Professional Documents
Culture Documents
World Watch Case
World Watch Case
World Watch Case
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
As best as can be estimated, worldwide watch and watch movement production in 1970 reached the level
of 175 million units. At manufacturers' selling prices this production had a value of about $ 1.3 billion. Pin-lever
watches constituted slightly more than half of the total output; jeweled-lever watches made up the rest with the
exception of 1% - 2% of the total which belonged to a variety of electric and electronic models.1
Since the early 1950s, when worldwide watch production was at an annual rate of about 45 million units,
the output of the industry had increased fourfold. In the 10 years leading up to 1970, worldwide output increased
at annual rates that ranged between 7% and 11%. Talk about market saturation persisted among some
watchmakers, yet as of 1970 the overall growth of the industry and not shown any noticeable sign of slowing
down.(Table-1 shows the origins of the 1970 output2.)
These figures in Table-1 illustrate several important points. The first is a well-known one : Switzerland is
far and away the dominant watchmaking nation. In 1970 its production amounted to 42% of Worldwide output.
Table -1
* Estimated.
The second point is less well-known: there is considerable production in countries currently outside the
mainstream of Western commerce. In 1970 output in the USSR, East Germany and mainland China represented
about 17% of the World total. For the time being, at least the bulk of this output stays within the Eastern block.
Accordingly, the communist countries, and in particular the Soviet Union, will be excluded from this note's
analysis of the struggle for the world watch market.
With the Eastern block out of the picture, the Swiss domination of watchmaking becomes all the more
striking. In 1970 every other watchmaker in the non-communist world came from a Swiss plant.
The third point had to do with how the watchmaking in Switzerland, Japan and the United States are
1
For a brief guide to watch technology, see Appendix `A'
2
Data provided in Tables 1 through 5 are provided by the
Federation of Swiss Watchmakers.
1
linked to world markets. In 1970 Swiss watchmakers exported virtually all of their output, Japanese firms
exported slightly more than half of their output, and American companies exported almost none of their output. In
the case of the United States, the largest watch market in the world, domestic production accounted for slightly
less than half of its needs. Imports, some from foreign firms and some from United States - controlled plants sited
overseas, filled the void.
While data on the production of watches by country are readily available, figures on market size by country
are hard to come by. Still, rough estimates by major geographical areas are possible. In 1970, Europe in total
represented a market about equal to that of the United States : watch purchases in both markets ran at an annual
rate of around 45 million units. In the same year, Japan's home market was about a third of the size of those in
Europe or the United States. And as for the rest of the world (excluding or the communist countries), its market
roughly matched that of Europe or the United States.
The reminder of this note examines the three watchmaking industries, as of the early 1970s, were the most
active contenders for dominance in these markets. Sections II, III and IV describe, in turn, the Swiss, Japanese,
and the United States industries. Section V which concludes this note, discusses the recent technological advances
that have turned the contest into competitive turmoil.
"Watchmaking - long presumed the private preserve of Swiss interests, has in the last decade or so
clearly become a field that's up for grabs. The Alpine republic's one-time international hegemony in the
timekeeping business is now almost as full of holes as the country's justly famed cheese." Value Line
Selection and Opinion
Watchmaking has always occupied an especially important place in the Swiss economy and the year 1970
was no exception, roughly 1,000 different firms and 80,000 employees were engaged in making $ 630 million of
watch and watch-related products3. Watchmaking contributed almost 3% to the total Swiss GNP; in that year it
was Switzerland's fourth largest industry and it employed close to 8% of all manufacturing workers.
Of necessity, the Swiss economy depends heavily on exports, and watches have routinely been one of the
country's major foreign exchange earners. In 1970 about 97% of total watch production has shipped outside the
Swiss borders. Valued at $ 610 million, these shipments represented 12% of the total Swiss exports, making
watches the country's third most important export product.
In 1970, watchmaking contributed to the Swiss economy in still another important, if intangible, way. As
the Swiss Bank put it:
"The long-standing reputation of the Swiss watch industry also provides another free benefit to the
Swiss economy. Being a typical symbol of quality and reliability it acts as an advertising medium for
other Swiss products. Swiss industry, due to the absence of low-cost natural resources, is often at a
disadvantage, in terms of cost, when competing against other countries' products. Therefore, the
reputation of the Swiss watch does help to publicize the quality of the `Swiss-made' brand and acts as a
powerful sales argument."
Not only was the Swiss watchmaking industry important at home, it was important to the world.
Excluding production in communist countries, every other watch made in the world in 1970 came from
Switzerland. And three quarters of all watches exported from any country in 1970 came from Swiss plants.
Though the Swiss hold on the world market in 1970 was impressive, it was not so impressive as it had
been several decades earlier. In the late 1940s the Swiss share of worldwide production was over 80%, and the
Swiss share of watch exports, from all sources, was around 95%. In response to those who talked about the
3
Unless otherwise indicated all data originally stated in
Swiss franc have been converted into US dollars at the 1970
exchange rate 4.3 Swiss Franc = 1 US Dollar.
2
weakness of the Swiss industry, pointing out that its share of the world market had been out in half during 1950s
and 1960s, the Swiss answered by referring to the three-fold growth in their watch production. Back in the late
1940s the Swiss industry produced around 25 million watches and watch movements each year; by the early
1970s the industry was producing annually at close to the 75 million unit rate. Employment in the industry had
actually increased slightly since the post-world War-II years. In the Swiss view the dramatic growth in their watch
output represented a considerable achievement and indicated that Switzerland would remain the dominant watch-
producing nation for years to come.
The percentage shown above were almost identical for jeweled-lever and pin-lever watches.
amount of clock exports)
Tables 2 and 3 make one point quite clear. In 1970 the export of finished jeweled-lever watches
constituted the core activity of the Swiss watchmaking industry. Anything jeopardizing this segment could
jeopardize the entire industry .
Table -4 shows, by major geographical region, where the Swiss exports went in 1960 and 1970. Several
points stand out. First of all, Swiss exports of jeweled-lever watches have been somewhat more dispersed than
those of pin-lever watches. Second, during the 1960s, the U.S.- Canadian market declined in its relative
importance to the Swiss while the European market became more important to them. And third, by 1970 Asia had
become a major market for Swiss pin-lever watches. When looking at these figures, bear in mind that the value of
jeweled-lever exports was almost five times that of pin-lever exports. Consequently, the shifts is market that took
place with jeweled-lever watches had a far greater effect on the value of exports than did those that took place with
pin-lever watches.
