logo
Vinho Ltd CEO Jorge Rodrigues Makes a Statement on the Future of Fine Wine Investment

Vinho Ltd CEO Jorge Rodrigues Makes a Statement on the Future of Fine Wine Investment

Rodrigues highlights the lucrative potential of fine wine as an alternative asset class and positions Vinho Ltd as the go-to fine wine investment partner for discerning investors.
United Kingdom, February 21, 2025 -- Jorge Rodrigues is positioning Vinho Ltd as a trailblazer in fine wine investment, ready to guide investors through the exciting changes happening in the wine investment market. In his forward-looking statement on the future of fine wine investment, the CEO of Vinho Ltd painted a picture of a market ripe with opportunity and innovation.
'The fine wine market has entered an exciting phase,' said Rodrigues. 'We are seeing investors going after rare and prestigious wines taking advantage of the opportunities in the market. These trends show that wine is no longer seen as just luxury purchase, it has become a legitimate and lucrative investment.'
Rodrigues cited recent data that indicates that fine wine prices have increased by 146% over the last ten years (Knight Frank Luxury Investment Index), with an average of 10% annual returns for the last 15 years (Liv-ex Fine Wine 100 Index). He explained that all factors from recent wine investment trends indicate that fine wine investment is gaining investor attention. This signals a new era for this market. Based on data from The Financial Times, which showed a downturn in the wine market in 2024, Rodrigues's revealed to investors that now is the prime time for investors to acquire high-quality wines at more favorable prices, especially wines like Burgundy and vintage champagne.
To emphasise the unique appeal of fine wine as an investment, Rodrigues presented the benefits of wine investment, saying that fine wine is a tangible asset that appreciates over time. 'Fine wine investment creates a natural appreciation that savvy investors can take advantage of,' said Rodrigues. 'They can display their collections and offer wine tastings which will drive up value because the more bottles consumed, the rarer a collection becomes and the more valuable it becomes.'
Vinho's vision for the future of wine investment is one of growth. He envisions an investment market where fine wine becomes a smart and rewarding investment option for anyone looking to diversify their portfolio. Therefore, under his leadership, Vinho Ltd is pioneering new ways to make fine wine investment more accessible and rewarding for investors. The fine wine investment company has positioned itself as the go-to partner for investors looking to sell their current stock, seeking comprehensive wine investment guides, or searching for an entry point to wine investment.
'We are on a mission to simplify fine wine investment and make it more accessible to new potential investors, because we believe fine wine investment is about more than just returns' concluded Rodrigues.
About Vinho Ltd:
Vinho Ltd is a leading fine wine investment company that specialises in purchasing, storing, and selling fine wines. Led by Jorge Rodrigues and Solomon Dawodu, the wine investment company is helping clients build and grow their portfolios with expertly curated wines and wine investment guides.
Visit Vinho Ltd to learn more about fine wine investment and how the company is redefining wine investment.
Contact Info:
Name: Jorge Rodrigues
Email: Send Email
Organization: Vinholtd
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Donald Trump-owned courses will host PGA Tour, LIV Golf tournaments next year
Donald Trump-owned courses will host PGA Tour, LIV Golf tournaments next year

USA Today

time7 hours ago

  • USA Today

Donald Trump-owned courses will host PGA Tour, LIV Golf tournaments next year

Donald Trump will be hosting events on the PGA Tour and LIV Golf for the first time in the same season in 2026. LIV Golf will return to Trump National Golf Club Washington D.C., in Sterling, Virginia, next year. The PGA Tour is expected to host an event at Trump National Doral, outside of Miami. LIV will return to Virginia for the second time with the 2026 event scheduled for May 8-10. The Saudi Arabia-backed tour has had at least one event on a course owned by the president every year since its inception in 2022. The Tour is expected to return to Doral in 2026, according to Sports Business Journal. The publication reported the event is expected to be April 27-May 3, three weeks after the Masters and two weeks before the PGA Championship. The tournament potentially will be a signature event with a $20 million purse. LIV is pulling out of Doral for 2026, the first time it will not hold a tournament at the course. The PGA Tour had a 54-year history at Doral before pulling out following the 2016 World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship and after losing its title sponsor. The move also came following then-presidential candidate Trump's discriminatory statements about Mexicans and Muslims, giving the Tour even more reason to separate itself from Trump. Tom D'Angelo is a senior sports columnist and reporter for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at tdangelo@

PGA Tour 2026 schedule unveiled: Trump gets back in picture with Doral event
PGA Tour 2026 schedule unveiled: Trump gets back in picture with Doral event

