Skip to main content
BoF Logo

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

Swatch Shares Plunge as Profit Falls 70% on China Weakness

The results underscore the downturn in demand for luxury goods in China as consumers in that key market shun purchases of pricey items.
Blancpain and Swatch collaboration sparks another sales surge.
CEO Hayek said he expects the Chinese market including Hong Kong and Macau to remain challenging for the entire luxury goods industry until the end of the year. (Shutterstock)

Swatch Group AG’s shares fell the most in four years after sales and profit plunged amid a China-led slowdown for Swiss watchmakers and other luxury companies.

The group, whose brands include Omega, Blancpain and jeweller Harry Winston, reported a 70 percent drop in operating profit and 14 percent drop in sales for the first six months of the year.

Swatch Group shares fell as much as 10 percent in early Zurich trading, the most since March 2020.

The results underscore the downturn in demand for luxury goods in China as consumers in that key market shun purchases of pricey items. Swatch Group chief executive Nick Hayek, in an interview, said the company has cut production by more than 20 percent while keeping its workforce intact to ride out the downturn.

ADVERTISEMENT

“The big impact is really mainly China,” he said.

Hayek said he expects the Chinese market including Hong Kong and Macau to remain challenging for the entire luxury goods industry until the end of the year. Entry-priced brands such as Swatch and Tissot will fare better than luxury brands such as Omega, Blancpain and Breguet, he said.

RBC analyst Piral Dadhania said the Swatch Group results are worse than expected and he anticipates “material earnings downgrades.”

Bernstein analyst Luca Solca called the report “really bad,” and said the company’s key Omega brand may be suffering from more availability of models at retail from rival Rolex, the top Swiss watch brand.

Like other luxury watchmakers, Swatch has been under pressure since soaring inflation caused consumers to curb spending after a pandemic boom. Less wealthy buyers have been squeezed the most, hitting sales of entry and mid-priced models.

Management at the company, which is controlled by Switzerland’s Hayek family, has also clashed with some shareholders who have criticised corporate governance and share-price performance. Swatch shares have declined about 17 percent in 2024.

Hayek said the company is retaining workers to avoid the “short-term thinking” typical of many publicly traded firms, in order to be ready when the market recovers. Otherwise, he said, it would have slashed the workforce by more than 30 percent.

By Andy Hoffman

ADVERTISEMENT

Learn more:

Swatch Shakes Up Executive Committee as Luxury Slowdown Persists

Chief controlling officer Peter Steiger, a 35-year veteran of the Biel, Switzerland-based company, will retire and leave the group, according to a statement Thursday.

In This Article
Organisations

© 2026 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Luxury
How rapid change is reshaping the tradition-soaked luxury sector in Europe and beyond.

Can Big Luxury Find Its New Look?

Sex sells — if anyone can figure out what sexy means in 2026. Robert Williams tracks the search for a new silhouette at Kering’s Gucci, LVMH’s Dior and more.


Swatch Group vs Morgan Stanley: It’s Time for Transparency

After Swatch Group launched an attack on Morgan Stanley’s influential annual watch report, Swatch-owned Tissot cracks open the door for a glimpse at some numbers and Robin Swithinbank says it’s time a secretive industry came clean on financials.


Is Armani Any Closer to a Stake Sale?

Half a year after Giorgio Armani’s death, it appears to be business as usual at the sprawling fashion empire while potential investors continue to circle with no firm bid in sight.


view more
Latest News & Analysis
Unrivalled, world class journalism across fashion, luxury and beauty industries.

Can Big Luxury Find Its New Look?

Sex sells — if anyone can figure out what sexy means in 2026. Robert Williams tracks the search for a new silhouette at Kering’s Gucci, LVMH’s Dior and more.


Estée Lauder’s Surprise Acquisition, Explained

The American cosmetic giant’s buyout of Ayurvedic beauty line Forest Essentials came as a surprise. By picking an under-the-radar brand it knows well, the company can show that it’s still in the M&A game without needing to outbid rivals.


VIEW MORE
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON