Dom Perignon 2013 leads weekly trade for the 2nd time in Q3

Stay up to date on the current trends of the wine investment market with our weekly summary.

Weekly trade breakdown

Source: Bx-trade.com, Liv-ex.com

Trade for Champagne, Tuscany, and Australia was the highlight last week, each regions trade share doubled from the previous week. As a result, Bordeaux’s trade share declined and for the first time in weeks, there was not a Bordeaux wine included in the top traded rankings.


Burgundy trade also rose, almost matching with Bordeaux at 26.9%. Some high-value trades of de la Romanee-Conti, Arnoux-Lachaux, and Armand Rousseau helped.


Even though Rayas 2010 was one of the top traded wines, Rhône’s trade share fell slightly, from 6.43% to 5.63%. However, it is worth noting that this is still double its total trade share of 2.20% in July.

Top traded wines

Source: Bx-trade.com, Liv-ex.com

The leader was Dom Pérignon 2013. This vintage is the most traded Dom Perignon so far this year, and it is also one of the cheapest available on the market. Last traded @ £783 per 6x75cl, making it 20% cheaper than most other comparable vintages. 


Next in line, Penfolds Grange 2018 also did really well, selling for £3,977 per 12×75cl. The 2018 received a perfect 100/100 score from Lisa Perrotti-Brown MW in 2022, which sent trading prices up by almost 20% to £4,350, before dropping again to £4,000 a few months later.


Tuscany had its shining moment too. Wines from San Guido and Fattoria Le Pupille were the stars. Fattoria Le Pupille’s Saffredi, Toscana IGT 2020 got the third spot, and people bought it for £512 per case.


Château Rayas 2010 landed in fifth place, a wine that has been a hot topic on the secondary market due to it’s huge price fluctuation over the last year. The 2010 has seen its market value drop by 31.1% in the last 12 months and yet it is one of the most traded wines from the entire region this year. ‘Buying on the way down’ comes to mind.

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What we’re reading

The perils of investing in a boutique winery in China - The Financial Times

A passion for viniculture — and lots of money — is needed in a challenging climate and difficult market.

Burgundy will drop and it will fall on the Mâconnais - Drinks Business

For one outspoken winemaker, the Mâconnais is Bourgogne’s best place for making fine wines in a warming climate, while the Côte d’Or faces a troubled future

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