Almost two years after the original release, there are seven more editions of the Swatch X Blancpain Scuba Fifty Fathoms watch. Photo: Swatch
Almost two years after the original release, there are seven more editions of the Swatch X Blancpain Scuba Fifty Fathoms watch. Photo: Swatch
Almost two years after the original release, there are seven more editions of the Swatch X Blancpain Scuba Fifty Fathoms watch. Photo: Swatch
Almost two years after the original release, there are seven more editions of the Swatch X Blancpain Scuba Fifty Fathoms watch. Photo: Swatch

How Swatch hacked fine watchmaking with a series of landmark collaborations


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If you were to cast your mind back across some of watchmaking’s pivotal moments, you would probably settle on early wristwatch designs by Cartier or Patek Philippe. Maybe you would stay with Louis Cartier for an intriguing change of shape via his Tank watch in 1919, or check IWC Schaffhausen’s first Pilot watch in 1936.

Two years ago, the world was probably not anticipating any new checkpoint to include collaborations between Omega, Blancpain and the affordable fashion of Swatch, but that was exactly what it got. That and a liberal dose of hype.

Despite offering some of the most technically complex and desirable products on the planet, the watchmaking industry has never really been in the business of hype. At least not in the word’s current streetwear usage.

Queuing overnight on cold capital city streets is not for your average watch collector. That’s not to say that they don’t have their own version of hype, they do. It just involves being treated like royalty for an hour in a cosy boutique before adding their name to a decades-long waiting list for a Rolex Daytona. Far more civilised.

Watches from the Swatch X Omega MoonSwatch collection. Photo: Swatch
Watches from the Swatch X Omega MoonSwatch collection. Photo: Swatch

But while collectors struggle to obtain certain key pieces, the industry itself has bigger fish to fry and the particulars of a new client base to worry about. It’s all well and good passing on your Patek to a progeny, but when a generation all but shuns traditional watches in favour of something smart, you need to find a workaround, and fast.

In July 2021, the journey to that solution began in a meeting room in Biel, Switzerland, as Swatch chief executive Nick Hayek Jr, Omega chief executive Raynald Aeschlimann, Swatch creative director Carlo Giordanetti and Omega head of product design Gregory Kissling came up with an 11-piece collaboration between Omega and Swatch. Eight months later, in March 2022, the MoonSwatch – a bioceramic-cased version of Omega’s Speedmaster – was born.

Suddenly, a low-cost entry into fine watches had opened up, and you could acquire a version of a watch that would usually cost about $7,000 for a very reasonable $260. At least theoretically.

The reality was shock, awe and snaking queues. Even actor Daniel Craig and footballer Zlatan Ibrahimovic were pictured wearing them. In London, there were riots; in Amsterdam, the Swatch store window was smashed, and the entire display of MoonSwatches was stolen. While this madness ensued, resale sites were populated with MoonSwatches going for four or five times their original price.

“The lack of availability turned the craze mass market,” says Andrew Morgan, known as the Talking Hands on YouTube. “As soon as demand outstripped supply, the hype train snowballed, the watches were going for crazy money and the watch became legendary. And when these watches start becoming an asset with appreciating value in them, that’s when people are going to fight over them.”

The following year, Swatch paired up with Blancpain, releasing a five-piece $400 brightly coloured marriage of the Swatch Scuba and Blancpain’s iconic Fifty Fathoms. Cue similar, if more sedate, levels of chaos. But this one felt a little different.

While Blancpain specialises in complicated fine watchmaking, its brand presence is actually a fraction of that of Omega. So, now you had streetwear-clad youngsters standing for hours waiting to get hold of a watch from a brand that, hilariously, many didn’t quite know. It mattered not. These were seasoned hypebeasts looking to score an in-demand piece they could then upload to a resale site.

Now, even taking into account that all these brands are stablemates under the Swatch Group umbrella, it’s unlikely that even the most far-sighted of watchmaking clairvoyants saw this activity coming. But whichever way you dice it – and, boy, was it diced – the coming together of luxe watchmaking and the more disposable reputation of the 1990s-iconic Swatch (the word actually means Second Watch) changed things up.

“My take on the collaborations is that they very much are a marketing ploy, but in more of a hopeful, optimistic way,” says Morgan. “I genuinely believe the minds behind it want nothing but success, not just for Swatch, but for the brands they partner with, too. Goodness knows that some brands and, of course, the very concept of buying expensive luxury watches, needs to do better to capture the hearts and minds of the younger generation.”

Scuba Fifty Fathoms Pacific Ocean edition. Photo: Swatch
Scuba Fifty Fathoms Pacific Ocean edition. Photo: Swatch

Almost two years since the original Speedmaster MoonSwatch release, Bloomberg has reported that sales jumped 50 per cent in Omega stores, and seven other editions have been launched. August’s Mission to Moonshine Gold even came with a certificate – a true hype move, if ever we saw one – to state it was crafted under a full moon. Meanwhile, Blancpain was quick to capitalise on its own sudden Googleability, launching a version of its flagship dive watch just two weeks after the Scuba Fifty Fathoms’s release.

