Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Swatch watchmaker, owner of Omega and Longines, ‘quits Baselworld trade fair’

STORYReuters
The logos of some of the many watch brands of Switzerland’s Swatch Group, which says it has quit the annual Baselworld watch and jewellery trade fair held in Basel, Switzerland. Photo: Reuters
The logos of some of the many watch brands of Switzerland’s Swatch Group, which says it has quit the annual Baselworld watch and jewellery trade fair held in Basel, Switzerland. Photo: Reuters
Timepieces

Decision by Swiss watchmaker – owner of luxury brands Longines and Omega – comes as exhibitors desert show because of high costs and insufficient returns

Swiss watchmaker Swatch Group is quitting the annual Baselworld watch and jewellery trade fair, the NZZ am Sonntag newspaper has reported – calling time on an event that has been a fixture of the luxury industry calendar for a century.

Omega maker Swatch is the most important exhibitor at Baselworld, which traces its history back to 1917, but more brands are deserting the fair held every March, blaming high costs and insufficient returns.

Advertisement

“The Swatch Group has decided not to be present at Baselworld from 2019,” the newspaper quoted Swatch CEO Nick Hayek as saying on Sunday.

The portfolio of Swatch, based in Biel in western Switzerland, spans the expensive Breguet, more affordable Longines and plastic Swatch timepieces.

Nick Hayek, CEO, Swatch Group

Some of Swatch’s high-end competitors have left Basel for a rival fair, the SIHH in Geneva, but Hayek said traditional annual watch fairs were no longer useful in a more transparent and fast-paced world.

Major exhibitors such as Swatch budget about 50 million Swiss francs (US$50.3 million) for each Baselworld, to cover travel and hotel expenses for staff and guests, the paper said.

Hayek, a famously outspoken and flamboyant character in a staid and conservative industry, cited the cost of the fair’s 430 million Swiss franc exhibition building, Messe Basel, as a reason for the decision to withdraw.

“We are not there to amortise an expensive hall designed by [Swiss architects] Herzog & de Meuron,” Hayek told the newspaper.