3
USA - Canada 31.6% 22.3% 45.2% 36.2%
Latin America 14.5% 12.1% 15.1% 7.1%
Oceania 2.7% 2.0% 0.2% 0.3%
Table-5, which lists all the countries to which the Swiss shipped a million or more watches in 1970,
rounds out the exports pictures. As table-5 indicates, 11 countries imported the bulk-three quarters in unit terms
and two-thirds in value terms of Swiss watch production. As the World's largest watch market, the United States
was, quite naturally, number one in importance to the Swiss. Yet, as suggested by Table - 4, the Swiss share of the
U.S. Market has been eroding steadily. In fact, in 1950, 99% of all watches imported into the United States were
of Swiss origin; by 1970 this figures had dropped to around 70%. In the same period, the Swiss share of total
watch consumption in the United States had declined from 50% to about 40%.
The number two export market for Switzerland in 1970, Hong Kong, was a recent arrival on the scene.
One item largely accounted for the rapid emergence of Hong Kong as a Swiss customer. By 1970 almost 85% of
all pin-lever movement (not finished pin-lever watches) made in Switzerland were destined for Hong Kong where
they were cased and subsequently scattered over many for Eastern markets. Determining who actually controlled
what part of the Hong Kong trade in 1970 was an almost impossible task. Several Swiss pin-lever manufacturers
had assembly plants in Hong Kong, yet local interests were also involved in the business. About all that could be
said was that Hong Kong had become an important channel through which Swiss pin-lever watches reached many
overseas markets.
One final point brought out in Table - 5 needs mentioning. Note that Japan, the second largest
watchmaker, was not a major market for the Swiss. This fact has certainly had a bearing on how the Swiss have
viewed the competitive problems facing their industry. Whereas, in any sort of contest among Swiss, Japanese,
and U.S. Watchmakers, the Swiss could afford to give up their place in the Japanese market, they could not afford
to see their hold on the U.S. market seriously jeopardized. As well shall see in a subsequent section, in 1970 the
United States was also Japanese leading export market. It follows that, if the 1970s were to see a struggle for
leadership in the world watch industry, the battle would take place principally in the U.S. market place.
One fact, mentioned at the beginning of the preceding section, is the key to the number one problem that
faced Swiss watchmakers in 1970. The industry, which included around 1,000 different enterprises, was far more
fragmented than that in any other leading watchmaking nation. To understand why this was so calls for a brief
review of the development of watchmaking in Switzerland.
Early Development
The Swiss did not invent the watch. Over 300 years ago the rudimentary techniques of watchmaking
were brought to Switzerland by Huguenots placing religious persecution in France. At first they settled around
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Geneva; subsequently they spread throughout northwest Switzerland.
For more than a century and half several factors combined to foster a very independent, family-oriented
spirit among the early watchmakers. In part, watchmaking was a craft which depended on skills being passed on
from one generation to the next. In part, where many of the watchmakers lived, in relative isolation in the
mountains, prompted a very independent view. And in part, the fact that each family fabricated a few complete
time pieces each year nourished a sense of a distinct family watchmaking tradition. BY and large, the attitudes
formed them described by some as a student individualism, persisted into recent times.
In the first half of the 1800s, in response to advances in mechanization, individual products started to
specialise : some families concentrated on making parts, others on assembling parts into finished watches. By the
mid-1800s the industry had evolved into a two-tier manufacturing system with component manufacturing separate
from watch assembling. With few changes, the industry retained this characteristic up to the mid-structure of the
industry.
By 1900 watchmaking in Switzerland far outfaced that taking place anywhere else in the world. But the
industry was make up of thousands of small family-owned firms. Though the Swiss dominated watchmaking on a
worldwide scale land had established "Swiss Made" as a symbol of quality in watches, they had done so with an
industry ill equipped to cope with anything other than the most superficial economic difficulties. The crises of the
1920s and 1930s made this painfully apparent to the Swiss.
a. The Federation Suisse de Fabricants D' Horlogeri (FH): those firms assembling watches from components
parts supplied by others plus those few firms with integrated manufacturing operations. All of ;the output
of member firms was of the x jeweled-lever type. These were the firms that actually sold watches in the
marketplace.
c. The Union des Branches Annexes de l 'Horlogerie (UBAH): the manufacturers of components other than
ebauches.
The formation of these associations laid the foundation for industry cartelization. In 1928, in a series of
restrictive private agreement among the three major associations, the manufacturing, pricing, and exporting
policies of member firms were brought under industry control.
No sooner had the watchmakers taken these steps when the depression of the 1930s got underway.
Deteriorating conditions in the industry forced the Swiss government to come to its aid. As a first step, the
government, in 1931, invested in a super holding company, the Societe Generale de I 'Horlogerie Suisse SA
(ASUAC), which, in turn, acquired the majority of the shares of Ebauches SA and of several of the leading
components manufacturers. This move eased the financial woes of a number of the watchmakers and made the
government a direct partner in industry affairs. Then, in 1934, a federal statute ratified the web of the industry's
private controls and imposed new ones. Thereafter, watch manufacturing and exporting were permitted only with
government approval. From 1934 through 1965, the structure of the Swiss watchmaking industry and the make
up of the many restrictive covenants under which it operated remained almost unchanged. A list of the principal
government-sanctioned rules of the industry includes the following:
) a)The members of Ebauches SA and UBAH agreed to sell components only to the members of FH.
b)In turn, the members of FH agreed, with one exception, to buy components only from member firm of
Ebauches SA and UBAH. The firms in FH did reserve the right to buy foreign-made components, but
they also agreed not to buy such components unless they were priced more than 20% under the Swiss
level.
c)In addition, the members of FH agreed to fix their selling prices in accord with a complex inter-
5
association pricing system and a market formula. Ebauches SA and UBAH supplied the components at
specified prices, subject to change only after inter-association negotiation. And the watch assemblers and
integrated manufacturers established their prices using a standard mark up above association determined
manufacturing costs.
d)Finally, FH members agreed to limit their guarantees on finished watches to one year.
e)As regards government rules firms could only engage in watchmaking after obtaining authorization
from a federal department. The federal legislation effectively froze the structure of the industry : firms
could not expand, move or sell out, acquire others, or change the nature of their operations without
government approval.
f)In addition, the government rules regulated the Swiss industry's links with the rest of the world. To
preserve order in overseas markets, firms were required to obtain permits to export finished watches,
movements, and components. More importantly, to ensure that new foreign competitors would not spring
up and that existing foreign competitors would not benefit from advances in Swiss Technology,
Government approval was required for the export of tools and dies, engineering drawings, and
watchmaking machinery.
This elaborate system, designed to protect the status quo in a highly fragmented industry, persisted for
almost 40 years. Yet by the late 1950s events in the market place were making it obvious that something had to
change.
6
Industry Concentration
In the early 1960s about 2,000 separate enterprises were engaged in one facet or another of watchmaking
in Switzerland, Roughly speaking, these 2,000 firms fell into the following categories :-
Component Manufacturers
d) 17 manufacturers of Ebauches, all members of Ebauches SA.
e) About 650 manufacturers of separate parts.
f) Around 500 other firms performing miscellaneous functions.
