Sunday Times

Rupert bets on robot takeover

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JOHANN Rupert, the billionair­e who controls Cartier owner Richemont, envisions a future in which humans are displaced by robots in the workplace and have all the time in the world to travel.

He’s betting the company’s money on it.

The Swiss luxury-goods maker, whose brands also include Montblanc, disclosed on Friday that it now had a 5% stake in Dufry, the world’s largest duty-free retailer. Dufry’s share price rose as much as 7.5% in early trade.

The purchase comes a week after Rupert predicted that artificial intelligen­ce and robots would cause economic and social upheaval in the next two decades, drawing on the second machine-age theories of MIT professors Erik Brynjolfss­on and Andrew McAfee.

While a swathe of the population may become unemployab­le, the uptake of work by machines and computers will fuel demand for leisure among those who can afford it, says the luxury-goods magnate.

“Man will have more free time,” Rupert said on a call with reporters last week when Richemont reported financial results.

“What are we going to do in 15 to 20 years’ time? Will they all play virtual reality games, will they be on Xboxes? I suspect travel will increase.”

Rupert predicted a wave of Chinese tourists will buoy the economic prospects of France, Italy and the rest of Europe. Dufry said earlier this month its Asian growth prospects have been boosted after Chinese travel conglomera­te HNA Group built up a 21% stake. A 5% stake is worth about Sf460-million (R6.25-billion).

Richemont’s purchase makes sense as the luxury-goods maker needs more avenues to sell watches at a moment when many ailing retailers hold oversize inventorie­s, said Luca Solca, an analyst at Exane BNP Paribas.

The Swiss company follows in the steps of Louis Vuitton-owner LVMH, which owns the DFS dutyfree chain.

Just as the Industrial Revolution created the concept of leisure and led to the birth of modern sports, the looming technologi­cal advances are set to fuel demand for cultural experience­s, said the Richemont chairman.

He said: “Will people travel again?

“The answer is yes, especially in the second Machine Age. We’ll have vast societal changes.” — Bloomberg

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