
Swiss Luxury Watchmakers' Shares Drop After Trump Tariff Shock
The sector, which exported watches worth 26 billion Swiss francs ($33 billion) in 2024, is already under pressure from a stronger franc and falling global demand.
Watch exports are on track to hit their lowest levels since the pandemic in 2020.
'The impact of the US tariffs, if they stay at 39 percent, could be devastating for numerous brands in Switzerland,' said Jean-Philippe Bertschy, an analyst at Vontobel.
Shares in Richemont and Swatch were both down around 1 percent at 9:06 GMT, paring back losses after earlier falling as much as 3.4 percent, and 5 percent, respectively.
Bertschy linked the move to hopes of Switzerland still getting a better deal - the tariffs are effective as of August 7.
Swatch Group chief executive Nick Hayek called on Swiss president Karin Keller-Sutter to meet Trump.
'Tariffs can change at any moment due to the unpredictability of the Trump administration,' said Georges Mari, co-owner of Zurich-based investment firm Rossier, Mari & Associates, which holds shares in Swatch, adding that it is 'impossible to make a serious forecast'.
Monday was the first day of trading following the US tariff announcement, as markets were closed on Friday for the Swiss National Day holiday.
The US is Switzerland's leading foreign market for watches, accounting for 16.8 percent of exports worth about 4.4 billion francs, according to the Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry.
While Richemont generated 32 percent of its full-year 2025 sales in the watches category, its exposure to the United States market should be just below 10 percent of overall sales, analysts at Jefferies said.
Swatch, meanwhile, generated 18 percent of its 2024 sales in the United States, with its CEO saying the company had raised prices by 5 percent following the first tariffs announcement in April.
By Isabel Demetz, Helen Reid; Editor: Adam Jourdan, Joe Bavier, Toby Chopra
Learn more:
Swiss Watchmakers Battle for Their Future
The sector is facing double-digit sales declines and a crisis of relevance. 'A watch has become a cultural object of sophistication… but culture has to constantly reinvent, otherwise it can disappear,' said former Cartier boss Cyrille Vigneron.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
AMD to report Q2 earnings as Wall Street looks to AI, PC sales growth
AMD (AMD) will report its second quarter results after the bell on Thursday, giving Wall Street a better understanding of the AI chip market ahead of rival Nvidia's (NVDA) report later this month. The company stands to benefit from the resumption of its chip sales in China after the Trump administration briefly banned them in April, as well as the potential for pull-forward in CPU sales as manufacturers built up inventory to fend off the impact of tariffs on PC sales. AMD shares are up 47% year to date and 34% over the last 12 months, while Nvidia shares are up 33% and 66%, respectively. For the quarter, AMD is expected to see adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.49 on revenue of $7.4 billion, according to Bloomberg consensus estimates. That would represent a 29% decline in EPS but a 27% jump in revenue. Part of the reason for that is that AMD is expected to take a $700 million hit from the Trump administration's ban on the sale of the company's MI308 AI chips for China. That's far lower than the $4.5 billion write-down Nvidia took in Q1 and the $8 billion it said it would take in Q2 due to the impact of the ban on its own China-specific chip. Trump reversed course on the ban last month, which should help make up for some of those losses in the coming quarters. AMD should also benefit from the launch of its MI350 line of AI chips, designed to go toe-to-toe with Nvidia's Blackwell-powered chips. According to AMD, the MI350 line, which includes the MI350X and MI355X, offers four times the AI compute performance and a 35x increase in inferencing capabilities versus its predecessors. 'We expect AMD to post higher results and higher guidance, as we see improving traditional server demand and latest generation share gains, as well as strong demand for MI355,' KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst John Vinh wrote in an investor note ahead of the company's earnings. AMD's Data Center segment is expected to bring in $3.2 billion in the quarter, up 14% year over year from Q2 2024 when the business generated $2.8 billion. Beyond the Data Center segment, AMD's Client business, which includes sales of CPUs for desktops and laptops, is expected to see $2.5 billion. That's a massive 71% jump versus the $1.4 billion it brought in during the same quarter last year. That anticipated increase is thanks to the anticipated pull-forward in laptop and desktop shipments to combat the Trump administration's tariffs. But it will also hurt sales in the back half of the year. 