Though these figures accurately reflect the extent of fragmentation that existed among finished watch
manufacturers, they misrepresent the situation that existed among component manufacturers. These organisations,
originally trusts composed of many small companies, dominated individual Parts manufacturing. They were :
Together with Ebauches SA, these three groups supplied about three-quarters of the Swiss industry's
requirements for Ebauches and separate parts4. Since they accounted for such a large share of components
production, it is obvious that the hundreds of other firms in the component sector either fulfilled highly specialized
roles or were quite marginal firms.
As we have seen a decade later, the number of firms in the Swiss watch industry was down to around
1,000, since 1966, when the Swiss government's restriction on the sale or acquisition of watch companies lapsed,
the industry experienced a crescendo of mergers. The Swiss were hurriedly some observers said frantically - trying
to create watchmaking firms matching the size and competitive clout of the major foreign rivals. Why the industry
was caught up in the merger's wave and where it was heading was summed up by one leading Swiss watchmaker
in these terms :
For many years far-sighted representatives of the watch industry stubbornly tries to introduce
new methods, to overcome outmoded structures. To eliminate the compartmentalization typical of Swiss
production, to channel the interest of technically-minded Swiss Watchmakers more into modern
marketing, to overcome difficulties rooted in outmoded protectionist ideas and to surmount assorted
similar problems. With few exceptions, however, they had to wait until very recently before there were
any visible signs of a trend towards industry cooperation and corporate concentration.
This development is irreversible and will doubtless accelerate in the future. It is already quite
conceivable that, under the growing pressure of competition from within and without the watch industry,
there will soon be a considerable increase in the number of medium-size companies (rather than
hundred of small ones). The only product lines likely to escape this trend will be a few speciality items
and exclusive products, the success of which does not depend on mass turnover.
Under these circumstances we do not think it overly bold to predict that, aside from the few
exceptions mentioned, in five years there may be only about ten watch producting enterprises operating
4
In 1968 another holdingcompany type arrangement was
established within the componenet sector. A number of small
watch jewel manufacturers became members of Pierrea Holding SA.
Altogether, the members of this new group supplied about 60% of
the total Swiss jewellever production.
7
in this country5.
As of 1972 there was, at least on paper, ample evidence that the Swiss were succeeding at consolidating
the industry. Whether the Swiss were also succeeding at converting the many newly formed companies into
operationally effective organization was still an open question. Then world received a fairly steady stream of
reports about mergers and plans for mergers; it did not hear much of what was said within the boardrooms and
corporate offices of the Swiss companies. Undoubtedly, the pains and problems of transition were taxing the
managerial skills of many Swiss executives.
Still, progress looked impressive. Both horizontal and vertical mergers were changing the industry
profoundly. For instances, as the result of a series of horizontal mergers, the Swiss finally had one watch company
that could match the size of large foreign rivals, Founded in 1930, the Societe Swiss de 1 'Industrie Horlogers
(SSIH), the manufacturer of such famous brands as Omega and Tissot, had always been a leader in the watch-
making industry. In the early 1960s it controlled about 9% of total Swiss watch exports. But even with that share
of exports, SSIH was small compared to the leading Japanese and U.S. watchmakers. Then, after 1966, SSIH
broadened its activities and, in 1971, merged with Economic Swiss Time Holding (ESTH). This second group,
composed of a number of pin-lever manufacturers, accounted for 20% - 25% of total Swiss pin-lever output. By
the end of 1971, the enlarged SSIH controlled over 20% of Swiss watch exports and had an annual turnover of
close to $ 130 million.
ASUAG, the "super-trust" controlling a majority interest in Ebauches SA and in the three largest
component manufacturers, gave birth to another large horizontal group, when, in 1971, it combined the
assembling firms selling seven different brands into the General Watch Holding Company. This move forged
important new financial and managerial links between the component manufacturing and assembling sectors of the
watch industry.
Meanwhile, Ebauches SA entered into another set of arrangements with both horizontal and vertical
merger characteristics. In 1970 the Longines-Record Watch Company and the Rotary Watch Company joined to
form Holdings Longines SA. Then, in 1971, Ebauches became major partner in this new venture. As in the case
with ASUAC, the Swiss joined together companies whose fundamental activities were assembling and marketing
watches and simultaneously linked the amalgamation to the component manufacturing sector.
The upshot of these mergers, and dozens more, had been the creation of a partially concentrated industry.
By 1971 almost three-quarters of all Swiss watch exports were accounted for by eight watch-making groups. But
the industry structure was still lopsided. A residue of several hundred small firms contributed the other quarter of
Swiss exports. Thus there was a growing gap between the big watchmaking combinations and the little
independent producers. Under these circumstances, it seemed fairly certain that only one of two different futures
faced most of the small companies: absorption by the big holding groups or collapse.
As for the large watch companies, the mere fact that most of them had multiplied their size through a
series of mergers did not guarantee that they would enjoy the benefits of size. They still had to tackle such tasks as
eliminating duplicate product lines, combining production facilities, streamlining management systems, and so on.
As suggested above, in the early 1970s the evidence of progress along these lines was still sparse.
a) Iseca SA, a consortium of Swiss watch manufacturers, acquired 100% of the Waltham Watch
Company.
b) Sopinter SA, a Swiss holding company, acquired a 16% interest in Elgin.
c) Chronos Holding SA, a financial company set up for the express purpose of promoting
amalgamation within the Swiss industry, purchased 20% of Gruen.
And in 1971 the Swiss took another step which could ultimately give them control of one of the most
famous names in American watchmaking, the Hamilton Watch Company. Apart from its proud tradition in
conventional watch-making, Hamilton had been on the technological forefront on more than one occasion. In 1957
5
Robert Brandt, "The Position of the Watch Industry",
Credit Swisse Bulletin.
8
it had been the first U.S. firm to market an electric watch. In 1971, with its "Pulsar" (which used light - emitting
diodes) it was the first U.S. firm to market a digital watch. Still, Hamilton came upon hard times.
The history of the Swiss move to take over Hamilton started in 1970 when Bush Universal, Inc., a
diversified firm that leased piers and buildings in Brooklyn, New York, bought 50.2% of the almost bankrupt
Hamilton Company. Subsequently, after Hamilton's losses deepended further, Bush spun off the watch business
into a new subsidiary and sold 17% of it to Aetos, as part of the deal, also accepted a note from Hamilton which,
if converted after three years, would increase the Swiss Company's interest in Hamilton to 51%. Hamilton seemed
destined to become a member of the Swiss camp.
The basic motivation for all these investments was fairly clear. Though the second tier of U.S.
