Secondary market trade for the Rhône increased this week as the region’s 2020 En Primeur campaign started to unfold.

  • Secondary market trade for the Rhône increased this week, making it the third most traded region by value.
  • Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, Romanée-Conti 2006 is this week’s most traded wine by value, followed by Petrus 2000.
  • The 2020 Bordeaux vintage also saw some secondary market action.

Regional trade this week

The 2020 En Primeur campaign for the Rhône began this week, with the official UK release of the 2020 Clos des Papes at £720 per 12×75 on Thursday.

Demand for the region’s wines already appears to be rising, as the Rhône took the third-largest share of trade this week (8.2%) – more than all other regions apart from Bordeaux and Burgundy.

Burgundy also enjoyed another strong week of market activity, after making gains in the beginning of November.

Meanwhile, Bordeaux maintained its level of trade at 37.7% – its 201820102000 and the latest 2020 vintage were met with the most demand.

The ‘others’ also sticked to 4.5% of the total market. Japanese and Scottish whisky accounted for 0.8% of its share.

Once again, the higher-value wines from Piedmont elevated the region’s share above Tuscany’s, although both Italian regions dipped slightly compared to last week. Champagne’s trade share also fell from 8.7% to 5.3%.

Most traded wines this week

The most active wines this week came from Bordeaux and Burgundy. Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, Romanée-Conti 2006 led trade by value, after the 2010 vintage from the domaine took the top spot last week.

The latest offering from Château Angelus – the 2020 vintage – also featured in the top five, having last traded 3.9% below release. Château Trotanoy, Pomerol 2020 also changed hands this week but at an 18.5% premium on its release price.

However, Petrus 2000 was the most traded wine from Bordeaux. It last traded 0.9% above its current Market Price (£49,800 per 12×75) and has risen over 500% since release.

Petrus 2000 trades on Liv-ex

A recap of the week

Following ‘ten years on’ critic tastings, the spotlight was back on the 2011 vintage from Bordeaux this week. In a series of blog posts, we examined the price performance of the First Growths and the wines from the Left and the Right Bank since release.

Liv-ex members also received updates on Henschke’s Hill of Grace, the most-searched-for wines in the market and the rising trade of sweet and fortified wines.

The new Indices Explorer tool was also launched this week. It allows Liv-ex members to dig into the data behind our indices and find out which wines are driving market trends.