The logical superiority of luxury collectibles.
A short reference on why ultra-rare, kosher-certified physical luxury — of which the Tannenblut Bereshit Series is one expression — is structurally positioned to outperform digital and paper assets across the coming decades of generational wealth transfer.
The superior performance of luxury assets is not coincidental, but structurally logical, driven by fundamental economic principles.
Five forces underpin the asset class. None of them is fashion; each is a feature of the way capital, demographics and authentication infrastructure already exist.
Absolute scarcity in an era of infinite digital assets.
Unlike cryptocurrencies — tokens with effectively infinite potential supply — or shares subject to dilution, ultra-luxury collectibles exist in fixed and immutable quantities. Hermès produces Birkin bags in deliberately limited volumes, creating permanent imbalances between supply and demand.¹⁻³ The TANNENBLUT BERESHIT SERIES — three thousand bottles, which will never be produced again — represents absolute scarcity.
Preservation of generational wealth through tangible assets.
The thirty-nine trillion dollars flowing to Generation X and the millennials⁴⁻⁶ is seeking tangible, inflation-resistant stores of value. Physical luxury collectibles cannot be devalued by monetary policy or quantitative easing. Wealth planning increasingly favours physical assets that are documentable, insurable and transferable.⁷
Cultural capital and social signalling value.
Luxury collectibles offer a dual return: financial appreciation and social and cultural utility.⁸⁻¹⁰ A Birkin bag or a rare spirit can be displayed, used and enjoyed whilst appreciating in value. Bitcoin and gold offer no experiential or aesthetic value to their owners.
Recession-resistant demand from the UHNW segment.
Ultra-high-net-worth individuals — a population of approximately 510,000 worldwide with assets of at least thirty million dollars¹¹⁻¹³ — are largely insulated from economic crises and continue to make luxury purchases regardless of market conditions. Baby boomers currently account for almost half of this cohort; their wealth is being transferred to younger generations who show an even greater propensity for luxury consumption.¹⁴
Professional authentication and provenance infrastructure.
Unlike cryptocurrencies — subject to exchange failures and fraud¹⁵⁻¹⁶ — luxury collectibles benefit from an established authentication ecosystem. The leading auction houses (Sotheby’s, Christie’s) ensure transparency in price determination and provenance verification.¹⁷⁻¹⁸ Collector registers, such as the Bereshit Register, create documented chains of ownership for inheritance and insurance purposes.¹⁹
The convergence of the Great Wealth Transfer with the proven superior performance of the luxury sector gives rise to a unique investment thesis.
Five consequences for the discerning collector. The first three concern capital; the last two concern the life lived with the asset in hand.
- Capital preservation.Collectible luxury items offer better protection against inflation than bonds or cash equivalents.
- Appreciation potential.Historical data suggests an annual appreciation of twelve to fifteen per cent for certain categories of luxury goods. Past performance of luxury categories is not, however, indicative of future price movements for this product.
- Portfolio diversification.Zero correlation with traditional financial markets or with the volatility of cryptocurrencies.
- Intergenerational wealth transfer.Physical assets facilitate transparent transfers with a clear, documented provenance.
- Enjoyment during ownership.Unlike gold bars in vaults, collectible luxury items offer aesthetic, social and experiential value while held.
For the discerning collector, the acquisition of an ultra-rare luxury collectible — such as a numbered bottle from the TANNENBLUT BERESHIT SERIES — represents not merely a purchase, but a strategic allocation of capital to one of the most resilient and high-yielding asset classes of the twenty-first century.
Read before registering or remitting funds.
Not an investment instrument.
The Bereshit Series is a physical luxury product. It is not a security, fund unit, derivative or regulated investment. No statement on this page should be construed as financial advice, an offer of securities, or a guarantee of future returns.
Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Historical data on luxury categories is presented as context for the asset class, not as a forecast for this specific product. Resale prices, if any, are determined by the secondary market and are outside the maison’s control.
By private invitation.
Bottles are placed at the seller’s sole discretion. Registration, expression of interest, or remittance of refundable holding deposits does not, in itself, confer an entitlement to receive any specific bottle, tier or number.
Age, jurisdiction and import.
The product is intended for collectors of legal drinking age. Purchasers are responsible for confirming the legality of importation, duty and consumption of distilled spirits in their jurisdiction prior to remittance.
Kosher certification scope.
Kosher certification applies to the production process and ingredients as documented at the still. The certification does not extend to subsequent handling outside the maison’s custody.
Operator of record.
The website is operated by Skye Ventures FZC, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates. The producing entity is JFN Spirituosen Hamburg GmbH, Ballindamm 3, 20095 Hamburg, Germany.
The sources behind the thesis.
All claims marked with a superscript in § 1 are sourced from the publications listed below. Citations are reproduced in the language of the original publication.
- Yahoo Finance (2 January 2026). “This segment of the US population is set to inherit $9 trillion.” finance.yahoo.com
- Merrill Lynch (2 October 2023). “How will the great wealth transfer affect the markets?” ml.com
- Estate Registry (25 October 2019). “Baby boomers’ inheritances: a boon for millennials (mostly).” estate-registry.com
- Eulerpool News (26 June 2024). “Baby boomers’ inheritances: a blessing or a curse for Generation X and millennials?” eulerpool.com
- Forbes (9 August 2023). “The great wealth transfer from baby boomers to millennials will impact the job market.” forbes.com
- Finanzen.net (28 July 2021). “From baby boomers’ wealth to millennials: younger generations are inheriting more.” finanzen.net
- Commonwealth Bank Australia (27 November 2025). “Baby boomers’ $3.5 trillion will fund millennials’ ‘forever homes’.” commbank.com.au
- Yahoo Finance (22 February 2026). “Forget the S&P 500. If you have money, there’s a luxury investment that has taken the market by storm over time.” finance.yahoo.com
- Bolsino (29 June 2025). “Comparison between the Hermès Birkin and Kelly: the best choice in 2026.” bolsino.com
- SAIKA (22 February 2026). “Hermès handbag price guide 2026: investment insights.” saikacollective.com
- Companies Market Cap (2026). “Hermès (RMS.PA) — Share Price History.” companiesmarketcap.com
- eToro / FX News Group. “Luxury fashion stocks have outperformed high-street brands over the last 5 years.” fxnewsgroup.com
- STOXX (4 February 2025). “Luxury goods: the finer things in life are also shining on the stock market.” stoxx.com
- Luxury Society (24 April 2025). “Shifts in the luxury market in 2025: from LVMH’s results to the impact of tariffs on gold.” luxurysociety.com
- Yahoo Finance (3 January 2026). “Bitcoin has just recorded its least volatile year to date.” finance.yahoo.com
- Reuters (2 February 2026). “Cryptocurrency market volatility triggers $25 billion in Bitcoin liquidations.” reuters.com
- Economic Times (2 January 2025). “Gold outperforms all asset classes in 2024, rising 25.5% as investors seek safe haven.” economictimes.indiatimes.com
- Kettle Club (22 September 2025). “Rolex vs. Patek Philippe: Which is the better investment watch?” kettleclub.co.uk
- CNBC (2 October 2025). “Ultra-wealthy millennials and Gen Z will overtake baby boomers.” cnbc.com
