Berliner Boersenzeitung - Taiwan's antique jade dealers see trade losing lustre

EUR -
AED 4.081584
AFN 76.121658
ALL 99.066978
AMD 430.970246
ANG 2.001288
AOA 1036.229994
ARS 1072.480232
AUD 1.626599
AWG 2.003002
AZN 1.89519
BAM 1.954227
BBD 2.242026
BDT 132.694986
BGN 1.956439
BHD 0.418826
BIF 3215.915757
BMD 1.111236
BND 1.433946
BOB 7.69026
BRL 6.153691
BSD 1.110421
BTN 92.761237
BWP 14.621087
BYN 3.633588
BYR 21780.217291
BZD 2.238329
CAD 1.502985
CDF 3189.246332
CHF 0.941222
CLF 0.037164
CLP 1025.45955
CNY 7.83665
CNH 7.842034
COP 4624.684659
CRC 575.864993
CUC 1.111236
CUP 29.447743
CVE 110.290124
CZK 25.128706
DJF 197.48834
DKK 7.458663
DOP 66.951905
DZD 147.344496
EGP 54.069942
ERN 16.668534
ETB 133.070553
FJD 2.467829
FKP 0.846271
GBP 0.832354
GEL 3.016952
GGP 0.846271
GHS 17.44286
GIP 0.846271
GMD 76.675363
GNF 9614.966312
GTQ 8.589203
GYD 232.325547
HKD 8.65247
HNL 27.613737
HRK 7.555303
HTG 146.349448
HUF 394.811174
IDR 16864.111103
ILS 4.205749
IMP 0.846271
INR 92.836899
IQD 1455.718605
IRR 46774.684875
ISK 151.695015
JEP 0.846271
JMD 174.459579
JOD 0.787531
JPY 159.451753
KES 143.349224
KGS 93.621608
KHR 4522.728857
KMF 490.443644
KPW 1000.111389
KRW 1483.327267
KWD 0.338982
KYD 0.925372
KZT 533.941467
LAK 24538.8636
LBP 99566.707565
LKR 338.274469
LRD 215.857651
LSL 19.448682
LTL 3.28119
LVL 0.672176
LYD 5.272809
MAD 10.773397
MDL 19.360765
MGA 5056.121795
MKD 61.553588
MMK 3609.249804
MNT 3775.978438
MOP 8.905373
MRU 44.132745
MUR 50.805824
MVR 17.06845
MWK 1929.104774
MXN 21.591082
MYR 4.671082
MZN 70.952536
NAD 19.44978
NGN 1820.893209
NIO 40.876823
NOK 11.650488
NPR 148.426215
NZD 1.773399
OMR 0.427763
PAB 1.110471
PEN 4.161587
PGK 4.411499
PHP 62.182483
PKR 309.077469
PLN 4.271507
PYG 8643.043289
QAR 4.045176
RON 4.975555
RSD 117.087543
RUB 101.647054
RWF 1491.278143
SAR 4.169315
SBD 9.222507
SCR 15.424449
SDG 668.417866
SEK 11.335803
SGD 1.434344
SHP 0.846271
SLE 25.388736
SLL 23302.048699
SOS 634.515487
SRD 33.821011
STD 23000.332849
SVC 9.716311
SYP 2792.012651
SZL 19.4579
THB 36.594656
TJS 11.803706
TMT 3.889325
TND 3.367835
TOP 2.602625
TRY 37.949478
TTD 7.550364
TWD 35.515645
TZS 3033.672592
UAH 45.978113
UGX 4107.749157
USD 1.111236
UYU 46.213427
UZS 14179.36626
VEF 4025509.252511
VES 40.856801
VND 27358.619883
VUV 131.92812
WST 3.10864
XAF 655.46776
XAG 0.036204
XAU 0.000423
XCD 3.003169
XDR 0.821487
XOF 656.191876
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.170042
ZAR 19.289271
ZMK 10002.452827
ZMW 29.455015
ZWL 357.817402
  • RBGPF

    1.8300

    58.83

    +3.11%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    13.01

    +0.69%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    25.07

    -0.32%

  • AZN

    -1.2400

    77.14

    -1.61%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    40.86

    +0.15%

  • BP

    0.2200

    32.86

    +0.67%

  • RELX

    0.8700

    48.86

    +1.78%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    37.9

    +1.21%

  • CMSD

    -0.0150

    25.005

    -0.06%

  • NGG

    0.9300

    70.48

    +1.32%

  • RIO

    1.0100

    64.58

    +1.56%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    35.1

    +0.17%

  • BCC

    4.1500

    141.65

    +2.93%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    7.06

    +1.56%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    10.11

    +0.99%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.3

    -0.15%

Taiwan's antique jade dealers see trade losing lustre
Taiwan's antique jade dealers see trade losing lustre / Photo: Sam Yeh - AFP

Taiwan's antique jade dealers see trade losing lustre

Tracing a palm-sized jade pig resting on its haunches, an antique trader in Taiwan said the ears on the nearly 400-year-old piece are a marker of its authenticity.

