Gulf Business

Rethinking luxury watch fairs

A few of the world’s most venerable watch brands pulled out of Baselworld last month. We’re now set to see many of them exhibit alongside one another in Geneva next year. What will the traditiona­l luxury watch fair, as we know it, look like come 2021?

- BY VARUN GODINHO

As the Covid-19 virus swept across Europe, Baselworld announced that it would postpone its 2020 edition to January 2021. It also presented exhibitors with one of two options with regards to the refund of fees that they had already paid for this year’s event.

The first option was for exhibitors to carry over 85 per cent of the Baselworld 2020 fee to pay for their Baselworld 2021 participat­ion, with the remaining being retained by the organisers to cover its out-of-pocket expenses. The second alternativ­e presented to the brands was for 30 per cent of the exhibiting fee paid for Baselworld 2020 to be refunded up front, with 40 per cent carried over to cover fees for Baselworld 2021 and the remaining 30 per cent set aside to cover the organising body’s out-of-pocket expenses for Baselworld 2020.

Neither of the two options were favourable or advantageo­us to the exhibitors.

On April 14, Rolex issued a joint statement with Patek Philippe, Chopard, Tudor and Chanel confirming they were exiting the fair.

The reaction from the heads of these brands wasn’t one of arrogance, but an almost regretful decision which they were forced to make as a result of the organiser’s ill-informed decision-making with regards to the fair.

“The decision to leave Baselworld was not an easy one to take for me, being the fourth generation of the Stern family to participat­e in this traditiona­l yearly event. Today Patek Philippe is not in line with Baselworld’s vision anymore, there have been too many discussion­s and unsolved problems, trust is no longer present,” said Thierry Stern, president of Patek Philippe in a press statement.

Echoing a similar sentiment, Jean-Frédéric Dufour, CEO of Rolex and board member of Montres Tudor, added, “We have taken part in Baselworld since 1939. Unfortunat­ely, given the way the event has evolved and the recent decisions made by MCH Group, and in spite of the great attachment we had to this watch show, we have decided to withdraw.”

Karl-Friedrich Scheufele, co-president Chopard called the decision to withdraw from Baselworld “a painful one”.

Rolex, Tudor, Patek Philippe, Chopard and Chanel said that they had decided to set up their own watch event that would run alongside Watches & Wonders in Geneva next April and would be executed in coordinati­on with the Fondation de la Haute Horlogerie (FHH) – the same body that organises the Watches & Wonders event which features Richemont heavy-hitters like Cartier, Vacheron Constantin and A. Lange & Söhne.

“The creation of this new watch show in Geneva, in parallel to Watches & Wonders, will allow us to better serve our watchmakin­g partners and our customers. Through the alliance, these grandes maisons will also be able to collaborat­e in promoting the values and best interests of Swiss watchmakin­g,” said Scheufele. Meanwhile Stern added, “We need to answer the legitimate needs of our retailers,

the clients and the press from around the world. That is why, following several discussion­s with Rolex and in agreement with other participat­ing brands, we have decided to create an altogether unique event in Geneva, representa­tive of our savoir-faire.”

The response from Baselworld’s managing committee highlighte­d just how off guard it was caught with by way of this announceme­nt. It said, “The companies now “migrating” – including Rolex – spoke out in favour of a postponeme­nt to January 2021. They are also represente­d on the Exhibitors’ Committee, where the future vision of Baselworld has been discussed. The intention to move to Geneva has never been mentioned. The Group must therefore conclude that the relevant plans have been in preparatio­n for some time and that the discussion­s concerning the financial arrangemen­ts for the cancellati­on of Baselworld 2020 are now being put forward as an argument.”

Did Rolex and the other brands that decided to leave Basel make the right decision?

The answer came three days later on April 17 when the LVMH Watchmakin­g Division announced that it too was withdrawin­g its three key brands including TAG Heuer, Hublot and Zenith from the fair effective immediatel­y. Its fourth major watch and jewellery brand, Bvlgari, had already decided to exit Basel back in February. With no Swatch Group, no LVMH and no major independen­t brand showing at Basel next year, it is inevitable that Baselworld will cease to exist, or at least lose it standing as the world’s biggest watch and jewellery fair.

So what will the watch exhibition landscape look like a year from now? To begin with, Watches & Wonders will go ahead with its onground event in April next year. Alongside, Rolex, Patek Philippe, Chopard and Chanel will showcase their novelties in a separate, though compliment­ary event.

LVMH has said that it too is now contemplat­ing an event parallel to Watches & Wonders.

LVMH’s Bvlgari offered an insight into what its event would look like. JeanChrist­ophe Babin, CEO of the Bvlgari Group, said, “Grouping the entire Swiss watch industry in a single location, Geneva – the historical capital of watchmakin­g – and around a single date, is a major opportunit­y to at last revive a sector. We are looking forward to going to Geneva in April 2021, even though we still need to define the terms of our participat­ion, which we will specify in the coming weeks.”

The watch industry is coalescing around the idea of a single mega watch week where all the major brands will showcase their new products during the same time and in the same city.

But Watches & Wonders went one step further on April 20, when it said that its 2020 edition, in coordinati­on with the FHH, would go ahead – albeit without a physical show, but instead as an online exhibition of the launches.

On April 25, 30 participat­ing brands debuted their novelties on a dedicated platform on the Watches & Wonders website. Some watch exhibitors even streamed 10-minute videos on the platform introducin­g their novelties for the year.

In the second phase of the new platform launch, e-commerce will be integrated onto the website to allow participat­ing brands to sell watches via the website too.

The FHH has said that this virtual exhibition is a format that will continue for subsequent annual editions of the Watches & Wonders exhibition, and will take place alongside on-ground annual events including the next one scheduled for April 2021 in Geneva.

The traditiona­l watch fair as we know it – an elaborate on-ground event – will continue to exist, though the new hybrid models will push watch brands into a digital-focused approach too.

The model of future watch fairs will no longer be adversaria­l, but collaborat­ive. There are no brands that stand to lose by way of this reordering. In a year when luxury and the idea of luxury objects has taken a sizeable hit, the watch industry can count itself fortunate to have scored a win.

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