GARY VEE: ORIGINAL VEEFRIENDS SKETCH (SHARING SQUIRREL)

Welcome to Cultural Assets Insider for April 15th, 2022 – FREE Edition.

Each week we give you the scoop on undervalued, mispriced and hidden gems in Alternative Investing.

Cultural Assets performance in 2022

When we last checked in on cultural assets, they were down on the year but still positive overall. In fact, we’d just seen a slight uptick and thought that maybe, just maybe, we’d found a bottom.

Turns out not.

Data from Rally and Otis

It’s been a steady ride down the last two months with no real signs of slowing down, unfortunately.

Last Week in Cultural Assets

Fractional secondary markets

Art has been the only bright spot lately while everything else, more or less, has suffered.

All stats come from assets trading on the secondary markets at Otis, Collectable, and Rally.

There are a LOT of assets trading on fractional marketplaces for a…fraction…of their valuations.

Auctions

Last week, someone paid $504k for five bits of the first lunar sample taken during the Apollo 11 mission to the moon.

Worth its weight in, gosh, I don’t know what.

Collected by first-man-on-the-moon Neil Armstrong, the samples are each only around 10mm in diameter, and the whole thing is basically a bit of dust.

But here’s the wild bit.

You know when you empty out your vacuum bag, and there’s a bit of lint and stuff left over, and it’s impossible to get out of the bag, and it’s just sort of always there?

That’s what these samples are.

Neil’s bag actually held around 1kg of moon dust. When it got back to earth, the bag was emptied out, and NASA did their science stuff to the contents.

The storage bag got thrown out / lost, and it wound up in a private collection. Eventually, someone noticed there was a bit of dust inside the bag, so they sent it to NASA for verification and removal.

This item is that dust. Imagine how much the full 1kg would be worth…

Speaking of wild, you can always count on RRAuctions to bring the heat.

The Ghoul Economy is Strong

Today I learned that Lee Harvey Oswald (the guy who *probably* killed JFK) had a life insurance policy. After Jack Ruby killed Oswald, Lee’s mum Marguerite filed an insurance claim for his death.

It took a while, but she was paid out $863.

A few days ago, someone paid $63k for the claim form.

Also available in the auction:

Looping back to space stuff quickly, RR also has a Space Exploration event going on right now, but nothing as wild as anything above.

This is sort of cute, though.

The places he’s gone, the things he’s seen…

This Week in Cultural Assets

Fractional IPOs

One fractional IPOs this week from Rally, and it’s a controversial one.

Rally has partnered (I think, it’s hard to tell) with entrepreneur/social media guy/salesman Gary Vee to sell one of his doodles.

What are these doodles?

Gary created an NFT project called Veefriends, which gives you access to his convention and some other stuff. They’ve done pretty well, actually, and the floor price for the collection is around 15 ETH ($45k or so).

Yours for $275.

The basis for the NFTs was a bunch of drawings Gary did. They’re sharpie-on-A4 pictures of animals with cute names. The doodle in question is “Sharing Squirrel,” pictured above.

The only real comps we have for these is a set of five that was sold at Christie’s in October 2021.

I am Amazed Alligator

I’m not sure which is the best comp (maybe the Gorilla??), but they’re all pretty much in line with the market cap Rally’s listed the Squirrel at.

Since we don’t have any other comps, the best we can do is to look at how the NFT collection has done.

Well, it’s about 20% up since mid-October. So if the Gorilla is the comp, our Squirrel is worth $300k.

It’s worth noting that the seller (I assume it’s Gary, but I could be wrong) is keeping 25% equity in the doodle. Can’t help but wonder if Fox is going to come after Gary for copyright infringement at some point.

GARY VEE: ORIGINAL VEEFRIENDS SKETCH (SHARING SQUIRREL)

Auctions

More impressive than it looks.

Potters wins the award for Weirdest Auction of the week with their Circus oddities event. It’s mostly photos of performers, and I’m not going to post any of these here, because it feels mean (they’re all pretty unfortunate / exploited people).

The posters are quite cool (above), and the art is special if you’re into that sort of thing, I guess?

I asked my six-year-old son to draw a lady with five legs and a frog boy.

On a slightly less-nightmarish note, Julien’s is auctioning off Kurt Cobain’s guitar from the famous “Smells like Teen Spirit” music video. It’s expected to fetch up to $1m.

Smells like…grunge.

Sticking with angry rockers… On the off-chance your self-esteem is just a little too high these days, you can buy one of these rock legends flipping you the bird.

Going to tell my kids this is Santa if they don’t start behaving better.

I’m out of space and time this week, but check out Gotta Have Rock ‘n Roll’s auction coming up later this month as well.

There’s soooo much good stuff in there, but this is probably my favourite.

Lastly, Our Podcast

Horacio spoke with Laura Ten Eyck, an antiquarian map dealer, vice president of the New York Map Society, and a Gallery Director at the Argosy Bookstore. She talks about the most famous maps of the world, what makes them valuable, and the 1796 Plan for New York City that will be fractionalized on Rally Road in the near future.

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Author

Wyatt Cavalier

Wyatt Cavalier

With a background in finance & intelligence analysis, Wyatt has an unhealthy obsession with finding the best blue chip investment opportunities. His previous newsletter, Fractional, resonated deeply with subscribers, bringing actionable insights and unconventional trading strategies. His rare book collection specializes in banned editions. He currently lives in Spain with his beautiful wife, three young boys, and dog Monty.

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