USA Today

time7 hours ago

  • USA Today

PGA Tour 2026 schedule unveiled: Trump gets back in picture with Doral event

ATLANTA – President Donald Trump is back in business with the PGA Tour in 2026. The Tour announced its schedule for next year on Tuesday and it includes a return to Trump Doral's Blue Monster near Miami in May for a new signature event to be called – for now – the Miami Championship. It is being announced without a title sponsor but Golfweek sources say one is expected to be announced in the coming months, well before the tournament. Doral was a longtime PGA Tour stop Doral was a longtime Tour host until it was dumped from the schedule in 2016 when title sponsor Cadillac elected to end ties with the Tour and the tournament and a replacement couldn't be found there. Instead, the Tour moved the event south of the border, which became the VidantaWorld Mexico Open. With the introduction of the Miami Championship to the regular season schedule, the Mexico Open will now be contested as part of the FedEx Cup Fall. One event has dropped off the schedule: the Barracuda Championship in Truckee, Calif., which has been played opposite the British Open in recent years. Trump courses have been used on multiple occasions for LIV Golf events, including at Trump Doral. The President attempted to help negotiations between the Tour and LIV on two occasions earlier this year but nothing came to fruition. More: Schupak: PGA Tour considers taking Tour Championship on the road, a home run of an idea The return to Doral's Blue Monster (April 27-May 3) will mark the 56th playing of a Tour event at the course, which hosted the Tour annually from 1962 to 2016. The Miami Championship gives the Tour nine signature events for 2026, up one from the previous two years. It includes a stretch of two majors and four signature events in a span of seven weeks, beginning with the Masters in April through the PGA Championship in May. [The lone regular event will be the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, a two-man team event.] 'We're excited to showcase the game's greatest players competing at golf's most iconic venues,' said PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp. 'Inspired by our players and fans, we're accelerating the Tour's evolution and ushering in a new era of innovation on and off the course.' Full PGA Tour schedule has adjustments The FedEx Cup regular season features a total of 35 official FedEx Cup events and begins in January with The Sentry (Jan. 5-11) in Maui, Hawaii. Notable adjustments to the schedule include The Genesis Invitational returning to The Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California – it was held at Torrey Pines last year due to California wildfires – and the Truist Championship (May 4-10) returning to Quail Hollow Club, after hosting the 2025 PGA Championship. Schedule changes include the Tour spending consecutive weeks in the Dallas/Fort Worth area with THE CJ Cup Byron Nelson (May 18-24) and Charles Schwab Challenge (May 25-31), while the Corales Puntacana Championship (from mid-April to July 13-19) and the Rocket Classic (from late June to July 27-Aug. 2) will shift dates on the calendar. Full details regarding the 2026 FedEx Cup Fall will be announced at a later date.

More scheduling challenges await top players in 2026
More scheduling challenges await top players in 2026

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

More scheduling challenges await top players in 2026

ATLANTA – The PGA Tour's 35-event slate for 2026 had few surprises. The majors will remain major, the signature events will again dominate the landscape and everyone else, both non-signature tournaments and players, will continue to scramble for relevancy. Outside of Trump National Doral's return to the lineup – a somewhat curious move given the Blue Monster's status as a LIV Golf venue the last four years – next year's schedule looks much like this year's version and that is not entirely a good thing. While the expansion to nine signature events with the addition of the Miami Championship seemed inevitable given the success of the limited-field, big-money events, the return to Doral only compresses a schedule that was already as congested as Interstate-20 at rush hour. Consider one six-week stretch next spring features two majors (the Masters and PGA Championship) and three signature events (the RBC Heritage, Miami Championship and Truist Championship). For star players who were already looking for relief – not to mention tournaments like the CJ Cup Byron Nelson which now finds itself wedged between the Truist Championship, Charles Schwab Challenge and the Memorial, an invitational and signature event, respectively – next year's schedule is even more loaded with can't-miss stops. It's not just the star players who will feel more of a pinch in '26. Those players who will begin the year outside the top 50 on the FedExCup bubble will face a nine-week stretch from April to early June that includes just four full-field events, with two of those being the Zurich Classic (a two-man team event) and an opposite-field event that awards less than half the FedExCup points (300) than a signature event (700). There will be a similar crunch heading into the Florida swing with the Cognizant Classic framed by two signature events (the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and Genesis Invitational) and the Arnold Palmer Invitational and The Players Championship, yet another signature event and the Tour's flagship event, respectively. The Tour's new CEO Brian Rolapp, who is scheduled to meet with the media Wednesday at the Tour Championship, has probably already discovered the foolishness of trying to please everyone but it is noteworthy that next year's schedule doesn't seem to land with either the stars or journeymen. 'I look at it in the sense of if there's a particular golf course or there's something to where I don't feel like I can play well or it's a place that maybe doesn't fit my eye historically, whatever it may be, then as a professional golfer, I have a hard time [going],' Justin Thomas said. 'If there are places that I think people look at that way, then you have to do what's best for that particular person. Obviously, the perfect model would be for all of us to be at all the events as often as possible.' Whether the addition of Doral as a signature event was an inevitable expansion that could signal the Tour's long-term intent or a political reality is unclear, but it does further aggravate the fear of 'load management' for the game's top players. It is a fear that took on new life earlier this month when Rory McIlroy skipped the year's first playoff event in Memphis. Never mind that McIlroy appeared to strongly indicate following last year's FedEx St. Jude Championship that he would not be returning to TPC Southwind in 2025, or that he was the only player out of the 70 who qualified to skip the opener, the handwringing reached feverish levels. 'I'll always choose the schedule that best fits me, and this year that meant skipping a few signature events. I might skip less next year. I might skip the same amount, I don't know,' said McIlroy, who played five of this year's eight signature events. 'The luxury of being a PGA Tour player is we are free to pick and choose our schedule for the most part, and I took advantage of that this year and I'll continue to take advantage of that for as long as I can.' The working theory at East Lake is the Tour is considering making participation in all the signature events mandatory to be eligible for the Tour Championship, which would be another workaround that will likely be equally unpopular among the star players. To be clear, players are not against the kind of limited-field, big-money events that are becoming the norm on Tour. What they typically don't like, however, is the kind of scheduling that requires five starts in six weeks which is why professional golf's version of load management has become a legitimate concern. When the Tour first introduced signature events there was an attempt to leverage bonuses from the Player Impact Program with participation but that was met with mixed results. On this the independent contractors are surprisingly unified. Instead of trying to concoct a new way to mandate participation in top events the Tour would be better served by focusing on building a better schedule.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store