The $260 Swatch-Omega MoonSwatch Is Reviving The Budget Brand

Roles were reversed in the 1980s, when the company’s cheap plastic watches helped prop up the Swiss luxury timepiece industry.

The MoonSwatch, right, alongside it’s inspiration, the Omega Speedmaster Moonwatch.Source: Swatch SA

When the Swatch was born four decades ago, the plastic timepiece breathed new life into the staid Swiss watch industry, which was struggling to compete with cheap quartz models from Asia. By the early 1990s, Swatch sales soared to about 20 million a year as consumers snapped up the colorful designs that married Swiss-made precision with an affordable fun factor. That boost provided financial cover for the slow-motion comeback of struggling high-end manufacturers (Blancpain, Breguet, Omega, and others), building the Swatch Group into a powerhouse that today includes 17 brands and generates annual sales of about $7.5 billion.

But in recent years, the Swatch brand itself has languished, muscled out of the low end by fitness bands, smartwatches—especially the Apple Watch, now the top-selling timepiece of any sort—and smartphones, which millennials often use instead of wristwear. By 2021, unit sales of the Swatch brand were down to about 3.2 million, analysts estimate. “It had lost some relevance for the younger generation,” says Nick Hayek, chief executive officer of Swatch Group AG.

HayekPhotographer: Stefan Wermuth/Bloomberg
HayekPhotographer: Stefan Wermuth/Bloomberg

Now, though, a high-end offering from the Swatch stable is propping up its budget plastic sibling: the Omega-Swatch MoonSwatch. Hayek and his team last year came up with a plan to create a model that would draw heavily on the Swatch Group’s vertical integration. A producer of watch movements and components on an industrial scale, Swatch would leverage its expertise in manufacturing and design, all for a price that remained true to the brand ethos.

The MoonSwatch leaned on the heritage and look of the Omega Speedmaster Moonwatch, an iconic timepiece worn on the moon by US astronauts. The steel, hand-wound, mechanical Moonwatch retails for about $7,000, but the quartz-powered MoonSwatch, housed in multicolored ceramic and bioplastic cases, costs only $260.

When the MoonSwatch was introduced in March exclusively at Swatch boutiques, buyers thronged stores from Sydney to New York. Three months later it remains hard to get, with stores selling out within minutes of receiving resupplies. Hayek insists he could sell 10 million MoonSwatches. “It lit instantly, putting Swatch back into the spotlight,” he says. “Everybody’s interested.”

The Covid-19 pandemic turbocharged the Swiss luxury watch business. Stuck at home during lockdowns, with little possibility of dining out or traveling, cash-flush consumers browsed Instagram posts of Rolexes, Pateks, and, yes, Omega Speedmasters, newly coveting expensive mechanical watches. Prices for some steel sportswatch models more than doubled on the secondary market, and today it’s almost impossible to buy a Rolex at the official retail price, even at an authorized dealer.

Hayek says the Omega collaboration has made the Swatch brand part of the luxury conversation again, even with prices that are a fraction of high-end timepieces. Commercial landlords want Swatch boutiques alongside top luxury fashion names, he says, and customers who stop by looking for the elusive MoonSwatch often check out other models. The company says that Swatch brand sales in Switzerland—excluding the MoonSwatch—are up 41% since the release, and that other regions have seen similar increases.

Some MoonSwatch owners are reselling them online for double the retail price—not unlike the Rolex gray-market dealers profiting from the brand’s scarcity. Hayek, though, counsels against buying from so-called flippers, as the MoonSwatch isn’t limited and production is being ramped up to meet demand, with most of the six Swiss facilities making the watch now running 24 hours a day.

It’s an ironic about-face that Swatch’s revival is being powered by Omega, a brand Swatch helped prop up in the 1980s. Omega’s comeback took hold only later, when it became James Bond’s timepiece of choice through a lucrative marketing deal. The maker of the De Ville, Seamaster, and Speedmaster models, Omega now accounts for more than a third of Swatch Group sales and more than half its profits, according to estimates by Morgan Stanley and industry researcher LuxeConsult. “Swatch proved it was possible to make a timepiece in Switzerland that had a trendy design and disruptive marketing while selling it at an extremely competitive price,” says LuxeConsult head Oliver Mueller. “History is repeating itself 40 years later, but in reverse.”

The Speedmaster wasn’t the only model Hayek considered for the Swatch collaboration. He also commissioned Swatch bioceramic versions of the Seamaster as well as the Blancpain Fifty Fathoms, a storied diving timepiece that retails for about $13,000. Hayek is happy to show those prototypes, but there’s one he won’t reveal: a mock-up of a Swatch collaboration with a “very high-end” outside brand. Is it a Patek? An Audemars Piguet? A Rolex? He won’t say. But he does suggest that a Swatch collaboration might be the perfect way to introduce a new generation to one of Switzerland’s most sought-after but expensive and hard-to-get brands. The exclusivity of such brands, he says, “cannot be the message. That’s not my message.”

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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