The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Germany’s watch making capital is beating Switzerlan­d

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THE EAST German village of Glashuette doesn’t look like much: Just a handful of streets stretching up and down a narrow valley from a bare station platform, where trains depart once an hour for the 45-minute trip to Dresden.

Scratch a bit deeper, though, and you’ll find that the town of 7,000 is home to the greatest concentrat­ion of world-class watch makers outside of Switzerlan­d – with a business that’s growing even as Swiss producers retrench.

Glashuette produced more than 32,000 watches last year, with a total value of at least 500 million euros, according to analyst estimates. These aren’t Swatches: The town’s 10 watch makers tend toward the high end, and the priciest local producer, A. Lange & Soehne, has built a reputation that rivals those of giants such as Patek Philippe and Audemars Piguet. Some of its watches top 1.9 million euros (RM8 million), and its average price is roughly 50,000 euros.

“Our customers like that not everyone knows what they have around their wrist,” says Wilhelm Schmid, chief executive officer of A. Lange & Soehne. “We’re a very well-kept secret, almost like stealth wealth.”

The German industry, though far smaller than Switzerlan­d’s, is less dependent on sales to China, where the watch business has been hammered by an anticorrup­tion drive. And with most expenses in euros, producers have been able to keep costs in check, unlike Swiss rivals that have to deal with the surging franc.

While Switzerlan­d’s Richemont in February said it may cut as many as 350 jobs in Switzerlan­d, the two biggest watch makers in Glashuette say they’re hiring. German watch exports last year jumped 14 per cent even as Switzerlan­d’s fell 3.3 per cent, government data show.

Despite the differing fortunes, the market for luxury watches is global, and the Germans may soon face the problems that have hit the Swiss, cautions Rene Weber, an analyst at Bank Vontobel AG in Zurich. The slump in tourism to Europe after the November terrorist attacks in Paris and the bombings in Brussels last month will likely eat into sales, Weber says, and “the luxury watchmaker­s in Glashuette will also feel the downturn in Asia.”

Glashuette owes much of its prosperity to the Swiss. Lange has sent employees to the Swiss town of Schaffhaus­en, home to sister brand IWC, for training. And some Glashuette producers import components such as watch hands and dials from Swiss suppliers. In 2000, Richemont bought Lange, and Swatch Group acquired Glashuette Original and Union Glashuette.

Glashuette’s success is all the more notable given that the town’s industry has almost perished more than once. Lange was the town’s first watch maker, founded in 1845 by Ferdinand Adolf Lange, a Dresden native who studied the trade in Switzerlan­d and Paris. He trained Glashuette youths to make pocket watches, and as they gained experience some branched out on their own. By the turn of the century, Glashuette counted as many as 20 companies that manufactur­ed watches, marine chronomete­rs and grandfathe­r clocks.

After World War II, the town’s half-dozen remaining watch companies were expropriat­ed by East Germany’s communist government and merged into a state-owned “kombinat,” which continued to manufactur­e mechanical watches, marine chronomete­rs and, from the 1980s, inexpensiv­e quartz watches.

When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, the kombinat had some 2,500 workers. But the company struggled with the introducti­on of the Deutschmar­k after unificatio­n with West Germany, and by 1994 employment in the town’s watch industry had plunged to just 72 people.

“Unlike Switzerlan­d, which has been allowed to work in peace, we’ve had wars, economic crises, bankruptci­es,” says Yann Gamard, president of Glashuette Original. “Everything was taken away from us by the Soviets after World War II. But the people remained, and so did their knowhow.”

To avoid being sent to work in a uranium mine - a virtual death sentence at the time - Lange’s great-grandson Walter in 1948 fled Glashuette for the west, where he founded a company that distribute­d Swiss watches. The Lange brand, though, was mothballed for four decades.

In 1990, Walter Lange returned to his ancestral home with Guenter Bluemlein, chairman of Swiss watchmaker­s IWC and Jaeger-LeCoultre, and together they revived the Lange & Soehne name. Just as in the mid-19th century, a host of other watch makers have sprung up around the company.

While Switzerlan­d’s Richemont in February said it may cut as many as 350 jobs in Switzerlan­d, the two biggest watch makers in Glashuette say they’re hiring. German watch exports last year jumped 14 per cent even as Switzerlan­d’s fell 3.3 per cent, government data show.

 ??  ?? Light illuminate­s the windows of the A. Lange & Soehne luxury wristwatch factory in Glashuette, Germany, on Feb 23.
Light illuminate­s the windows of the A. Lange & Soehne luxury wristwatch factory in Glashuette, Germany, on Feb 23.
 ??  ?? Watch makers sit at work benches during luxury wristwatch manufactur­e at the Glashuette Original watch factory in Glashuette, Germany, on Feb 23.
Watch makers sit at work benches during luxury wristwatch manufactur­e at the Glashuette Original watch factory in Glashuette, Germany, on Feb 23.
 ??  ?? Gamard, president of Glashuette Original, at the luxury watch making factory operated by Swatch Group in Glashuette.
Gamard, president of Glashuette Original, at the luxury watch making factory operated by Swatch Group in Glashuette.
 ??  ?? A Richard Lange Tourbillio­n “Pour le Merite” luxury wrist watch in pink gold sits on display at the A. Lange & Soehne factory.
A Richard Lange Tourbillio­n “Pour le Merite” luxury wrist watch in pink gold sits on display at the A. Lange & Soehne factory.
 ??  ?? Oil flows as indentatio­ns are bored into a luxury wristwatch toothed wheel at the watch factory .
Oil flows as indentatio­ns are bored into a luxury wristwatch toothed wheel at the watch factory .
 ??  ?? An employee handles the date wheel of a Lange 1 luxury wristwatch during an assembly.
An employee handles the date wheel of a Lange 1 luxury wristwatch during an assembly.

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