SG Bidder Sets World Record for Ancient Shipwrecked Bubbly

Acker Merrall & Condit, one of the world’s premier wine auction houses, announced that it has beat the world auction record for a bottle of champagne, selling a bottle of […]


Acker Merrall & Condit, one of the world’s premier wine
auction houses, announced that it has beat the world auction record for a
bottle of champagne, selling a bottle of shipwrecked Veuve Clicquot to an
anonymous Singaporean bidder for US$43,630. The landmark sale took place at
Mariehamn, Åland, where Acker Merrall auctioned two of the world’s oldest
bottles of champagne, salvaged last year from a 19th century shipwreck off the
Åland Islands, along with 15 special lots direct from Veuve Cliquot’s cellars.

In an exciting sequence of events, an anonymous Internet
bidder from Singapore
outbid American phone bidder, Robert A. Rosania, a legendary champagne
collector in the auction circle.  When asked about the tense battle for
both lots of shipwrecked Champagne,
Rosania commented enigmatically: “I’ll be back.” 

“We are overjoyed by today’s outcome,” said John Kapon, CEO
of Acker Merrall & Condit. “To have America
and Asia battling it out here in Europe,
setting a new world record, is a testament to the globalization of the fine
wine market, and this is only the beginning.

“What was equally amazing was the fact that the sale took
place in Aland, an incredibly beautiful yet remote region of the world. 
It just goes to show that the most discerning and passionate collectors will go
wherever it takes to acquire the world’s greatest wines.”

Ackerwines


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