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BASELWORLD

Tag Heuer announces plans for smartwatch

Luxury Swiss watchmaker Tag Heuer announced on Thursday that it was joining forces with technology behemoths Google and Intel to develop a smartwatch that can compete with the new Apple Watch.

Tag Heuer announces plans for smartwatch
Tag Heuer Director General Guy Semon, company CEO Jean-Claude Biver, Intel's Michael Bell and Google's Dave Singleton announce plans. Photo: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP

The timepiece, which aims to combine Swiss watchmaking know-how with high-end technology, is expected to hit stores by the end of the year, Tag Heuer chief Jean-Claude Biver told the Baselworld watch fair.
   
"Silicon Valley and Switzerland are going to conquer the market of the connected watch," he told a press conference at the world's largest trade show for timepieces, in the northern Swiss city of Basel.
   
Biver, an industry legend who also leads the watch division of Tag Heuer's owners LVMH, did not reveal how much the watch would cost or which functions it would have.
   
"We don't want the competition to know what we are going to do," he said.

"We want them to be surprised."
   
In a statement, the three companies said their partnership "signifies a new era of collaboration between Swiss watchmakers and Silicon Valley, bringing together each company's respective expertise in luxury watchmaking, software and hardware."
   
David Singleton, head of engineering for Android Wear at Google, said the company was "thrilled" with the project, telling the news conference the companies were ready to "forge a new evolution for the luxury watch of the future."

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BASELWORLD

Slump in luxury watch exports casts shadow over Baselworld

The world's biggest watch fair will open in Switzerland this week, even as slumping exports of luxury Swiss timepieces appear to dash hopes of a market rebound.

Slump in luxury watch exports casts shadow over Baselworld
Photo: Astrid Stawiarz/Getty Images North America/AFP
Global exports of Swiss watches slid ten percent in February to 1.5 billion Swiss francs ($1.5 billion, 1.4 billion euros), the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry (FHS) said on Tuesday.
   
The news cast a shadow over the looming Baselworld trade fair, which opens its doors to the media on Wednesday and to the public a day later.
   
The giant gathering in the northern Swiss city of Basel is the highlight of the year for watch and jewellery makers, with hoards of retailers looking to fill their showcases with pricey bling.
   
Investors had been hoping this year's 45th edition would open on a more positive note amid signs that the market was stabilizing and even on the verge of a rebound after two years of deep crisis.
   
Citigroup analyst Thomas Chauvet described Tuesday's export numbers as a “reality check”.
   
He said the figures showed there was “no underlying improvement” in the industry, despite a more “upbeat mood” from senior watch executives, and a more optimistic tone from the FHS in its January release.
   
Exports to Hong Kong, the biggest market for Swiss watches, slumped 12.1 percent last month.
   
And exports to the United States, the second biggest market, plunged 26.2 percent.
   
Most European markets also fell, and sales to Japan tumbled 17.3 percent.
   
Exports to China, however, rose 6.7 percent year-on-year in February.
   
That represents some much-needed good news for the industry — China was the main driver of several years of euphoric growth for Swiss watches, with Chinese consumers' thirst for luxury goods sparking a production boom.
   
But the market suffered a severe hit after Beijing in 2013 began cracking down on corruption by banning extravagant gifts like expensive watches to public officials.
   
And since then the storm clouds have multiplied, with the pro-democracy Umbrella protests in Hong Kong also chipping away at sales, followed by a range of deadly terrorist attacks in European cities frightening off luxury-seeking Asian tourists.
   
In 2016, Swiss watch exports shrank 9.9 percent, after contracting 3.3 percent a year earlier.
   
But in recent months, there were some indications the market was stabilizing.
   
Exports to China gradually inched back into positive terrain during the second half of 2016, and a number of markets around the world put on a healthy glow during the holiday season at the end of the year.
   
Watch makers themselves have also been making increasingly soothing sounds about the health of the market and justifying production hikes.
   
Swatch Group chief Nick Hayek told reporters last week that he was now aiming for “healthy growth”, driven particularly by China's growing middle class, which he said once again appeared hungry for consumption.
   
With such uncertainty, Baselworld, which each year draws around 1,500 exhibitors and some 150,000 visitors, should help gauge the actual state of the luxury watch market.
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