Watchmakers, those that had not attained the size of Bulova and Times, were, barely able to meet the mounting
competition within the industry, they all possessed one valuable asset; established trade names. To the Swiss,
control of the names, in part or in whole, opened the door to increased penetration of the U.S. market. There was
some evidence that the Swiss intended to fight the electronic watch battle in the United States with trade names
which American consumers would assume were those of fine old U.S. watchmakers.
What else were the Swiss doing to insure the continued prosperity of their watchmaking industry ?
Promotional Practices :
Up until the late 1960s Swiss watchmakers relied mainly on an institutional approach to promotion. They
channeled a high proportion of their promotional expenditures through industry - wide organizations, like the
Federation of Swiss Watchmakers, into collective campaigns in overseas markets. The campaigns stressed the
quality and reputation of "Swiss-Made" watches rather than specific brands. Of course, a few of the larger Swiss
watchmakers supplemented the industry's activities by promoting their own brands. Names like Rolex and Omega
became world-renowned. Still, the sale of watches bearing established brand names constituted a small fraction of
total Swiss exports. This was particularly true in the case of watches falling in the low and medium - price
categories.
As of the early 1970s this all started to change. The 1971 Annual Report of the Federation of Swiss
Watchmakers (FH) described the new approach :
"During 1971, the FH continued on the new course adopted after the concentrating on designing,
carrying out, and financing promotional activities with fuller co-operation from the brands involved.
This change in the FH's approach to promotion consisted in a shift away from collective promotion
mainly benefiting the industry as a whole in favour of programmes integrating the brands involved in
every way................"
Even though Swiss watchmakers reallocated more and more of their promotional fun a from industry to
company campaigns, they still continued to support the industry's many long-standing technical programme.
Since the Second World War, the Swiss sponsored watch-repair training schools in many countries. They
established technical centres and after-sales service centres in a number of foreign markets. They frequently held
seminars, in Switzerland and overseas, on a wide range of subjects related to the watch industry. And they
conducted a variety of training programmes covering the management, marketing, and distribution aspects of the
watch business. Almost all of these efforts were collective undertakings. By and large, they were regarded as
essential to the success of the industry.
And there were no signs that Swiss efforts along these lines would diminish in the 1970s.
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up for full-scale manufacturing and marketing.
Whether the first decade of operation of the CEH was regarded as a success or not seemed to depend on
who was making the assessment. American watchmaker pointed out that the CEH failed at developing a tuning-
fork device that did not violate Bulova's patents. The Swiss claimed that the CEH had come up with an acceptable
alternative. Still, in 1968 Ebauches SA entered into a license agreement with Bulova to manufacture and sell
watches based on Bulova's tuning-fork movement. As for research on the quartz crystal watch, the Swiss stressed
that the CEH had perfected a commercial model before anyone else. Yet when the Swiss introduced their first
quartz watches in 1971, American watchmakers noted that the contained integrated circuits made by U.S. firms.
The Swiss had hoped to avoid this turn of events. In fact, this hope had prompted their second major research and
development effort of the 1960s.
In 1966 the Federation of Watch Manufacturers (FH), two Swiss companies (Brown Boveri and Landis &
Cyr.), and Philips of the Netherlands formed FASEC, a Laboratory for joint research in the fields of semi-
conductors, integrated circuits, and lasers. The purpose of the project was clear enough: to make sure that the
Swiss watchmaking industry would not be dependent on U.S. electronics manufacturers. Yet some observers
interpreted the formation of FASEC as an indication of the weakness of the Swiss watchmaking industry, for it
had to turn to a foreign company, Philips, for advanced electronics technology. As of 1972 there was no way for
outsiders to measure what FASEC had accomplished, since Swiss electronic watches still contained American -
made circuity and the Swiss were reticent about describing FASEC's research output.
How much has the Swiss industry spent on developing the electronic watch? Unfortunately, the figures are
not available to answer the question with any precision. What follows, therefore, is based on the crudest of
estimates. According to some reports, the Swiss have spend around 2.5 million per year CEH's research activities.
The Swiss industry has backed up FASEC to the same extent, -- the industry has been putting about $ 5 million a
year into research and development related to the electronic watch. This figure looks respectable until it is
compared to total industry turnover; it amounts to about 0.8% of industry sales. Suppose, and this is rather
unlikely, that individual Swiss firms have matched the research and development expenditures of the industry -
sponsored programmes. Total outlays, even then, would have added up to not much more than the half per cent of
industry sales.
If these figures describe, even in rough terms, the level of research and development commitment of the
Swiss industry in the late 1960s and early 1970s, they raise the question of whether that commitment was high
enough. It's safe to assume that the Swiss were asking themselves that some critical question.
Diversification :
Throughout the last decade Swiss watchmakers have talked at length about the advantages of
diversification. Yet it is fair to say that as of the early 1970s no Swiss watchmaker, big or small, was in any sense
diversified. True, some produced items other than watches and clocks, but almost without exception these other
goods were intimately related to the technology of time keeping.
In the case of the many small firms, the reasons why they held fast to their narrow product lines were
fairly obvious. A close family orientation, 30 years of protection under cartel rules, and a perception of their
business in specific technical terms did not foster among the small watchmakers the inclination or the basis for
diversification. And the case of the large firms, they had been so preoccupied since the mid-1960s making and
digesting mergers that it is unlikely they had either the time or the resources to pursue diversification seriously.
Whatever the causes, the Swiss watchmakers faced the problem of the 1970s from a very narrowly defined
business base.
A Swiss watch manufacturer was asked if the Russians posed a threat in his business.
"The Russians" he laughed. "They always seem to be ten years behind."
"And the Japanese? How far behind are they?"
"About three weeks ................."
Jewelers' Circular - Keystone
Early Development
Watchmaking started in Japan in the 1880s, For the next 50 years Japanese watchmakers concentrated
almost exclusively on supplying their home market and on making jeweled-lever watches. They stressed jeweled-
lever production because they wanted to emulate the best in western watchmaking. Yet, by most standards, the
10
quality of the time-pieces made in Japan in the industry's early days was inferior to that of time-piece made in the
West. And, in fact, the Swiss dominated the premium end of the market, supplying about 90% of Japanese
imports.
By the late 1930s Japanese production of watches and watch movements had reached the level of around
5 million units per year. One firm had emerged as the industry leader; alone it accounted for almost one-half of
Japanese production. Then the Second World War and its aftermonth postponed further growth of the industry for
almost 20 years. Japanese watchmakers did not produce at the 5 million unit level again until the 1958-1959
period. By then, and had significantly upgraded the quality of its product. The Japanese were ready to make their
presence known as a full-fledged member of the world watch industry
Industry Structure
In sharp contrast to the situation in Switzerland and to the state of the U.S. industry until recent years. the
Japanese watch industry has always been highly concentrated. Over the years, four firms have accounted for
almost all Japanese watch production. More strikingly, two firms have accounted for almost 90% of the
production. As of 1970, the industry structure looked like this :
* In terms of value.
