The Jerusalem Post

Swiss watchmaker­s prepare their smartwatch­es

- By MARTINNE GELLER and ERIC AUCHARD

LONDON/FRANKFURT ( Reuters) – To observers of the secretive Swiss watch industry, its quiet, seemingly passive response to Apple Inc.’s plan to attack their centuries- old business could be mistaken for submission before an overwhelmi­ng adversary. But luxury and fashion groups Richemont, LVMH, Swatch Group and Guess Inc. have been busy in the past year tinkering with smartwatch­es of their own, while aiming to preserve their products’ more timeless appeal. When Apple Watch was first announced last September, some experts dismissed such devices as appealing to a different class of customer – those who prize technology over prestige. Now analysts and industry executives are starting to think that maybe the Apple Watch juggernaut will stoke sales of luxury timepieces among younger consumers who are used to telling the time with their phones rather than on their wrists. “Apple has the potential to make the watch cool again,” said CCS Insight mobile analyst Ben Wood, a confessed wearable-gadget freak. “I think the Swiss watch industry are going to be absolutely delighted.” Swatch, the world’s largest watchmakin­g group, has dabbled with smartwatch experiment­s for more than a decade and already makes components for fitness-band wearable devices. It has told Swiss newspapers it is gearing up to offer smartwatch­es of its own in the next few months. “Apple is not the only company which is about to toss a smartwatch on the market,” Swatch chief executive Nick Hayek told SonntagsBl­ick in January. “This is not a threat but a huge opportunit­y for us and the Swiss watch industry.” On Monday, Apple revealed that its lineup of watches will go on sale in April. The entry-level Apple Watch Sport will start at $349, the standard version at $549 and the high-end “Edition” watch at $10,000. The upcoming Swatch Smartwatch will include a chip that allows users to make contact-less payments with a swipe of the wrist. It will use long-lasting batteries and work with both Apple and Google-based phones, according to news reports. While the Apple Watch has drawn rave reviews for many of its features, its limited battery life of no more than 18 hours before recharging is considered a big drawback. LUXURY OF TIME The threat of the smartwatch may also be limited due to its short shelf life as a hi-tech, frequently upgraded product. An iPhone tends to lose half its value within the first year after it is introduced, while Rolex’s flagship Submariner model has risen in value, analysts at Berenberg Bank noted in a recent report. Montblanc, owned by Richemont, announced in January the launch of the TimeWalker Urban Speed e-strap watch, which combines a traditiona­l mechanical watch with an interchang­eable strap containing a Bluetooth connected device. That offers “the best of both worlds,” according to Berenberg luxury-goods analyst Bassel Choughari. This is less risky than the strategy of LVMH’s Tag Heuer, which has partnered with an as yet undisclose­d US tech company to produce a watch outside Switzerlan­d, he said. “It creates a bit of a gray area between Swiss-made and probably made-in-China products, so that could be a bit difficult to manage over time,” Choughari said of the danger to brands. Guess Inc. has also announced plans to launch a smartwatch line called Guess Connect later this year. The new models, which come in sporty and jewel- encrusted versions, will link wirelessly to a user’s nearby Apple or Google Android smartphone. Guess says these will be compatible with thousands of existing cellphone apps and can be controlled from the watch using voice-activated commands. Fossil Group, another US-based fashion group, has toyed with smartwatch­es since 2003. A year ago it said it would produce a smartwatch based on Google’s Android Wear software, and in September it said it had partnered with chipmaker Intel Corp. It is too early to know whether the Apple Watch, whose price tags run as high as $17,000 for its yellow- or rose-gold models, will steal share from the Swiss industry, which sells about 30 million watches a year. The threat that Apple will cannibaliz­e existing watch demand is most acute for Swatch, analysts say, because it has the highest proportion of products selling for a few hundred dollars, instead of several thousands as high-end names do. If Apple sells 20 million watches in the first year, as some analysts estimate, and all of those purchases divert buyers from other watch brands, Swatch could suffer a 6 percent hit to annual revenue, according to a calculatio­n by Barclays analysts. Watch connoisseu­r Steve Baktidy says he is interested in the Apple Watch but only as a tech gadget to play with. But he also welcomed efforts by luxury-goods makers to introduce more tech features of their own. “Absolutely I’ll buy one [from Apple], but it’s not going to replace my everyday watch,” said Baktidy, owner of two auto-body repair shops in New York and two dozen watches by luxury brands including Patek Philippe, Audemars Piguet, Breitling and Omega.

Analysts and industry executives are starting to think that maybe the Apple Watch juggernaut will stoke sales of luxury timepieces

 ?? (Denis Balibouse/Reuters) ?? VACHERON CONSTANTIN watchmaker­s work on calibers in the company workshop in Plan-les-Ouates, near Geneva, last year. Vacheron Constantin is part of Geneva-based luxury group Richemont. Luxury and fashion groups Richemont, LVMH, Swatch Group and Guess...
(Denis Balibouse/Reuters) VACHERON CONSTANTIN watchmaker­s work on calibers in the company workshop in Plan-les-Ouates, near Geneva, last year. Vacheron Constantin is part of Geneva-based luxury group Richemont. Luxury and fashion groups Richemont, LVMH, Swatch Group and Guess...
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