French-Israeli telecommunications entrepreneur Patrick Drahi acquired the auction house after its 31-year-run on the New York Stock Exchange
LONDON — In recent years, the competition between the world’s two largest auction houses, Sotheby’s and Christie’s, has seemed at times like a bit of an unfair fight.
Sotheby’s, which is publicly traded, has lost out to its privately held archrival for several headline-grabbing consignments. Last year, Christie’s sold the collection of Peggy and David Rockefeller for $835 million, the highest-grossing auction ever of a private collection. In 2017, Christie’s sold Leonardo da Vinci’s “Salvator Mundi” for $450.3 million, the highest auction price ever for a work of art.
Both auctions were underpinned by financial guarantees arranged by Christie’s, which since 1998 has belonged to a holding company owned by French billionaire François-Henri Pinault.
Wendy Goldsmith, a London-based art adviser and former head of 19th century European art at Christie’s, noted the advantage gained by an auction house owned by a wealthy individual. “If you wanted to get something done,” she said, “you went to the man with deep pockets.”
On Monday, Sotheby’s moved to level the playing field, agreeing to be acquired by a billionaire of its own, French-Israeli telecommunications entrepreneur Patrick Drahi, in a deal worth $3.7 billion. The purchase, by Drahi’s BidFair USA, returns the only publicly traded major auction house to private ownership after 31 years on the New York Stock Exchange.
About $2.66 billion of the purchase price will be paid in cash, with Sotheby’s shareholders getting $57 per share of their common stock. That is a 61% premium over the stock’s closing price on Friday. Sotheby’s shares jumped 58% in trading Monday after the deal was announced.
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