Sunday Tribune

MILITARY WARPLANES TOP ON CRAFT COLLECTORS’ LISTS

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COLLECTIBL­ES markets are driven by passion, not rational thought.

But the aircraft-collecting market has seen a split in recent years between those who purchase and restore for love and history and those who are new collectors with an interest in return on investment.

The owners of Redondo Beach, California-based Platinum Fighter Sales claim to have brokered more than $300 million (R4.2 billion) in classic aircraft and warbirds or military planes to both types of buyers over the past three decades. In the last few years, Simon Brown, co-owner of Platinum, has noticed an influx of investors. These clients may not even know what kind of plane they’re buying, but they know a good return on investment when they see it.

“Over the last 40 years these airplanes have doubled in value every 10 years,” Brown says. Adjusted for inflation, this is in line with the historical average annual return on the S&P 500, which since its inception in 1923, is only about 7%.

The fear among collectors and those who love the planes for their history over a return on investment is that these rare birds will be kept under lock and key instead of shared with enthusiast­s. Many are transporte­d abroad from their country of origin and privately hangared, effectivel­y taking them out of circulatio­n at air shows and similar historical events. “From a financial or commercial standpoint it’s good, but you don’t see the airplanes fly as much, which kind of defeats the purpose of telling the history of the airplanes,” Brown says.

The Collector

Greg Herrick, owner of the Golden Wings Flying Museum outside Minneapoli­s, owns 38 vintage aircraft. Most date from the golden age of aviation, the period between the two world wars.

“It’s not just the airplane, it’s the history that it represents,” Herrick says of what drives him to collect. He has history in spades in his hangar. Among his collection are five Ford Tri-motor aircraft, manufactur­ed in the 1920s and known as the first luxury airliner. “One of them is the oldest flying metal aircraft in the world,” he says. “One of them is American Airlines’ oldest flying aircraft. I also have a flying car and the world’s first diesel-powered airplane.”

Herrick isn’t opposed to buying aircraft for investment purposes, but he prefers the historical adulation shown by many collectors and the public access they allow. “The preservati­on of this is so important, but if someone [has invested] and created value, then maybe they incentivis­e other people to collect and restore them,” Herrick says. “These planes should be appreciate­d.”

The Seller

Sixty percent of business at Platinum Fighter Sales is domestic, with the remaining sales tracking a flight path abroad.

“We have people that buy an airplane in US Dollars and hold on to it and then sell it just because the exchange rate is favourable,” Brown says. “They make more money off the exchange rate than they do off the value of the airplane sometimes.”

A large portion of Brown’s internatio­nal sales are from Europe. There are also buyers in Australia and New Zealand, with sales in Eastern Europe and Russia growing. Buying or selling a vintage aircraft can be an emotional exercise for a collector. Investors, however, just want the best deal, Brown says.

Parts and Restoratio­n

The purchase price is often only the first in a long line of expenses for both collectors and investors. Returning a vintage aircraft to its former glory (or even just a flyable state) can be an expensive task. For Brown, it comes down to the individual choice of love vs money. “Some airplanes you can do a restoratio­n and be financiall­y still in a good situation,” he says. “Other airplanes you are going to restore can be that much more labour-intensive, and you may end up upside-down on it and never get your money out. Perhaps in 10 years you may, but not straight away.”

On the sales side, Brown says anything British is super-hot right now, especially Spitfires and Hurricanes. “This year is the hundredth anniversar­y of the Royal Air Force,” he says. “It’s made them the flavour of the year. Anything that is British, in fact.” – BLOOMBERG

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