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Op-Ed | For Richemont, There Can Be Such a Thing as Too Many Luxury Watches

Richemont's approach shows a continuation of the disciplined stance it took during the latest luxury downturn, buying back excess stock and cutting about 300 Swiss staff to curb costs.
The Cartier Drive watch | Source: Cartier
By
  • Bloomberg Gadfly

ZURICH, Switzerland — There are too many luxury watches in the world. That was the assessment from Richemont Chairman Johann Rupert.

Rupert said Friday his company is supplying third-party retailers with fewer models than they are selling, so the number of its watches out in the market is shrinking.

He thinks some rivals are happy to flood the market with their wares, and that's a problem for the nascent watch recovery that investors are betting on.

Richemont's approach shows a continuation of the disciplined stance it took during the latest luxury downturn, buying back excess stock and cutting about 300 Swiss staff to curb costs.

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But full-year sales were lower than expected — in contrast to some of the forecast-busting performances announced by other high-end powerhouses over the past few weeks. And fourth-quarter sales growth was just in line with that of the previous three months, rather than the step up that had been anticipated, prompting the biggest fall in the shares for 11 months.

His evaluation is more evidence that expectations of a revival in demand of all manner of top-range products, from watches to handbags, have got ahead of reality. While there's no doubt that bling is back -- just look at the sales growth at LVMH and Kering — they were struck against easy comparisons, and there is no guarantee that luxury demand will continue to go gangbusters for the rest of the year, when comparisons get tougher. An M&A boom or a sharp acceleration in demand is needed to justify prices that are close to their peak.

There were some more positive aspects to Richemont's full-year results. Its operating profit of €1.8 billion ($2 billion) was better than expected — though that's down 14 percent from the year earlier, it's still a decent performance given the slump in the luxury market in 2016.

But even with Friday's fall, shares in Richemont are up about 45 percent since mid-September, when the group warned of a slump in full-year net income. The shares trade on a forward price earnings ratio of 25 times, just ahead of Swatch Group AG and a significant premium to the Bloomberg Intelligence luxury peer group.

Part of that rating is down to the decline in the watch makers' earnings over the past year. But it also reflects hopes that the watch market has finally turned a corner.

Indeed, Swiss watch exports increased for the first time in 21 months in March. And the broader luxury market has undoubtedly climbed out of its 2016 nadir, when a corruption clampdown in China hit demand there for top-range goods, and the terrorist attacks in Paris deterred high-spending visitors.

But valuations have got ahead of themselves, as Gadfly pointed out in February. Rupert's warning is a useful reminder that in some parts of the luxury landscape, at least, recovery remains fragile.

By Andrea Felsted; editor: Jennifer Ryan. This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Bloomberg LP and its owners. The views expressed in Op-Ed pieces are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Business of Fashion.

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