In summary I'd say:
1. 77s still affordable so get in before next year (if the 66 effect this year is repeated)
2. recent vintages (with perfect provenance) are still below the real-terms price of the opening offers
3. some mature vintages - 66, 70 are turning up in price now after a couple of steady years
4. 75s are definitely back on the market - more of them and up a third on prices one or two years ago.
5. mid-range wines from the 80s still make the recent vintages look bad value. (And OK, I know 97, 00 and 03 are better than 80, 83 etc,



Taylor 45 (1 bottle) 380 - steady on last year
Graham 45 (4 botts) 3,300 - big increase...in fact mad :?
Dow 55 (3 mags) 1050 - continues to edge up, I would have bid if they'd been bottles or halves!
Fonseca 63 (case) - 1,400 - still edging up
Cockburn 63 (cases) - one case went for 850, the next for 620. Shows virtue of sitting on hands! (You can get at the higher price retail)
Taylor 70 (1 case) 680 - no change
Warre 70 (case) - 480 - glad I got some of my old favourite at about 380 last year - really on the up
Dow 75 (case) - 210 - 75s now back on the market again in big numbers - were almost absent in 2005, I thought they'd all been drunk. Slight increase as was as low as 160 in recent years.
Taylor 75 (case) 270 - really on the up - got some at 200 last year
Taylor 77 (various cases) 560 - 600 - steady/slight fall - a real surprise I paid more last year, but will this one take off for the 30th anniversary trade next year? I think so. Buy now.
Graham 77 (case) 510 - steady
Fonseca 77 - (case) 800 - still on gentle upward trend and diverging from less-favoured Taylor 77
Gould Campbell 83 - (lots of 2 cases) - at effectively 180 per case - what a bargain!
Taylor 97 (case) 380 - 97s at last starting to move out of the opening-offer price territory.
Dow 2000 (case) 200 - phew, an antidote to buying in bond. Some 2000s are definitely on the slide