'Similar to [Intel], we expect AMD Client to benefit from tariff-related pull-in of demand in Q2, and that same benefit to likely reverse in 2H, leading to below-seasonal Q3/Q4,' BofA Global Research analyst Vivek Arya wrote in an investor note. 'For [Intel], new Street estimates for [Client Computer Group] now point to +4%/+2% [quarter-over-quarter growth] in Q3/Q4, below +7%/+4% prior to Q2 earnings and also below typical +9%/+4%,' Arya added. 'However, for AMD, we highlight Street estimates already embed the demand normalization, with Client estimates of +2%/+0% in Q3/Q4 well below typical +15%/+14%.' Email Daniel Howley at dhowley@ Follow him on X/Twitter at @DanielHowley. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Brazil chooses local relief over retaliation for US tariffs, sources say
By Marcela Ayres, Bernardo Caram and Lisandra Paraguassu BRASILIA (Reuters) -Brazil's government has set aside for now plans for direct retaliation against steep U.S. tariffs taking effect this week, focusing instead on a relief package for industries hit hardest by the levies, sources familiar with the strategy said. Wide-ranging exemptions granted in U.S. President Donald Trump's executive order last week spared some of the most vulnerable sectors of Latin America's largest economy, to the relief of many investors and business leaders. That has left Brasilia cautious about responding to Trump with reciprocal tariffs or other retaliation that could escalate tensions, said government officials, who requested anonymity to discuss confidential deliberations. Talks with Washington are likely to be slow and complex, said one of the sources, so Brazil's government is prioritizing immediate relief for exporters, such as through public credit lines and other support for export finance. Another official said the government is studying potential responses to the tariffs that would affect U.S. companies, but sees them as a last resort if negotiations fail. Those potential countermeasures, now under review, could include suspension of royalty payments for pharmaceutical patents and media copyrights, two sources said. The government had also signaled last year that it was preparing a new tax that could affect big U.S. tech companies, but shelved the plan this year to avoid antagonizing Trump ahead of his April tariff announcement. At the time, Brazil was saddled with a 10% tariff, among the lowest in the world, which many credited to a longstanding U.S. trade surplus with Brazil. Trump then tied a steeper 50% tariff in July to what he called a political "witch hunt" against former President Jair Bolsonaro, a right-wing ally on trial for an alleged coup plot to overturn his 2022 election loss. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva initially said he would respond under the country's Economic Reciprocity Law, passed by Congress to provide legal grounds for countermeasures against trade sanctions, fueling speculation about retaliation. Talk of reciprocal action has since faded, even as Lula criticizes Trump's rationale for the tariff hike, defending the independence of Brazil's judiciary and insisting any negotiations should remain strictly focused on trade. U.S. tariff exemptions granted last week for Brazil's aviation, energy and mining industries were taken in Brasilia as evidence that patient diplomacy and lobbying by affected U.S. companies seeking relief was the best way to get results in Washington. Brazil also said it plans to file a formal complaint at the World Trade Organization over the tariffs, even though that dispute settlement system has been stalled since the first Trump administration. "You still need to go through the available channels," one Brazilian official said, while acknowledging that a resolution is unlikely under the current state of the WTO. More immediately, the government is fine-tuning measures to shield sectors most hurt by the U.S. tariffs set to take effect on Wednesday, extending financial relief to companies already facing canceled contracts. Officials have said the package will likely include credit lines and possible tweaks to the export credit insurance and export financing mechanisms, according to one of the sources. Finance Minister Fernando Haddad, who said relief measures could begin rolling out this week, on Friday said the government was never committed to retaliating against Washington. "We never used that verb to characterize the actions the Brazilian government will take," he said. "These are actions to protect sovereignty, to protect our industry, our agribusiness, our agriculture," he told reporters. "That word (retaliation) was not present in the president's speech, nor in any minister's." Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Rolex, luxury watchmakers brace for Trump's tariffs on Swiss imports
