Sold! to the man with $12,400: a pair of Japanese melons

This combo picture shows a pair of melons (bottom), weighing 4.5kg together, which are priced at two million yen (16,610 USD) at an auction (top) in Yubari city in Japan's northern island of Hokkaido, 15 May 2007. The pair of melons were the heaviest among all the auctioned Yubari brand melons, famous throughout the nation as a top quality fruit. AFP PHOTO.

This combo picture shows a pair of melons (bottom), weighing 4.5kg together, which are priced at two million yen (16,610 USD) at an auction (top) in Yubari city in Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido, 15 May 2007. The pair of melons were the heaviest among all the auctioned Yubari brand melons, famous throughout the nation as a top quality fruit. AFP PHOTO.

TOKYO–A single pair of premium melons fetched an eye-watering 1.5 million yen ($12,400 or P553,000) at an auction in Japan on Friday.

The winning bid was placed by a local fruit wholesaler for the first Yubari melons to go under the hammer this year at the Sapporo Central Wholesale Market in northern Hokkaido, officials said.

The figure — enough to buy a brand new car in Japan — is some way short of the record for the luxury fruit, which fetched 2.5 million yen last year.

High prices are the norm for the opening auction of the season and reflect buyers’ desire for prestige.

Yubari melons are considered a status symbol in Japan — like a fine wine — with many being bought as a gift for friends and colleagues.

The best-quality Yubari melons are perfect spheres with a smooth, evenly patterned rind. A T-shaped stalk is left on the fruit, which is usually sold in an ornate box.

While the prices they fetch at auction are very high, melons are not the only expensive fruit in Japan.

A single apple from a supermarket can cost more than $3 and a presentation pack of 20 cherries might sell for over $100.

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