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Alternative assets give investors access to markets beyond traditional stocks and bonds. These include rare whisky, fine art, luxury watches, and other culturally significant collectibles. They can offer diversification, potential inflation protection, and the chance to participate in markets typically reserved for institutions or ultra-high-net-worth buyers.
However, success in these markets requires more than enthusiasm or taste. Unlike public equities or bonds, real-world assets (RWAs) are illiquid and highly individual in nature. They cannot be sold instantly at a transparent market price, and each asset must be researched on its own merits. Investors face the risk of overpaying, buying inauthentic items, or locking up capital for longer than planned.
This guide is designed to help Konvi investors perform effective due diligence. By following a structured process, you can better evaluate an asset’s risks, costs, and potential for appreciation. The goal is to support confident, informed decision-making that aligns with your personal investment objectives.
Selecting an alternative investment begins with understanding exactly what you are buying. Each asset class has its own market structure, typical buyers, holding periods, and appreciation potential. Careful research into the asset type lays the groundwork for all other due diligence steps.
Alternative assets are diverse. Before anything else, identify what category you are evaluating. Examples include:
Each category has distinct investment drivers, risk factors, and exit strategies.
Markets for alternative assets are specialized and often opaque. Investors should study:
For example, fine wine has benefited from expanding global demand and constrained production, while contemporary art prices can fluctuate with cultural trends and critical reception.
Rare Whisky
The rare whisky market is driven by global collectors, connoisseurs, and specialist investors. Buyers often come from the UK, Asia, and the US, with growing demand in emerging markets. Whisky casks are typically held for long periods (5 to 20 years) to allow further maturation or to target favorable market cycles.
At the bottle level, official auction data shows strong appreciation trends. For example, the Rare Whisky 101 Apex Index, which tracks leading bottles, rose over 500% between 2010 and 2022 (source: Rare Whisky 101). Scarcity, brand prestige, and maturation potential all contribute to demand.
Source: Rare Whisky 101
Contemporary Art
The contemporary art market attracts a mix of private collectors, museums, and investors. Buyers may be motivated by aesthetic value, cultural status, or investment potential. Holding times can vary widely. Some buyers seek quick flips, while others hold for decades.
Art auction results illustrate both the potential and the volatility of this market. According to Artprice, the Contemporary Art Market Report 2023 notes overall market growth of 2,200% between 2000 and 2022 but also points out sharp fluctuations depending on artist popularity and macroeconomic conditions. Resale values can soar for in-demand artists but drop if critical interest fades. Furthermore, if looking at prints with a limited production run, like most Banksy pieces, the production run and number of copies plays a crucial role in price development. A piece that might look identical to another might be from a different production run and fetch lower prices and vice versa.
This comparison underscores the need to study each market’s structure. While both categories can appreciate strongly, they demand different time horizons, research depth, and risk tolerance.
Authenticity and provenance are critical pillars of any alternative investment. Without them, even the most beautiful asset can be worthless on resale. Investors should prioritise rigorous verification to protect capital and maximise value.
High-value assets often attract forgeries or misrepresented items. Whether it is a luxury watch, a rare painting, or an ancient fossil, ensuring authenticity is essential for maintaining market confidence. An inauthentic asset is difficult or impossible to resell through reputable channels and can result in total loss of value.
For example, the global art market faces persistent issues with forgery. The Fine Art Expert Institute (FAEI) in Geneva has estimated that over 50% of artworks it reviews are either forged or misattributed (source: FAEI). Authentication processes, therefore, are not optional, they are fundamental.
Provenance refers to the documented history of ownership, sale, or production. It serves as a chain of evidence supporting the asset’s legitimacy and value. Investors should seek:
In luxury watches, provenance can mean factory papers, original receipts, or service histories from authorised dealers. In fine art, it may include auction house documentation, gallery records, or artist certificates.
Avoiding counterfeit or disputed assets requires working with trusted sources. Investors should:
At Konvi, asset sourcing prioritises expert evaluation, ensuring only verified, investment-grade pieces enter opportunities offered to investors. By placing authentication and provenance at the heart of your due diligence process, you significantly reduce risk and support long-term value.
Scarcity and demand are two of the most important drivers of value in alternative assets. Investors need to understand both dimensions to assess appreciation potential and market resilience.
Scarcity can result from natural rarity, limited production, or historic significance. Assets with verifiable scarcity often command higher premiums and demonstrate more stable long-term demand.
Examples include:
When assessing an asset, investors should ask:
Artificial Scarcity and Brand Strategies
Some brands manage perceived scarcity through allocation strategies rather than truly limited production. Rolex, for instance, carefully controls distribution to create long waiting lists for popular models like the Submariner or Daytona. While production numbers are substantial, brand-controlled supply at retail maintains high demand and strong resale values on the secondary market.
Investors must understand these dynamics:
Auction house data can help confirm genuine scarcity by tracking long-term pricing and sell-through rates for well-documented limited editions versus mass-market models.
Demand comes from collectors, investors, and cultural institutions. It can be steady and predictable or highly cyclical.
Key considerations include:
For example, Christie’s and Sotheby’s have documented rising demand for certain categories, such as vintage Rolex and Patek Philippe watches, driven by global collector competition. Similarly, the fine wine market has seen expanding demand from Asia, with Liv-ex data showing growth in the share of Asian buyers in 2025 (Liv-ex June Market Report 2025). Generally, a trend can be observed that **Gen Z, Gen X, and Millennials, are reconsidering their investment strategies** and re-allocating new capital into alternative investments, thereby creating a more robust investment environment.