While these collaborations have certainly caused some consternation among watch aficionados – based on a whole range of grounds, from colour to material – the fact is they have been something of a win for all concerned, and for a variety of reasons.

“The Fifty Fathoms isn’t quite the household name that the Speedmaster is,” says Blake Buettner, managing editor of website Worn and Wound. “But where the MoonSwatch felt like a boon to Swatch, this conversely feels like it could be a boon to Blancpain.”

The Arctic Ocean model of the Blancpain x Swatch collaboration. Photo: Swatch
The Arctic Ocean model of the Blancpain x Swatch collaboration. Photo: Swatch

While the MoonSwatch quickly became something of a legend, the slightly muted response to the Scuba Fifty Fathoms could well have an impact on how the industry in general – and Swatch in particular – now moves forward.

“I’m not sure the Blancpain roll-out has been good enough to make another easy decision,” says Morgan. “I anticipate the conversation that’s been happening will be about doing another Omega, like the Seamaster, versus another Swatch Group brand. I think it’s unlikely any other brands or groups will license their products to Swatch. I think it’s unlikely, but not impossible, to see affordable Swatch Group favourites like Longines and Tissot get the Swatch treatment. They’re a bit too close in price.

“There are other brands like Jaquet Droz or Glashutte Original, which might just be too niche, which really only leaves Breguet. That’s my guess.”

But regardless of when and how the Swatch brand hacking of its luxe label mates continues, the whole operation has certainly given fine watchmaking a shot in the arm, placing it firmly on the wish list of a younger generation of consumers who will do almost anything to pick up a prized object.

And, really, that’s quite a turnaround. “Swatch saved the [watch] industry before by having a bit of cheap fun,” says Morgan. “No reason they can’t do it again.”

Brown/Black belt finals

3pm: 49kg female: Mayssa Bastos (BRA) v Thamires Aquino (BRA)
3.07pm: 56kg male: Hiago George (BRA) v Carlos Alberto da Silva (BRA)
3.14pm: 55kg female: Amal Amjahid (BEL) v Bianca Basilio (BRA)
3.21pm: 62kg male: Gabriel de Sousa (BRA) v Joao Miyao (BRA)
3.28pm: 62kg female: Beatriz Mesquita (BRA) v Ffion Davies (GBR)
3.35pm: 69kg male: Isaac Doederlein (BRA) v Paulo Miyao (BRA)
3.42pm: 70kg female: Thamara Silva (BRA) v Alessandra Moss (AUS)
3.49pm: 77kg male: Oliver Lovell (GBR) v Tommy Langarkar (NOR)
3.56pm: 85kg male: Faisal Al Ketbi (UAE) v Rudson Mateus Teles (BRA)
4.03pm: 90kg female: Claire-France Thevenon (FRA) v Gabreili Passanha (BRA)
4.10pm: 94kg male: Adam Wardzinski (POL) v Kaynan Duarte (BRA)
4.17pm: 110kg male: Yahia Mansoor Al Hammadi (UAE) v Joao Rocha (BRA

Understand What Black Is

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Teaching your child to save

Pre-school (three - five years)

You can’t yet talk about investing or borrowing, but introduce a “classic” money bank and start putting gifts and allowances away. When the child wants a specific toy, have them save for it and help them track their progress.

Early childhood (six - eight years)

Replace the money bank with three jars labelled ‘saving’, ‘spending’ and ‘sharing’. Have the child divide their allowance into the three jars each week and explain their choices in splitting their pocket money. A guide could be 25 per cent saving, 50 per cent spending, 25 per cent for charity and gift-giving.

Middle childhood (nine - 11 years)

Open a bank savings account and help your child establish a budget and set a savings goal. Introduce the notion of ‘paying yourself first’ by putting away savings as soon as your allowance is paid.

Young teens (12 - 14 years)

Change your child’s allowance from weekly to monthly and help them pinpoint long-range goals such as a trip, so they can start longer-term saving and find new ways to increase their saving.

Teenage (15 - 18 years)

Discuss mutual expectations about university costs and identify what they can help fund and set goals. Don’t pay for everything, so they can experience the pride of contributing.

Young adulthood (19 - 22 years)

Discuss post-graduation plans and future life goals, quantify expenses such as first apartment, work wardrobe, holidays and help them continue to save towards these goals.

* JP Morgan Private Bank 

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1) Kepa Arrizabalaga, Athletic Bilbao to Chelsea (£72m)

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4) Gianluigi Buffon, Parma to Juventus (£33m)

5) Angelo Peruzzi, Inter Milan to Lazio (£15.7m

Updated: February 09, 2024, 3:59 PM