Rare bottle of Scotch whisky sells for $1M | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

A Bonhams porter shows the bottle of Macallan Valerio Adamai 1926 whisky which sold for a world record sale price of £700,000 at auction in Edinburgh on October 3, 2018. The whisky, which was in a vat for 60 years from 1926 then bottled, fetched £700,000 plus a £148,000 sales premium to make it the most expensive whisky for £848,000. / AFP PHOTO / Andy Buchanan
A Bonhams porter shows the bottle of Macallan Valerio Adamai 1926 whiskey which sold for a world record sale price of £848,750 at auction in Edinburgh on October 3, 2018. The whiskey, which was in a vat for 60 years from 1926 then bottled, fetched £700,000 plus a £148,000 sales premium to make it the most expensive whiskey for £848,000. AFP 

EDINBURGH, United Kingdom – An extremely rare bottle of whiskey was sold for a new world record at auction in Edinburgh on Wednesday.

The 60-year-old Macallan Valerio Adami 1926 was sold at Bonhams for a total £848,750 (about $1.09 million, 947,000 euros) beating a previous bottle from the same cask that was sold in Hong Kong in May for £814,081.

Richard Harvey, a drinks expert at Bonhams, told AFP: “The buyer is from the Far East where there has been an enormous interest in whiskey.

“Whisky bars are opening up in the Far East everywhere, so there is a huge interest,” he said.

In general, about “a third to 40 percent of our sales go out to buyers in the Far East,” he said.

Bonhams now holds the record for the three most valuable bottles of whiskey ever sold at auction.

Martin Green, a Bonhams whiskey specialist in Edinburgh, said: “It is a great honor to have established a new world record, and particularly exciting to have done so here in Scotland, the home of whiskey.”

The whiskey was distilled in 1926 and kept in a cask until it was bottled in 1986.

Just 24 bottles were produced with labels designed by two famous pop artists – 12 by Peter Blake and 12 affixed with the Valerio Adami label which features on the bottle sold in Edinburgh on Wednesday.

It was bought by the vendor direct from the Macallan distillery for an undisclosed sum in 1994 and was part of a wider collection from the same owner offered in the sale.

It is not known how many of them still exist but one is thought to have been destroyed in an earthquake in Japan in 2011, and another is believed to have been opened and drunk.

Charles MacLean, a Scotch whiskey expert, told AFP: “Whisky is the third most popular alternative investment during periods of stock market uncertainty, behind vintage cars and fine art, and its appreciation value has been higher than gold in recent years.” /cbb

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