Liquidity is one of the defining characteristics of alternative assets. Unlike stocks or bonds, these investments are not designed for immediate sale at a transparent, market-wide price. Instead, investors should think in terms of planned, strategic exits that balance time horizon with expected returns. Furthermore, it is important to understand that illiquidity isn’t necessarily disadvantageous but potentially a determining factor in alternative asset appreciation. If you want to learn more about how illiquidity affects your investment decisions, read this article.
Liquidity in this context does not mean instant cash-out. It means the ability to exit at a fair, market-supported price given the right strategy and timeframe. Alternative investors should expect to plan their exits carefully, recognizing that the best opportunities often reward patience.
This is why understanding market structures is essential:
Platforms like Sotheby’s, Christie’s, Bonhams, and Liv-ex (for wine) publish detailed sales data that help investors evaluate realistic resale options.
Successful alternative investing means setting appropriate time horizons. Even assets with strong demand benefit from strategic timing.
Key considerations:
For example, fine wine futures may offer resale within a few years once bottled, while property investments often require five years or more to capture meaningful value shifts.
At Konvi, we emphasise helping investors understand these dynamics from the beginning. Liquidity in alternative assets doesn't mean immediate access to capital. It means having a clear, informed plan for when and how you might exit a position based on market mechanisms, asset type, and your personal goals.
Investors should consider:
By setting expectations early, investors can make choices aligned with their cash flow needs, risk appetite, and time horizon. Strategic liquidity planning avoids disappointment and supports more disciplined, confident investing in real-world assets.
Studying historical price performance is an essential part of due diligence in alternative assets. While past results never guarantee future returns, they provide critical insight into market maturity, volatility, and demand drivers.
One of the most reliable ways to assess an asset’s investment potential is to analyze documented auction sales. Reputable auction houses maintain detailed records of past sales, often searchable online.
Key benefits of auction data:
Alternative asset markets are heterogeneous. Some segments demonstrate blue-chip stability, while others are highly speculative. Investors must evaluate:
For example, blue-chip art by established names (like Gerhard Richter or Yayoi Kusama) tends to show more consistent auction demand than emerging artists with limited sales history. In watches, classic models from Rolex or Patek Philippe consistently sell well, while niche microbrands may struggle on resale.
An investor evaluating art might compare:
This type of analysis helps investors balance their risk appetite with expected returns, shaping a more resilient, informed investment strategy.
Alternative investments carry unique risks and ownership costs that directly impact net returns. Proper due diligence means identifying these factors in advance and planning for them strategically.
Beyond the purchase price, investors must account for ongoing costs that affect profitability. These include:
For example, whisky casks typically incur annual storage and insurance fees with specialist warehouses, while fine art requires professional handling and valuation for resale.
Alternative assets are illiquid by nature. Selling often involves finding the right buyer at the right time, which can take months or years. This illiquidity demands patience and careful alignment with your financial goals. Liquidity planning is not about expecting instant sales, but about structuring an exit strategy to achieve fair value over a suitable time horizon.
Like any market, alternative assets experience cycles of demand and pricing. Economic downturns, shifting tastes, or oversupply in certain categories can suppress prices.
For instance, auction data shows contemporary art can experience sharp corrections during global recessions. Wine and whisky prices may also fluctuate based on changing consumer demand and regulatory changes in key markets.
High-value collectibles attract counterfeiters and unscrupulous sellers. Risks include:
Investors should insist on robust documentation, expert authentication, and sourcing from reputable dealers or platforms that prioritize verification.
A well-structured portfolio diversifies across asset types, reducing reliance on any single market cycle or price trend. Patience is equally essential, as quick flips are often unrealistic in these markets. A well-known figure within this space, Warren Buffett, who’s investment strategies have cemented his status as one of the world's most astute investors, focuses on long-term value, diversification, and a deeply philosophical approach to capital growth.
At Konvi, we emphasize education and transparency to help investors understand these realities. Informed investors can plan for costs, mitigate risks, and approach alternative assets as long-term, strategic components of their overall portfolio.
Alternative investments offer unique opportunities to diversify a portfolio with tangible, culturally significant assets. They can deliver meaningful long-term value, hedge against inflation, and connect investors to markets traditionally reserved for institutions or ultra-wealthy buyers.
Yet success in these asset classes requires careful, informed decision-making. Illiquidity, authentication challenges, market cycles, and ownership costs all demand thorough due diligence. Investors who take the time to understand the asset type, verify authenticity, assess demand, evaluate liquidity, study price history, and plan for costs and risks are better positioned to make confident, strategic choices.
At Konvi, our mission is to make these exclusive markets accessible to retail investors through expert curation, transparent sourcing, and education. By lowering the minimum investment threshold to €250 and working with industry-leading partners, we help investors participate in opportunities once out of reach.
With research, patience, and the right approach, alternative assets can become a rewarding, resilient component of a well-diversified portfolio.
Disclaimer
This article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, or a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instruments or assets. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Investing in alternative assets carries risks, including potential illiquidity, market fluctuations, and loss of capital. Readers should conduct their own due diligence or consult with a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.