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Bankable Artworks...

Investors snap up 'bankable' artworks... WORKS from famous landscape artists are being snapped up by investors as 'bankable' options for their nest eggs. Antiques, furniture, art, gold, stamps and coins are once again being purchased as long-term investments, according to people in the auction industry. It comes as property values continue to fall and confidence in the stock markets -- and particularly in bank shares -- remains fragile. Now those with money to invest towards their retirement are looking to the art world. "They think they (paintings) are bankable and they are probably right," said Ian Whyte, managing director of Dublin auction house Whyte's. "I remember particularly in the late '70s, when inflation was running at 18pc to 20pc a year, people were purchasing tangible art collections, antiques, furniture, stamps and coins. "People are uncertain about banks and they want to buy into something tangible. Property is no

Irish Property Overvalued By 30%...

Irish property could still be overvalued by 30 percent... Irish house prices increased by around 330 per cent between 1996 to 2007 – a bubble of impressive scale and duration, but a bubble nonetheless. Plenty of outside observers saw the writing on the wall and said so, but they were overlooked in the Celtic Tiger gold rush. The European Central Bank (ECB), the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the Financial Times, the Economist and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) all spoke of dire portents early and often. They were ignored. Cheap and easy money arrived in Ireland just as the tiger economy geared up. The country adopted the euro and access to a large pool of low-cost European finance with it. When the bubble burst Ireland's main domestic financial institutions were wiped out and European institutions and the IMF took over the nation's financial affairs. So the question now is has the country reached the end? According to a report i