Guide · 25 listed producers · 2+ country hubs

Wine ETFs don't exist. Here's the full listed wine universe instead.

Search “wine ETF” and you find nothing pure-play — because there isn't one. There is no exchange-traded fund that simply holds a basket of the world's wine companies, and none that holds fine wine itself. If you want equity exposure to wine, you buy the listed wine companies directly. There are only about 25 of them on the planet, and this page is the whole list. It is editorial research, not investment advice, and not a recommendation to buy or sell any security.

Why no wine ETF exists

A conventional ETF needs a deep, liquid pool of holdings it can buy and rebalance cheaply. Wine has neither at the equity level: only about 25 wine producers trade publicly, many are small-cap and thinly traded, and they are scattered across 15 countries and a dozen currencies — from Champagne houses in Paris to Chinese A-shares in Shenzhen and Sula Vineyards in Mumbai. Physical fine wine, the other side of the category, does not trade on an exchange in a form a fund can hold at low cost. So the pure-play product every searcher wants can't easily be built. That gap is the reason BoomCellar tracks the listed names as a transparent index — the BIPTVI Wine Stock Index — rather than as a fund.

The four ways to actually get wine exposure

These are genuinely different vehicles — different liquidity, cost, and what you're exposed to.

VehicleWhat you ownLiquidity & access
Listed wine equitiesOperating wine companies (the 25 below)Buy in a normal brokerage; liquidity varies by name
Physical fine wine / en primeurBottles & wine futures; tracked by the Liv-ex indicesSecondary market & merchants; storage & provenance matter
Managed wine fundsA pooled portfolio of physical wine, run for youHigher minimums & fees; limited redemption windows
Broad drinks ETFsBeverage-alcohol baskets — mostly beer & spiritsFully liquid, but only incidental wine exposure

The fine-wine backdrop in 2026 is a genuine recovery — the Liv-ex 100 has strung together consecutive monthly gains led by Italy and Champagne — but that describes physical bottle prices, not these equities. See the country context on the Italian and French wine-stock hubs.

Explore by country

Curated hubs covering the deepest listed markets, with dated market context: Italian wine stocks · French wine stocks.

The full listed wine-stock universe (25 companies)

This is the entire investable set of pure-play and near-pure-play listed wine producers — the closest thing to a “wine ETF” there is, only you hold the components yourself. Click any name for its live share price, one-year chart, market cap in EUR and profile.

CompanyCountrySymbolExchange
Bodegas EsmeraldaArgentinaESME.BABuenos Aires
Australian VintageAustraliaAVG.AXASX
Treasury Wine EstatesAustraliaTWE.AXASX
Andrew PellerCanadaADW-A.TOToronto
Viña Concha y ToroChileCONCHATORO.SNSantiago
Viña San Pedro TarapacáChileVSPT.SNSantiago
Yantai Changyu Pioneer WineChina000869.SZShenzhen
AdViniFranceALAVI.PAEuronext Growth Paris
Lanson-BCCFranceALLAN.PAEuronext Growth Paris
Laurent-PerrierFranceLPE.PAEuronext Paris
Vranken-Pommery MonopoleFranceVRAP.PAEuronext Paris
Schloss WachenheimGermanySWA.DEXETRA
Domain Costa LazaridiGreeceKTILA.ATAthens
Sula VineyardsIndiaSULA.NSNSE
Italian Wine BrandsItalyIWB.MIBorsa Italiana (EGM)
Masi AgricolaItalyMASI.MIBorsa Italiana (EGM)
Delegat GroupNew ZealandDGL.NZNZX
Foley WinesNew ZealandFWL.NZNZX
AmbraPolandAMB.WAWarsaw
Purcari WineriesRomania/MoldovaWINE.ROBucharest
Bodegas RiojanasSpainRIO.MCBME Madrid
Chapel Down GroupUnited KingdomCDGP.LLondon (Aquis/AIM)
Naked WinesUnited KingdomWINE.LLSE (AIM)
Crimson Wine GroupUSACWGLOTCQB
Willamette Valley VineyardsUSAWVVINasdaq

← Back to the BIPTVI Wine Stock Index

Editorial research and market data, not investment advice, and not a recommendation to buy or sell any security or vehicle. The absence of a pure-play wine ETF is a factual observation about available products at a point in time; producers and their listing details are factual data points; figures such as the Liv-ex readings describe the physical fine-wine market, not these equities. Product availability and listings change — confirm any detail before relying on it.