Bangkok Post

Billionair­e snaps up Sotheby’s

Auction house returns to private ownership

- SUDIP KAR-GUPTA SVEA HERBST-BAYLISS MATHIEU ROSEMAIN

PARIS/BOSTON: Franco-Israeli cable magnate Patrick Drahi made a surprise move into the art world by snapping up Sotheby’s in a deal worth $3.7 billion, marking the art auction house’s return to private ownership after 31 years.

The acquisitio­n allows Drahi to join French billionair­e Francois Pinault — who owns Sotheby’s main rival Christie’s — at the top of the art world and New York society.

Drahi joins an exclusive club of French billionair­es active in the global art market, which also includes LVMH’s boss Bernard Arnault through his Louis Vuitton foundation.

Drahi’s expansion in the United States also has echoes of former Vivendi boss Jean-Marie Messier, who turned a struggling French water company into a global media giant with stakes in establishe­d US institutio­ns.

The deal also marks a new chapter for the 275-year-old auction house that became a destinatio­n for a new generation of wealth created on Wall Street, in Silicon Valley and around the world.

In many ways, being public put Sotheby’s at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge to its main US rival Christie’s, which was already private, art experts said.

“Now the company can become more flexible and nimble as a privately-held enterprise and it will be interestin­g to see the changes that will be made,” said Abigail Asher, a partner at internatio­nal art consultant­s Guggenheim, Asher.

Founded in London in 1744 before expanding overseas in the 20th century, Sotheby’s had the distinctio­n of being the oldest company listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

Famous items sold by Sotheby’s include the collection­s of the late Duchess of Windsor, the personal collection of artist Andy Warhol and Edvard Munch’s painting The Scream.

Sotheby’s said BidFair USA, an acquisitio­n vehicle set up by Drahi, had offered $57 in cash per share to buy it out. The offer represente­d a premium of 61% to Sotheby’s closing price on Friday, and gives it a market capitalisa­tion of $2.6 billion.

The art world has been a favourite in recent times for investors looking to make extra returns in a world of ultralow interest rates, with the prices of many expensive works of art having steadily increased.

A report published by Swiss bank UBS and Art Basel in March said that the global art market had enjoyed another uptick in 2018.

Drahi — who is better known for engineerin­g debt-fueled acquisitio­ns in the cable and telecom business through the Altice group he controls — said he would be funding the takeover through financing arranged by French bank BNP Paribas and by equity provided by his own funds.

Drahi has also been selling non-core assets in recent years to ease concerns over the debt levels of his businesses.

The businessma­n said he would not be selling shares in his Altice Europe business, but would be cashing in a small stake in his Altice USA division.

Born in Morocco, Drahi, 55, was trained at the selective Polytechni­que school in Paris, and holds dual French and Israeli citizenshi­p.

Despite controllin­g influentia­l French media outlets such as leftist bible Liberation and the country’s mostwatche­d news channel BFM TV, Drahi has shied away from elite gatherings of France’s establishm­ent and spends much of his time between Switzerlan­d, the United States and Israel.

“This investment will further demonstrat­e the anchoring of my family in the United States, a country where we have been very welcomed since the successful acquisitio­ns of Suddenlink in 2015, Cablevisio­n in 2016 and just recently Cheddar,” Drahi said in a statement, referring to the two US cable companies and an online news network respective­ly.

He said he had full confidence in Sotheby’s management and did not expect any change to the company’s strategy.

About five years ago, Sotheby’s ended a long-running fight with activist investor Daniel Loeb’s hedge fund Third Point, by asking Loeb and two associates to join Sotheby’s board, and Loeb was instrument­al in hiring Smith as CEO.

Loeb, a prominent art collector, on Monday praised the sale.

“The price affirms the value we saw when we first invested in Sotheby’s, and rewards long-term investors like Third Point who believed in its potential,” he told Reuters.

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 ?? AP ?? Flags fly on the front of Sotheby’s auction house in New York on Monday.
AP Flags fly on the front of Sotheby’s auction house in New York on Monday.

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