Watch brands are beginning to enter the pre-owned market for their timepieces, with potential industry-wide effects.
Lower prices, side-stepping that first hit of depreciation on a brand-new watch, or obtaining timepieces that have gone out of production: These are some local watch collectors’ oft-cited reasons for embracing the pre-owned timepiece market. Sales director Paul Cheong, who has been collecting timepieces for some 15 years (and appears in the collectors’ feature elsewhere in this magazine), often scours websites for older pieces that you won’t see on retail shelves. He shares: “I don’t believe in paying a premium for watches. Also, today, you won’t be able to find many of my watches new, such as those by Gerald Genta and Daniel Roth.”
Cheong is not alone. In the Trends Report 2018 published by the Fondation de la Haute Horlogerie, financial consultancy Kepler Cheuvreux estimated the global market for second-hand watches to be worth US$5 billion (S$6.8 billion) a year. Size aside, this segment has posted annual growth rates of 5 per cent, outperforming the market for new watches.
BRANDS WANT IN
These tantalising figures have not gone unnoticed by industry chiefs, several of whom have recently made statements about their plans to enter the pre-owned watch game. These include Audemars Piguet, MB&F, Richard Mille and Breitling, although Richemont Group – the conglomerate behind brands like Jaeger-LeCoultre and Cartier – also made its intentions clear when it acquired Watchfinder, a UK-based pre-owned watch retailer, this June. No longer are brands content with watching from the sidelines.
Denne historien er fra Timepieces 2018-utgaven av The PEAK Singapore.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra Timepieces 2018-utgaven av The PEAK Singapore.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
From Screen to Store
Heini Zachariassen, founder of global wine rating app Vivino on how its first retail store in the world brings data-driven curation to wine lovers.
In the Dining Spotlight
Renowned Dutch chef Sergio Herman, whose name has been associated with the Michelin Guide in the Netherlands and Belgium, is expanding his Asian footprint with his Singapore outpost, Le Pristine in Grand Hyatt Singapore.
All for One
How would you navigate a corner if you were hearing-impaired or enjoy school if you were on the spectrum? These architects posit that inclusive design must be part of mainstream standards to improve overall living environments.
Pods and Swirling Staircases
This quirky and playful home designed by Park Associates is shaped after its owners, a young family with three children.
Stories Behind the Kebava
Sufiyanto A. S., one half of the duo behind the Kebaya.Societe Instagram account, has had enough of seeing Malay identity erased and forgotten.
Good to Go
Driving classic Jaguars on the legendary Goodwood Motor Circuit is all the magic a motorhead needs.
Seasons of the Snake
Japanese architect Tadao Ando once again works his magic for Bvlgari, with the Serpenti Tubogas as an artistic canvas for nature's cyclical transformation.
Phoenix Rising
One gutsy retired pharmaceutical executive rescued two-century-old Swiss watchmaker Bovet, and today, its presence is stronger than ever in Southeast Asia.
Con Amore, Leggiero, Presto!
Chan Weitian injects new insights into Presto Drycleaners, blending operational innovation with time-honoured values.
Preserving Paradise
Gaya Island Resort takes eco-tourism beyond the expected, blending conservation efforts with authentic luxury.