finance team, says a massive transfer of wealth is underway from boomers to millennial­s, who want a “more personal experience and more contextual transparen­cy.” — Bloomberg

 ?? AFP ?? A VISITOR takes a photo of the painting Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci at Christie’s New York Auction House, Nov. 15, in New York City.
AFP A VISITOR takes a photo of the painting Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci at Christie’s New York Auction House, Nov. 15, in New York City.

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