Chesapeake co-founder’s wine sells for more than $8m at auction

Rare French bottles break records at Chicago auction

Aubrey McClendon’s collection included Bordeaux wines such as Chateau Mouton Rothschild and Chateau Margaux, as well as cabernets from the Napa Valley region of California. Photographer: Caroline Blumberg/Bloomberg News
Aubrey McClendon’s collection included Bordeaux wines such as Chateau Mouton Rothschild and Chateau Margaux, as well as cabernets from the Napa Valley region of California. Photographer: Caroline Blumberg/Bloomberg News

The wine collection of late Chesapeake Energy co-founder Aubrey McClendon sold for $8.44 million (€7.5 million) on Saturday, above the estimated range and breaking records for some of the rare French bottles.

The collection included Bordeaux wines such as Chateau Mouton Rothschild and Chateau Margaux, as well as cabernets from the Napa Valley region of California, according to Hart Davis Hart Wine, which ran the auction at a Chicago restaurant.

When the sale was announced last month, the collection was estimated to be worth $5.1 million to $7.6 million.

Almost 1,000 bidders participated in the sale, with the highest price for a single lot going to a case of three double magnums of 1989 Chateau Petrus, which sold for $65,725, including the 19.5 per cent buyer's premium, Hart Davis Hart Wine president Ben Nelson said.

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US buyers

About two-thirds of the collection, measured by sales price, went to US buyers.

The auction was held the day after the deadline to file what were expected to be hundreds of millions of dollars in claims against McClendon’s estate.

McClendon was one of the first US energy explorers to employ fracking – sideways drilling and intensive hydraulic fracturing techniques to crack dense shale formations – a revolution in the oil and gas industry that triggered a renaissance in US energy production.

The Oklahoma native built Chesapeake into the second-largest US gas producer before a shareholder revolt and cratering energy prices forced him out of the company he had led for a quarter century.

McClendon died on March 2nd, just hours after he was indicted on federal bid-rigging charges, when his vehicle slammed into a highway retaining wall in Oklahoma City.

McClendon “bought the best vintages and he bought a lot of them”, Mr Nelson said in an interview last month. “Such huge quantities of the finest wines like this aren’t something anyone will see at auction again.” – (Bloomberg)