Text size:

"The folds in the pig's ears show the handiwork, the ancient handicraft" of the Ming dynasty (1368-1644), said the 60-year-old trader, who would only provide his last name as Lee.

"It takes very careful carving. If it were duplicates, they wouldn't make it that delicate and detailed."

Lee's shop in Taipei's Da'an district holds ancient treasures worth more than a condominium located in the same neighbourhood.

The value of his merchandise represents just a fraction of an industry that the island's jade association says brought in nearly $16 million annually in recorded pre-pandemic antique jade sales.

But dealers warn the sector is flagging post-Covid. With the global economy in tatters, buyers are more cautious about taking a chance on expensive items, especially with the market awash with counterfeits.

Taipei's worsening ties with Beijing have also meant restrictions are still in place for visitors from mainland China, effectively cutting out the industry's biggest buyers.

Relations have plummeted since Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, who refuses to accept Beijing's claim that the self-ruled island belongs to China, was elected in 2016.

"About seven to 12 years ago, it was very good times for people in Taiwan who are in the antiques or jade trade," said Liu San-bian, who runs a store in Metropolitan Jewelry and Antiques Emporium, a treasure trove of ateliers.

"It declined when cross-strait politics slowly affected travel between both sides," he said, summing up the dilemma in four Chinese characters meaning: "Hard to buy, hard to sell."

"Chinese people stopped coming in and rich people in Taiwan are not buying. There is no supply in the market... and collectors here are not willing to release their items for sale."

- 'Ingrained in our DNA' -

Taiwan was the go-to place for hunters of Chinese relics long before it became a powerhouse for hi-tech semiconductors. Collectors said most were carried out of mainland China during the Cultural Revolution, ending up on the island and nearby Hong Kong.

The Chinese government generally considers the trade of antiques from historical eras to be illegal if they were not passed down through inheritance or bought from authorised venues, such as cultural relic stores.

But there is a grey area in Taiwan, where collectors say they have obtained the items through legitimate means, especially if the items were personal belongings.

"To the Chinese, it is ingrained in our DNA," Chang Juben, chairman of Taiwan's Association of Jade Collectors, told AFP.

"Collectors in Taiwan began collecting when they realised that these were valuable national treasures... Taiwan has a reputation in the Greater Chinese community, that you can come here to see, touch and buy good jades here."

The antique jade market took off around 2011, when Beijing-friendly Ma Ying-jeou was president, bringing in "an endless stream of buyers from China and other countries", Chang said.

Now Taiwan's market is about a quarter of its former annual value -- roughly $9.4 million to $15.7 million in the boom years -- and it is easy to be steered towards inauthentic "artefacts".

"It relies on word of mouth," Chang said. "You have to walk the right path and find the right person."

Most reputable collectors are also "protective" about their stock, refusing to show their best items to a novice who won't appreciate it or to a buyer simply looking to resell for profit.

- 'Build a reputation' -

A two-hour flight to Hong Kong -- a hub for Chinese antiques sold in both sprawling markets and upscale auction houses -- tells a different story.

Pola Antebi, deputy chairman at Christie's auction house in Hong Kong, said she is seeing a trend in which antique collectors are releasing long-cherished collections held for up to five decades.

"We've sold several substantial collections from Taiwan in Hong Kong in recent years, including the notable Chang Wei-Hwa collection of early jades," Antebi told AFP.

That portfolio of jades from the Qin and Han dynasties fetched $9.3 million in November, while three previous auctions of Chang Wei-Hwa's collection brought in $24.7 million from 2019 to 2021.

Taiwan's jade "players" remain confident the trade "will survive no matter what", said the trader Lee.

His unique shop, which houses aquariums of iridescent corals, gets visitors via word of mouth. One trip can turn into several before any transaction is made -- if at all.

"It takes very long to build a reputation, but it is very easy to ruin it. If one item you sell turns out to be fake... that's all it takes to ruin you," he said.

(S.G.Stein--BBZ)