Interview: Whisky investment promises high returns, but beware of scamsters, says Mark Littler of Protect Your Cask
- People not taking ownership of their casks is leading to fake selling of titles.
- For maximum return, one has to be ready to buy a young cask and let it age.
- While many Irish distilleries are emerging, Scotch remains the safest best in the whiskey investment space.
In the fast-moving world of equities and cryptocurrencies, investment in whisky occupies a rather small portion of people's portfolios, if at all.
In recent years, however, this alternative asset class has seen growing investor interest, with new distilleries entering the market globally.
However, while returns on cask investments can be attractive over time, investing through cask ownership has become a minefield, breeding scammers out to profit from the relatively opaque market.
Organizations like Protect Your Cask are guiding interested investors to make informed decisions and avoid getting cheated.
Invezz spoke to Mark Littler, co-founder of Protect Your Cask, whisky consultant, and broker to learn more about investing wisely in this niche asset class, the various pitfalls, and his picks. Edited excerpts follow:
Invezz: Give us an overview of the whisky investment space and how it differs from other asset classes.
Cask sales were historically a way for distilleries to generate revenue. As recently as 2002, you could walk up to the Macallan distillery and buy a cask. Thus, the industry and the brokers have always historically sold casks to the public, which have generally yielded very good returns for those who are patient.
For instance, if you bought a cask of Springbank in 1993 for a thousand pounds, it could be worth between 100,000-300,000 pounds today depending on the size of the cask and the amount of whisky in it.
Whisky cask: Look before you invest
Invezz: What are the problems with whisky cask investment and how are people getting scammed?
The biggest problem with whisky cask investment is that most people who are buying casks today are not taking ownership of their casks and instead rely on companies holding casks on their behalf, which is leading to a lot of fake selling of titles.
Because the cask is stored in a warehouse in Scotland, and it must stay there to be called Scotch whisky, you cannot take physical ownership of it.
The Scotch Whisky Association as well as excise notices set by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) state that ownership should be transferred in the warehouse. So, if you are buying a cask and it has your name on it in the warehouse, you have complete autonomy.
I won't name them, but there is definitely one company that's gone into liquidation in the UK and it appears to be disappearing without being able to give anybody their casks. Likewise, the London City Police is investigating one of the cask investment companies, so these fears are very much real.
Invezz: What is the ideal time to hold whisky assets for them to accrue maximum value?
There is a promise of high profits from cask investment; however, one has to be prepared to take a young cask of whisky and age it to an older state.
You've got to be buying something between 0-10 years old and aging it to 18-25 years old, and that's the key to whisky cask investment where you get rewarded by adding value to the product.
If you take a 3-year-old whisky and come back with a 6-year-old or even a 10-year-old whisky, you're not adding much value to it.
A new make of cask from a big distillery can come for around 2,000-3,000 pounds a barrel while those for say 5-8 years old can cost you around 4,000-7,000 pounds, but these are today's market prices that may increase or decrease.
Also, I always advise people if they are buying a cask, to stick to lower values and not go investing tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of pounds into casks because it's much more likely that you've been abused in terms of the pricing structure.
If somebody overcharges you 100% for a cask of new make whisky and they charge you 4,000 pounds, not 2,000 pounds, you've only lost 2,000 pounds.
But, if someone overcharges you 100% too much for a cask of Macallan, you might be overcharged 300,000-400,000 pounds, maybe even half a million pounds. And that's where these companies like to prey because there's a lot more profit for them to sell those on the upside.
Scotch whisky: The safest bet
Invezz: Apart from Scotch whisky and Irish whiskey, are there any other whiskies coming from other geographies that are becoming a favourite of investors?
While Irish whiskey is a new and emerging market, the distilleries are still young, and it remains to be seen whether they can transform the youngish distilleries into big established market players.
Scotch is the safest bet, I would say, because the distilleries and market is the oldest and they also have very stringent regulations about bottling and maturation.
There are some Japanese distilleries where you can buy casks of whisky from, but again, you have to satisfy yourself, wherever you are based, that you fully understand their excise rules because the same rules apply there.
Invezz: Do you have any picks for investment in bottled whisky?
Obviously, brands like Macallan are more than just a drink; they're luxury. They partner with Bentley. They're not just bottles of whisky; it's like buying status.
However, if you look at a lot of their modern releases like the Folio Seires—they're in a big fancy presentation case, but they're not really worth that much because they're just no-age statement whiskies.
Things to avoid would be no-age statement whiskies that are being released by a lot of distilleries in limited editions, but their limited edition numbers are often almost open-ended, 2,000 to 10,000 bottles, which is not necessarily that limited, he says.
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