Obviously, K. Hattori & Co. is the General Motors of the Japanese watch industry. To understand the
industry, therefore, one has to know something about this dominant leader. How did the company operate in 1979?
Actually, K. Hattori was only the sales arm of a cluster of firms known as the Seiko Group. Two subsidiaries in
the group, Daini Seikosha and Suwa Seikosha, produced watches, movements, and components. Another
11
subsidiary produced clocks. Still other subsidiaries manufactured products outside the time-piece field. K. Hattori
managed all the sales activities for the group, marketing its products worldwide under the Seiko trade name.
By the mid-1960s the Seiko group had become the world's largest producer of jeweled-lever watches. The
reasons for Seiko's success are spelled out in the sections that follow. Bear in mind, that even though the
discussion focuses in the entire industry, what Seiko has done has been the key to what the industry has
accomplished.
Manufacturing :
A combination of four factors has made it possible for the Japanese to be remarkably efficient low-cost
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watch producers. These factors have been:
By putting these together, the Japanese manufacturers attained economies of scale unmatched anywhere
else in the world watch industry.
The labour factor is, of course, the first that immediately comes to the outsider's mind. And there is no
doubt that the Japanese have had a significant edge over other producer's in this respect. This has been especially
true in the case of jeweled-lever watches since the labour content associated with their production is relatively
high. For example, as late as 1965 the workers assembling jeweled-lever movements in Japan were earning about
one-fifth of what their counterparts were earning in the United States. By the late 1960s, however, rapidly rising
wage rates in Japan were eroding the industry's labor-cost advantage.
The response of the industry to mounting wages highlighted its determination to preserve its competitive
advantage. Japanese watchmakers were not content to stay at home seeing their costs spiraling upwards. Instead,
they were prepared to shift production, or at least some of it, to new low-wage countries. By 1970 both Seiko and
Citizen had established manufacturing facilities in Hong Kong. Thus, the watchmakers, like many other Japanese
manufacturers, had few qualms about pursuing low-wage labour wherever expanding, they did not have to face
the problem of protecting employment at home.
Still, Japan's labour-cost advantage should not be overemphasized. It has been only part of the total
manufacturing picture. The Japanese watchmakers have also stressed the use of the most advanced production line
techniques. According to industry legend, this all came about as the result of a visit to the United States by
engineers of K. Hattori & Co. After World War II they studied the production techniques used by a number of U.S.
watchmakers and also visited the auto-assembly plants in Detroit. Apparently they were especially impressed by
what they saw in the watch industry but were struck by what they saw in the automobile industry. In any case, by
the mid-1950s K. Hattori & Co. had adapted its watchmaking to a conveyor-belt assembly-line operation. With
this type of production Hattori could use not only cheap labour, but also unskilled labour. The rest of the Japanese
industry soon followed Hattori's lead.
The industry took all other steps necessary to foster low-cost production. It integrated backward into the
manufacture of components, jewels, even watchmaking machinery. And it standardized production whenever and
wherever it could. The result of combining all these features of manufacturing has been a total mass-production
approach to watchmaking.
Comparing the Swiss industry to the Japanese industry dramatizes the difference in their approach to
manufacturing. In Switzerland, as we have been around 1,000 firms were involved in producing, largely through a
two-tier system, about 74 million watches in 1970. In the same year two Japanese firms, Seiko and Citizen,
produced in-house the equivalent of 30% of the total Swiss output.
What did this difference mean in terms of actual production cost? As might be expected, the watchmakers
were reluctant to give out specific figures. One has to rely on indirect measures to get at the answer. Table-7
provides at least a clue.
Table-7: Per-Unit Value of Watch Movements Imported into the United States*
(Calculated from 1970 data)
13
Are these figures a valid guide to the production cost differential between Switzerland and Japan?
Undoubtedly the Swiss would say no, claiming that the Japanese figures represent only marginal prices. Perhaps
this is true, but even so the figures pin-point an advantage that the Japanese have had over the Swiss. With a large
market, the Japanese have been able to absorb all fixed costs over their domestic production. They could,
therefore, afford to sell at or near marginal costs in foreign markets. With practically no home market, the Swiss
could pursue the same pricing strategy only with great difficulty. Whether the figures in Table-7 reflect production
costs of pricing policies or a combination of the two, they show that the Japanese had the ability to undercut Swiss
prices anywhere from 15% to 45% in the largest watch market in the world.
"For years the Swiss ruled the world watch market with a regiment. The Japanese are countering now
with several giants. A lot of the troops in the regiment aren't going to make it in a battle with giants.
Besides, the industry can't hold very many giants. How the U.S. watchmakers will come out of this, in
between the Swiss and the Japanese trading punches, isn't at all clear.
14
IV :The U. S. Watch Industry
"We've been able to beat foreign competition simply because we are foreign competition"
- Harry B. Henshal, President, Bulova Watch
Highlights as of 1970 :
In 1970 U.S. consumers spent approximately $ 1 billion to purchase about 45 million wristwatches, of
which roughly 40%, or about 18 million had been manufactured at home, while the remaining 60% had been
imported from foreign countries or from the Virgin Islands. At the same time, U.S. watch exports, as they had been
for many years, were nil. Thus in 1970 the United States was both the World's largest watch market and the
world's largest net importer of watches. However, as we shall see shortly, these figures do not mean that foreign
watchmakers supplied 60% of the U.S. market.
Although the United States was the World's largest watch market, watchmaking represented an
insignificant part of U.S. manufacturing industry. Workers engaged in watchmaking constituted only one-tenth of
1% of total manufacturing employment. In fact, only two U.S. watch companies, Bulova and Timex, were
involved in any domestic watch production. This point is crucial. To understand anything about the U.S. watch
industry as it moved into the 1970s, it is first imperative to distinguish between those watchmakers that are both
U.S. manufacturing and selling enterprises and those that were merely U.S. marketing organizations. Making that
distinction calls for some history.
15
becoming questionable whether these watch marketers could survive.
Industry Structure :
Even though market-share data are not publicity available, it is clear that two companies ruled the U.S.
watch market in the early 1970s. Probably somewhere between two-thirds and three-quarters of all watches sold in
the United States were made by either Bulova or Timex. Another half dozen U.S. watch companies and a group of
foreign watchmakers scrambled for the rest of the U.S. market.
