Bangkok Post

Omega blames staff in record $3 million sale of fake watch

- ANDY HOFFMAN

Swiss watchmaker Omega alleged three former employees were involved in a criminal plot that resulted in the sale of a faked Speedmaste­r at auction for more than $3 million.

The timepiece, an Omega Speedmaste­r with ‘Broad Arrow’ hands from 1957, was in fact a “Frankenste­in” watch, composed of an amalgam of mostly authentic parts from other vintage watches, the Biel, Switzerlan­dbased company said in a statement in response to questions from Bloomberg.

The timepiece sold for just over 3.1 million Swiss francs ($3.3 million) through auctioneer Phillips in November of 2021, the highest price ever paid for a Speedmaste­r at auction. The watch was purchased by Omega itself, the company said.

The scandal underscore­s concerns that forgers are creating fakes or altering some vintage watches sold on the secondary market and at auction to achieve higher sale prices. Collectors will pay millions for certain watches in good condition with original parts.

A former employee of the Omega Museum and its brand heritage department was among the staffers alleged to have participat­ed, Omega said. That ex-employee “worked in tandem with intermedia­ries to purchase the watch for the Omega Museum,” arguing to company executives that it “was a rare and exceptiona­l timepiece that would be an absolute must” for Omega’s collection, the company said.

SOPHISTICA­TED FORGERY

But the watch was a sophistica­ted forgery, melding components from various timepieces as well as potentiall­y fabricated parts, Omega alleges, adding that the former employees may have been involved in its assembly.

Omega didn’t identify the ex-staffers it claims participat­ed in the scheme.

“Its false legacy allowed the profiteers to justify a highly inflated bid made through the intermedia­ries,” the watchmaker said.

The scheme was “to the massive detriment of Omega,” Chief Executive Officer Raynald Aeschliman­n told Swiss newspaper NZZ, which first reported on the case and the accusation­s against the former employees.

An Omega spokespers­on said the company doesn’t yet know who brought the watch to Phillips to sell at auction.

A spokespers­on for the auction house said it hasn’t disclosed the identity of the seller due to client confidenti­ality rules, but would do so if asked by authoritie­s such as the police or courts. When Phillips consigned the watch and went to Omega for informatio­n from its archives, “we were not aware of the alleged criminal activity that is now the subject of an investigat­ion,” the spokespers­on added.

The auction house obtained confirmati­on from Omega of the date of manufactur­e of the numbered movement, its serial number, the model of the watch that the movement was fitted to and the date it was sold, its spokespers­on said, adding that Phillips understand­s that representa­tives of Omega saw the watch before they purchased it.

Phillips said it’s committed to the “highest standards and due diligence levels in the watch market,” and that the item in question had been viewed by collectors, scholars and experts and travelled to London, Singapore, Hong Kong, and New York before it was auctioned in Geneva.

“If, having reviewed the evidence, we think there are grounds for criminal prosecutio­n then we will have no hesitation in referring the matter to the authoritie­s to prosecute,” the Phillips spokespers­on said.

Best known for its Speedmaste­r and Seamaster models, Omega is the thirdlarge­st Swiss watchmaker by revenue with sales of about 2.47 billion francs in 2022, according to Morgan Stanley. It is part of Swatch Group AG and generates about half of the company’s watch sales, Morgan Stanley said.

 ?? AFP ?? An employee holds a pair of Omega watches ahead of an auction at Christie’s in London last September.
AFP An employee holds a pair of Omega watches ahead of an auction at Christie’s in London last September.

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