Hiscox Online Art Trade Report 2018
- Analyst:
- Pages: 45
- Access: Analyst
The sixth annual Hiscox Online Art Trade Report, reveals an online art market worth an estimated $4.22 billion – up 12% in 12 months. While still a solid year on year increase, this was lower than the 15% growth in 2016, and significantly behind the 24% experienced in 2015.
Key findings from the report:
Fewer people buy art online, but those that buy, spend more. Roughly four in ten (43%) art buyers bought online in the last 12 months – down from 49% the previous year. Despite this slowdown, the share of online buyers paying, on average, in excess of $5,000 per fine art object, increased to 25% (up from 21% the previous year). Active online buyers are also purchasing more than in previous years, with 74% making multiple online purchases, up from 65% in 2017.
Price transparency is a key stumbling block. Existing collectors have grown used to a lack of price transparency but for the vast majority (90%) of new buyers, this is a key consideration that simply isn’t being addressed.
New media art finds a foothold. Paintings and prints remain the preferred medium for online buyers but new media art (such as video or digital art) is gradually making its mark. One in six (17%) online art consumers bought new media art last year and the average prices paid have also shown a gradual uptick.
Mobile commerce sees significant growth and Instagram cements its leading position. The use of a mobile to buy art has risen to 20% in 2018, up from 4% in 2015. This coincides with a gradual decline in the use of tablets. On social media, 63% of buyers cite Instagram as their platform of choice, up from 57% in 2017 and 48% in 2016. With close to 1 billion users, it is becoming an essential tool for the art industry in reaching consumers beyond the existing art market.
Industry consolidation expected to speed up and the online auction market expected to heat up. With a number of new mergers and acquisitions taking place in the last 12 months, 81% of online platforms expect to see a higher rate of consolidation in the future, particularly in the form of ‘vertical mergers’ (companies operating in different parts of the value chain). The online auctions market is expected to see particularly fierce competition, with half of all platforms anticipating this to be the area facing the most intense competition this year.
Third-party marketplaces prove instrumental sales tools. Three quarters of galleries used third-party marketplaces to sell art online in 2018 (up from 59% in 2017 and 41% in 2016). One in five (19%) are now using these marketplaces as an outlet for at least half of their online sales (up from 3% in 2017).
Cyber crime hits platforms, galleries and buyer confidence. A worrying 54% of platforms and 28% of galleries have been the target of an attempted cyber attack in the past 12 months, with 10% – 15% of attempts being successful. Perhaps unsurprisingly, four in ten (41%) online art buyers admit to being ‘concerned’ or ‘very concerned’ about cyber crime when buying art online.
High hopes for blockchain but minimal adoption. The majority (60%) of online platforms feel that cryptocurrencies as a payment method will be the way blockchain technology initially enters the online art market. That said, only 7% currently accept cryptocurrencies as payment and only 8% have embedded blockchain technology into their businesses. In addition, 64% of online platforms felt that using blockchain as a title/ownership registry for the art and collectibles market was going to be the most successful use of blockchain technology in the future.
Regulatory readiness called into question. Despite its widespread applicability, 41% of galleries and 24% of online platforms surveyed were not aware of the new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and concerning numbers were unprepared for it. Coming into force on 25th May 2018, GDPR will seek to unify data standards and provide greater data protection for EU citizens.