Exhibit 2 presents some of the basis facts about the firms traditionally considered to be part of the U.S.
watch industry. Three points stand out in the exhibit. First, most of the companies did not manufacture in the
United States. Second, most were losing money in the early 1970s. And third, several had sold out to larger U.S.
companies or two Swiss interests. If Exhibit 2 included balance-sheet data, it would also show that a number of
the companies were heavily in debt. Apart from Bulova and Timex, the once proud U.S. watch industry was in a
fairly sorry state as of the early 1970s. What had Bulova and Timex done right to separate themselves from
others?
Bulova :
During the 1960s Bulova's management pursued four main goals:
How Bulova tackled the U.S. marketplace is indicative of the product strategy the company implemented
around the world. Throughout the 1960s and into the 1970s Bulova sold a line of watches in each of the three
major market segments, low, medium, and high-price, and equalled or outfaced competition in each segments.
At the bottom of the market, in the price range of around $30 and under, Bulova offered its "Caravells"
line. In 1961 response to Timex, Bulova had countered with this line which, though priced competitively with
Timex's pin-lever watches, consisted solely of watches containing jeweled-lever movements. Bulova was able to
challenge Timex because it had turned to a Japanese supplier, Citizen Watch, for inexpensive jeweled-lever
movements. By the mid-1960s Bulova claimed that it was the leader in the jeweled-lever part of the inexpensive
watch market. Parenthetically, it should be noted here that Bulova's success with the Caravelle line probably
explains why Citizen, Japanese second largest watchmaker, has never moved into the U.S. market on its own.
The middle of the market, consisting principally of jeweled lever watches selling in the $ 30 to $ 100 price
range, has always been Bulova's stronghold. The company marketed literally hundreds of models under the Bulova
name, and within this segment of the market remained price competitive by manufacturing the watch movements
in its own Swiss plants. In fact, supplying the U.S. market made Bulova the largest single manufacturer in
Switzerland.
At the top of the market, Bulova's tuning-fork watch, the "Axxutron", was in a class of its own. Why this
was so, calls for a little history. Clocks based on the tuning fork principle dated from the turn of the century. In
1952s young Swiss engineer, working at the Bulova plant in Switzerland, got management approval to develop a
miniaturized tuning-fork movement. By the mid-1950s he had partially succeeded. Bulova brought his prototypes
to the United States and miniaturized them further by applying advanced electronics and metallurgical techniques.
After patenting the device, Bulova put it on the market in 1960 as the `Accutron' watch.
Though the Accutron did not compete head-on with luxury mechanical watches, those sold more as
jewelry than as time-pieces, it soon grabbed the lion's share of watch purchases in the over $ 100 price category.
Moreover, Bulova swept the market with a watch designed solely for men; for technical reasons, "Mini-Accutors"
for women were not put on the market until 1971.
Whereas Accutron's uniqueness undoubtedly accounted for much of Bulova's success within the high-
price segment of the watch market, uniqueness of product could not account for Bulova's success in the other two
segments of the market. Instead relied on aggressive marketing. Advertising and distribution support, for year's
Bulova's forte, were the two critical marketing factors.
By the second half of the sixties, Bulova was spending as much as $ 4 million at a crack of its seasonal
advertising campaigns. By the beginning of the seventies it was spending half of all watch advertising dollars in
the United States. It maintained the largest sales forte within the industry and provided the distributors,
particularly jewelers, with dozens of different selling and service programmes. In short, Bulova, which came out of
16
the second World War somewhat larger than its rivals, increased the gap by pouring funds into marketing at a rate
unparalleled in the industry
Meanwhile, Bulova management built the manufacturing base that ensured the success of its marketing
strategy. It expanded the company's manufacturing operations until, by 1970, it had 20 plants scattered around the
world. As suggested by the quotation at the beginning of this section, Bulova's management saw its worldwide
production system as its key competitive strength. With this system Bulova could pick the time and place for
producing a particular watch. For instance, it concentrated U.S. production on the Accutron, which require a low
labour input sophisticated technology.
Furthermore, as it broadened its manufacturing base, Bulova became capable of conducting research and
development and market testing at more than one site. It developed its Mini-Accutron for women in Switzerland
and first put it on the market in France.
As production spread around the world, so too, did sales. Whereas, in 1960 international business
accounted for not much than 5% of Bulova's consumer sales (these exclude defence and industrial sales) a decade
later the percentage was in the 20% range. Part of this surge could be attributed to the Accutron, which Bulova
introduced, with success, in a number of overseas markets. Thus by carrying competition into its foreign rivals'
own backyards, Bulova diluted somewhat the efforts they could bring to bear on the U.S. marketplace.
At the same time that Bulova was pushing its sales base, it was also shoring up its worldwide dominance
in the field of tuning fork technology. In 1968, Swiss manufacturers, unable to develop a version of the tuning-fork
movement that did not conflict with the Bulova patent, agreed to enter into a licensing agreement with Bulova.
Consequently, by the early 1970s several Swiss producers, Bulova's licensees, were making and selling their own
versions of the tuning-fork watch. And on the other side of the globe, the Citizen Watch Company, Japan's Second
largest watchmaker and minority partner with Bulova in the joint manufacturing venture, was making and selling
Accutrons under another license agreement with Bulova.
The combination of all these factors turned Bulova into the world's largest watch seller, in dollar terms.
Timex :
Coming out of nowhere in 1950, Timex carved out a major place for itself in the U.S. Watch market in the
1950s and in foreign markets in the 1960s., On almost every count Timex's product and market strategy differed
from that of the traditional watchmakers. Timex did not build its reputation on the jeweled-lever watch. Instead, it
took a pin-lever movement, simplified it even further so that it could be mass-produced with automated techniques,
put in simple but tasteful cases and marketed its first watch line to retail at $6.95 to $7.95. Then Timex went
outside the conventional distribution system, first selling most of its watches through drug stores and subsequently
through a number of mass merchandisers. Next, Timex drummed up sales through intensive advertising. Like
Bulova, Timex spent far more for its advertising than was customary in the industry at the time. But unlike Bulova
or any other rival Timex promoted its line in ways that were unorthodox and, according to critics, somewhat
garish. One example of Timex's off-key advertising approach, its "torture tests", became a standard on network
TV in the late 1950s.
By the early 1960s Timex could claim that it was selling one out of every three watches in the United
States. It then broadened its product line with electric watches and some jeweled-lever models. Consequently, by
the late 1960s Timex could claim that it was selling every other watch in the United States.
While Timex was strengthening its hold on the market, it was also, like Bulova, building up a worldwide
manufacturing system. By 1970, it too had 20 plants scattered around the world. Thus, both giants in the U.S.
watch industry had manufacturing bases more widely dispersed than any of their U.S. rivals, or, for that matter,
than any of their foreign rivals.
