WWD Digital Daily

Swiss Watch Exports to China Drop in June

The figures underscore the difficulti­es faced by luxury brands due to the country's stagnant market.

- BY LILY TEMPLETON

— China and its current economic travails are weighing heavily on the Swiss watch industry, as its export figures from June showed.

Foreign sales of Swiss timepieces fell 7.2 percent in the month, showing a “marked decline,” said the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry, or FHS.

The picture for the first half likewise came out lackluster, with a 3.3 percent year-on-year contractio­n that saw a cumulated 12.9 billion Swiss francs, or

$14.6 billion at current exchange rates, of watches shipped abroad for the period.

For the Swiss industry body, the underperfo­rmance of China and Hong Kong, respective­ly falling 36.5 and 23.1 percent, was “clearly lowering the average” for June. In the first six months of the year, both territorie­s also declined by around 20 percent.

This underscore­d the impression that the party is over for luxury in the region, following a series of lackluster first-half earnings reports.

For Bernstein's Luca Solca, June's Swiss watch exports came as “no surprise given recent earnings reports and commentary from Swatch Group and Richemont,” with weaker wholesale growth impacting first-half results and tougher comparativ­es expected to weigh on the rest of 2024.

Swatch Group said its first-half revenues were hit by a sharp drop in demand for luxury goods in Greater China as well as Southeast Asia, due to the decline in Chinese tourists. Its sales for the period totaled 3.45 billion Swiss francs, or $3.86 billion, down 10.7 percent at constant exchange rates.

Likewise, lukewarm Chinese demand coupled with tough comparativ­es in the previous year dented fiscal firstquart­er sales at luxury giant Compagnie Financière Richemont, parent of brands including Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Dunhill.

The second half of 2024 is expected to remain challengin­g for luxury, with watches particular­ly under scrutiny given post-pandemic effervesce­nce.

Earlier this week, China said its economy grew 4.7 percent year-on-year in the second quarter, missing analysts' consensus forecasts.

While key economic directives and even stimulus plans are expected to come out of the country's Third Plenum concluding Thursday, moves such as a major reform to consumptio­n tax could potentiall­y drive retail price inflation and further dent consumer confidence in the short term, according to a research note by Citi.

Globally, the picture for Swiss watch exports was mixed but “remained broadly in line with their respective trends since the start of the year,” the FHS noted.

Europe, beset by electoral turmoil, saw moderate declines across the U.K., France, Germany and Spain, and a 13 percent slip in Italy.

Meanwhile, exports to Asia fell significan­tly, with Singapore and South Korea down 10.8 percent and 8.6 percent, respective­ly.

Japan was the one bright spot for Swiss watches in June, with a 13.2 percent jump attributed to an uptick in foreign visitors taking advantage of a weak yen.

The month's crunch was felt across all price segments, although watches priced more than 3,000 Swiss francs at export price fared better, remaining near flat in value despite a 9.6 percent decrease in volume.

 ?? ?? The Indian and Antarctic Ocean-inspired Blancpain x Swatch watches.
The Indian and Antarctic Ocean-inspired Blancpain x Swatch watches.

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