An academic spent six years studying the lavish boats of multimillionaires. Her conclusion: showing off the owners wealth and status matters more than travel
As conspicuous displays of wealth go, the mooring of Motor Yacht A owned by Russian tycoon Andrey Melnichenko last month on one of the most striking spots on the Thames, next to D-day warship HMS Belfast by Tower Bridge, was hard to top. One of the worlds largest superyachts, the Philippe Starck-designed, 119-metre (390ft) white vessel which features three swimming pools, a helipad and bombproof glass embodies an exclusive lifestyle that is highly visible but inaccessible to all but the global financial elite and their entourage.
But Melnichenko, who made his 9.2bn fortune in coal and fertilisers, has put the distinctive boat up for sale after upgrading to the 347m, 143-metre Sailing Yacht A, believed to be similarly named to ensure it is listed first in shipping registers. His new vessel, which features three carbon masts more than 90 metres tall with a sail area greater than a standard football pitch, is the tenth-largest superyacht in the world. It propels him into the premier league of private yacht owners alongside fellow oligarch Roman Abramovich, whose 162.5-metre Eclipse is currently the second-largest.
The Chelsea football club owners spectacular 724m vessel, which made headlines last summer when it briefly moored on the river Clyde in Scotland, far from its usual cruising grounds, is believed to feature two swimming pools (one of which has an adjustable depth that allows it to be converted into a dancefloor), an exterior fireplace, a leisure submarine, armour plating, bulletproof windows, a missile defence system and an anti-paparazzi shield designed to dazzle digital cameras.
But one British academic has managed to penetrate this elusive milieu. Emma Spence has spent the last six years researching the industry, has crewed on superyachts around the world and shadowed a yacht broker in the tax haven of Monaco, observing how the boats are deployed to establish a pecking order among the super-rich. The researcher is completing a PhD on the superyacht scene and says the vessels are unique among prestige assets: unlike private jets they are not a useful mode of transport; unlike art and property, they always depreciate in value. Instead, as one owner told her, what makes a yacht desirable is that it allows the super-rich to perform their wealth status.
Superyachts are defined as boats with hulls that measure longer than 24 metres at the waterline and that require a professional crew to operate. With basic annual maintenance and operation costs expected to be 10% of the original purchase price, ownership is the preserve of multi-millionaires and billionaires.
In a forthcoming book on the lifestyles of the super-rich, Spence explains how merely possessing these elite craft is not enough to enhance the profile of the super-rich; how and where the yacht is used is equally important. This is why most owners and charterers of the luxury vessels prefer to go to prominent ports with bars and restaurants where they can guarantee an audience of super-rich peers. Her research focused on the Cte dAzur, the centre of the superyacht scene, where hundreds of luxury vessels line the docks in Saint-Tropez, Nice, Antibes, Cannes and Monaco, the most prestigious port in the Mediterranean.
Among the owners she witnessed projecting their status were billionaire retailer Sir Philip Green, who took delivery of his third superyacht the 100m, 90-metre Lionheart, his second boat to bear that name earlier this year. While she was crewing on a yacht belonging to somebody else in Saint-Tropez in 2013, Green came on board without invitation. He walked up on the aft deck in board shorts and a T-shirt standard super-rich attire, as casual as you can be, she says. The grownup children [of the owner] and friends all immediately stood to attention until he told them it was OK to sit down. Ive never seen anyone else command that respect on someone elses yacht.
The perma-tanned Topshop tycoon recently finished a two-month Mediterranean cruise with his wife, Tina, leaving their daughter, Chloe, on board in Monaco, where yacht owners and industry insiders gathered last month at the worlds most prestigious yacht show to size up one anothers nautical assets. The familys got a permanent berth there and Ive docked alongside him for many years, says Spence. One time, years ago in Monaco, a rival crew climbed on board in the night and changed the boats name with tape to Lion Fart.