1) By the end of the 1960s watchmakers could no longer base their marketing strategies almost
exclusively on the punch of the conventional distribution system. Both Bulova and Timex marketed their
products directly to consumers and made their brand names, not the jeweler's recommendation, the key to
watch sales. In part, this switch in marketing emphasis was a natural consequence of the sweeping
changes that affected the distribution and retailing of many consumer goods. In part, it was associated
with the slow but steady disappearance in the United States of an important source of consumer
information; the watch repairman. It was also related to consumer confusion over quality. In the 1950s
17
and 1960s the industry baffled the consumer with literally thousands of watch models and recurrent price
cutting. Unable to determine what was a good watch at a fair price, the consumer naturally turned to the
one or two brands with which he or she was most familiar.
2) Unexploited niches were a thing of the past in the U.S. watch market. Bulova was very explicit about
its strategy in this regard. Note this comment in its 1970 annual report :
"Bulova's market researches have sought to identify the particular needs of segments consumer
groups. That we have succeeded in this crucial phase of our operations is evidenced by the
record number of more than 800 different watch models offered to the United States markets."
The report went on to note that Bulova sold watches in the price range of $10.95 to $11.000. And, of
course, Timex completely blanketed the low price field and part of the mid-price field. The rest of
competition, the other U.S. watchmakers and dozens of foreign manufacturers, offered hundreds of
additional models. By 1970, the chance that a watchmaker would find a niche unnoticated by competition
was, for all practical purposes, nil.
3) Finally, the U.S. watch company with a strictly domestic orientation was an anachronism. During the
1960s Bulova and Timex redefined themselves as multinational firms; their outlook on markets and
production became worldwide. Over time they internationalized their marketing, production, and research
and development skills and competed successfully because they exploited advantages regardless of where
the advantages were located. It is questionable if either firm, or any other major watchmaker, for that
matter, could survive in the 1970s if it limited its operations to a single country.
What about some of the other factors that would determine the competitive ability of U.S. watchmakers in
the 1970s?
"The products made in the company's four non-consumer areas have as a common
denominator, watch-making technology and miniature electronics, threading through the
production of artillery and mortar fuses, micro-circuit automation equipment, test
instrumentation, crystals, oscillations, and serve-mechanisms, and production of millions of
pin-head sized synthetic jewels."
Other watchmakers engaged in similar activities. Timex developed and manufactured gyroscope and
timing devices. Benrus supplied high-precision components for missiles, power-supply systems for naval vessels,
and electronic instrumentation for satellites. Elgin made flight instruments.
To be sure, not all of the U.S. watchmakers retained the technical knowledge and expertise they acquired
18
in the course of meeting defense needs. Those that had to sell out to other companies or that had experienced
especially hard ties at the end of the 1960s more than likely saw their reservoir of knowledge and skills dwindling
away or becoming obsolescent. In the early 1970s the smaller U.S. watch companies showed no striking evidence
that they had a technological lead over Swiss and Japanese companies. Bulova and Timex were a different matter,
however, they had prospered throughout the 1960s. They, therefore, had the opportunity to build up their
reservoirs of skills. In the early 1970s they were in the technology vanguard, and as the decade rolled on their
accumulated technical capabilities might well turn to be their most important competitive edge over Swiss and
Japanese rivals.
Diversification :
At the end or another in the fifties and sixties almost all the U.S. watchmakers experimented with
diversification Generally speaking, none of the experiments was successful. Several firms did develop lines of
industrial products like precision parts or electromechanical components, but the sale of these lines never became a
major part of their operations. And as for consumer goods, the watchmakers demonstrated a fairly consistent
inability to market successfully a second consumer line.
Some industry observers attributed this weakness to the watchmaker's unique but specific set of marketing
skills. Other claimed that the watchmakers had so many problems to deal with that they never had the chance nor
the resources to pursue diversification seriously. And the cynics suggested that it was simply another case of an
industry with a fixation on one technology and on one product. Whatever the cause, as the industry moved into the
1970s there was little evidence that its members could regard diversification as a readily available means for
adversity or for stimulating growth.
"It all shapes up as an intriguing struggle that can be safely watched by most investors from
the security of the side lines".- Value Line Selection & Opinion
19
But product difficulties forced Seiko to recall the watch shortly after it had been put on the market. Then Bulova
launched its analog `Accquartz' in a luxury version retailing at $1,350. The year 1971 saw other manufacturers
announcing the introduction of their own expensive versions of quartz watches. Piaget, for example, brought out
one retailing at $2,900. Toward the end of the year Hamilton launched its digital Pulsar at a retail price of $2,100.
Clearly, the industry was first trying to skim the cream off the market by packaging luxury cases around the new
technology. But the cream did not last long.
At the end of 1971 Bulova brought out an improved version of the Accuquartz bearing a retail price of
$395. Seiko returned to the marketplace with a quartz line retailing in the $450 - $475 range. Then in April 1972
the Swiss, through Ebauches SA, announced a full line of Quartz Crystal watches, both of the analog and digital
variety, to retail prices of $300 and under. Hardly had the Swiss sprung their news when Timex announced that it
was about to introduce on analog quart crystal watch to retail at $125. In the midst of all this activity, jewelers
were complaining that new product announcements were flowing out of corporate headquarters a lot faster than
the marvel watches were flowing of assembly lines7. Industry rivals were in a sort of frenzy to be the latest with
the newest. Still, the U.S. watch market did settle down to a full two months of tranquility.
Benrus Defies
Omega, Bulova, Seiko, Timex
Benrus thus challenged the industry with the introduction of its analog version of a quarts watch, a
timepiece which was to carry a suggested retail price of $99. Furthermore, Benrus let it be known that it intended
to market the watch through all available distribution channels, including mass merchandisers. Up to that point all
the watchmakers including Timex had restricts distribution of the new watches to the jewellery trade. Benrus'
management had apparently decided to use a page of the Timex marketing manual.
But the Benrus advertisement was almost back to back with others showing that the solid-state watch was
about to become a reality in the U.S. marketplace. The Waltham Watch Company, a division of the Swiss
Societedes Grade-Temps, announced that it would soon have available a quartz crystal, completely solid-state,
liquid crystal display watch. Priced at under $200 retail, the watch would come on the market at less than half the
price for the first few watches of this type. As important as its price was the fact that it was an "all-America
developed and manufactured product".
At the very same time, Gruen announced that it was about to introduce its Teletime, a watch comparable
to Waltham's. The retail price tag on the Gruen watch was to be $150.