Switzerland is bracing for a big tariff hike on its exports, and its watch industry could take the brunt if President Trump hits Alpine nations with an enhanced 39% tariff for its exports, slated to start on Aug. 7. The Swiss watch industry employs thousands of artisans at various watchhouses that pump out millions of wristwatches and clocks each year. The industry also employs thousands in corporate and retail roles too. In 2024, Swiss watch exports hit $29.5 billion, second only to manufactured items like pharmaceuticals and chemical products, with the US being Switzerland's main trade partner. A tariff at these levels could crush demand for new Swiss watches. 'A 39% markup could make even a stainless-steel Submariner at retail jump from $10,000 to nearly $14,000,' secondhand dealer Bob's Watches CEO Paul Altieri said to Yahoo Finance. Read more: What Trump's tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet Altieri noted that Bob's Watches' demand for pre-owned models is on the rise, with buyers hoping to avoid the tariff price surge. Indeed, watch prices have already been rising in the US when Swiss exports were hit hit a 10% tariff earlier this year. Morgan Stanley and its data partner WatchCharts found that prices for luxury watchmakers like Patek Philippe (up 6.9%), Audemars Piguet (up 6.7%), and Richemont's ( Vacheron Constantin (up 6.5%) have risen the most in its second quarter industry report. And these tariff-fueled price hikes won't just be situated in the US but will likely affect global customers too, argued watch trading site Subdial, which runs an online watch marketplace and releases its own watch index with Bloomberg. 'If they increase prices in the US only, we may see a knock on effect in other markets. It seems more likely that brands will increase prices across all geographies (so as to maintain pricing parity, an important principle within luxury), and just accept lower margins on US stock on account of tariffs,' a spokesperson for Subdial said. Price hikes will push more of these buyers to the secondhand market, where the selection is vastly wider and deals can be found, the Subdial spokesperson added. The big watch houses and retailers aren't saying much at the moment about where prices are headed. Swiss-based Swatch Group ( is the largest watch producer in the world and counts brands like Omega, Blancpain, Breguet, and, of course, Swatch, in its portfolio. A spokesperson for the group said the company would not comment at this time. Geneva-based Rolex, which is estimated to produce over a million luxury watches a year, is in the tariff crosshairs. A Rolex spokesperson did not respond to Yahoo Finance when sought for comment. Watches of Switzerland (WOSG.L) is one of Rolex's top retail partners and operates certain 'monobrand' Rolex-only boutiques. 'We note the announcement of the proposed new US tariff rate on imports from Switzerland due to come into effect on 7th August and will continue to work closely with our brand partners to mitigate any potential impact,' the company said in a statement to Yahoo Finance. Mitigating the impact in this case likely means passing on tariff costs to customers and/or absorbing a small percentage. And this is because the effect of full passage to customer would be huge. For Rolex and Watches of Switzerland, the tariff effects may not be as severe since they operate their own certified pre-owned (CPO) watch programs. Last year Rolex bought Bucherer, the jewelry and luxury watch retailer that operates the Tourneau chain in the US. New watch buyers could shift to these CPO programs and still keep revenue flowing. But as Bob's Watches points out, used prices are climbing in sympathy as demand rises. Interestingly, Trump's tariffs on the Swiss could actually hurt his own business interests. Last year, Trump licensed his name for a range of Trump-branded watches, with models dubbed 'Fight Fight Fight" and 'Mugshot suit,' as well as a $100,000 Swiss-made tourbillon movement watch in solid 18K gold. Pras Subramanian is the lead autos and wealth reporter for Yahoo Finance. You can follow him on X and on Instagram. Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest stock market news and events moving stock prices