All these announcements represented news enough, but the trade press contained another tit-bit that may
have been more important than everything else. Microma Universal of Mountain View, California, one of the
principal suppliers of integrated circuits and liquid crystal displays to watchmakers, disclosed its intention to sell
watches under its own name. Microma said it planned to market in analog quartz watch at a retail price of $79.50
and a digital solid-state watch at the retail price of $149.50. Microma also said that it had agreed to make quartz
watch for Sears-Roebuck. Thus, the first of the electronics manufacturers, albeit a small one, was about to invade
the watchmakers' domain. Subsequently, another interesting aspect of Microma's venture was brought to light in a
7
Privately many jewelers greeted the introduction of the
electronic watch with dimay, for they did not understand its
technology. Consequently, the electronic watch jeopardised their
traditional functions as advisors to consumers and repairmen.
(Jeweler's Circular KEYSTONE, July 1972)
20
trade press article which revealed that Ebauches SA would supply Microma with the mechanical parts required for
its analog watch.
a) Manufacturing the electronic watch would call for very low labour inputs. Some observers
predicted that labour costs might eventually amount to no more than 10% of total manufacturing
costs. In contrast labour costs could run as high as 70% of total manufacturing costs for fine
mechanical watches;
b) Unlike the situation with the turning-fork watch, when Bulova controlled the technology
through patents, no firm was likely to build up any sort of patent wall with the electronic watch.
The relevant technology was widely held, in large part by firms outside the watchmaking field.
c) Unlike the case with mechanical watches, cost reductions for the electronic watch would not
come at the expense of quality. Even if the prices for it did fall to very low levels, the electronic
watch, when completely perfected, would not be a junk watch. Instead, it would have the quality
associated with the most expensive mechanical watches.
d) The cost of the electronic watch would be determined by the cost-volume relationships
connected with the manufacture of electronics components. Consequently, the cost advantages of
volume for the electronic watch might well exceed those for the mechanical watch ; and
e) And finally, the electronic watch would undergo important improvements in the next five years,
as of 1972, was still far from being a completely perfected product. Neither of the two key
technical components, the quartz crystal and the liquid crystal display, was free from
shortcomings.
In fact, several leading watchmakers cautioned the industry against extolling too strongly the merits of the
quartz watches then on the market. The Bulova Watch Company, for instance, issued a statement in July 1972
21
which listed the following limitations to quartz crystal:
1) they are all subject to a gain and accordingly subject to some change in their vibration
frequency;
Bulova warned that guarantees of accuracy of within a minute-a-year, which some firms offered, were
unrealistic. Bulova's statement want to say that it would not yet market watches using liquid crystal displays
because the clarity of the devices then available was inadequate and because their effective lifetime was still to be
established.
"We have thoroughly examined this matter on both the technical and the marketing level, and
we are convinced that if a happy future is in store for the electronic watch, the mechanical
watch, is doomed and would throw thousands of watchmakers in Switzerland out of work".
Put in perspective for the American reader this prediction would compare with a forecast of putting 1.3
million American out of work. Simple or automatic version, also has brilliant possibilities. In 1980, the
consumption of watches will be approximately 300 millions units (as against 180 millions in 1972). The most
optimistic forecasts fix the share of electronic watches at one third, with the balance, at least 200 million pieces,
being mechanical watches.
Another spokesman for the Swiss industry emphasized that its watchmakers were as well prepared as any
to fight it out in the electronic watch battle:
Henry Altorfer, Executive Director of the Watchmakers of Switzerland, underlines how Ebauches SA had
laid a permanent foundation for watch progress and how back in July 1967, long before the Japanese or anybody
22
else had it, the Swiss had Beta-21, the prototype of the quartz watch. By 1969.... the Swiss were ready to produce
the quartz watch in volume.
"We have been and will continue to be world leaders in watch production and technology",
Altorfer assured.
=================================================================
23
Exhibit - 1
SWISS WATCH CHAMBER
(1)
ASUAG (2)
1. The association that represents the entire industry in governmental and foreign trade matters.
2. The holding company, 30% controlled by the Swiss Government that owns a majority interest of
Ebauches SA and of three of largest component manufacturers.
3. The association of pin-lever watch manufacturers. In 1970 it had over 50 members.
4. The association of jeweled-lever watch manufacturers. In 1970 it had 486 members.
5. A trust composed of 17 subsidiaries producing Edauches.
6. The association of component manufacturers. It includes hundreds of small firms among its members as
well as four large component producing firms or groups of firms. The four are :-
Fabriques D' Assortiments Reunies (escapements)
Fabriques de Balanciers SA (balance wheels)
Groupment des Fabriques Swisses de Spiraux (hairsprings)
Pierres Holding SA (Jewels).
24
EXHIBIT - 2: THE WATCH INDUSTRIES
Bulova U.S. 1972* $147 $3.9 million 20 Plants around the world
mill. including several in the U.S.
Hamilton Since 1979 1972* $47mill. $2.4 mill. Leases manufacturing & assembly
a 50% owned million plants in Switzerland and Virgin
marketing subsdry
of Bush Universal;
Swiss own 17%, with
option to buy 51% in 1974
Times Privately 1971 $200 mill NA. 20 plants around the world including several
owned U.S. in the U.S.
25
Appendix A: THE WORLD WATCH INDUSTRY
Wrist watches come in innumerable sizes, shapes, designs and price ranges. Yet until the last decade most
of the differences among running mechanisms of watches were classed into a few general categories. All watches
were mechanical and of the spring powered type. And by tradition they were put into only one or the other two
categories: jeweled-lever or pin-lever. These terms will be explained later. But with the advent in the late 1950s of
the electric watch and the subsequent introduction of several types of electronic watches, the problem of describing
how watches work and classifying them grew in complexity.
Still, if matters are simplified considerably, it is possible to acquire without much difficulty a working
familiarity with watch technology. That is the aim of this guide. It begins the traditional spring powered watch, a
timepiece little changed in over 300 years, and then traces the major innovations that have so dramatically changed
the nature of wristwatches in the last two decades.
1) The Ebauche, or movement blank, which accounts for more than three-fifths of all parts. It comprises the
framework of the watch (the parts and bridges), the gear train (the wheels and pinions), and the winding
and setting machines. In a roughly way, Ebauches can be thought of as the chassis and engine of an
automobile.
2) The regulating components (the escapement, balance wheel, and hairspring), which make the movement
work at the correct rate. Roughly, these can be thought of as the transmission of an automobile.
3) Other miscellaneous parts which cannot be classed under any generic heading
When these hundred or so parts are assembled, how do they work. Winding a watch tightens the spiral of
its mainspring. As the spring unwinds, it drives a series of gears to which the hands of the watch are attached. But
the unwinding of the mainspring has to be restrained and precisely controlled to provide the right increments of
time. This requirement is what makes a watch movement complex.
The task of releasing ;energy from the mainspring in a precise way is carried out by the regulating
components, the heart of which is the escapement mechanism. A gear called the escapement wheel is attached to
the main gear train. The escapement wheel is restrained from relating freely, thereby blocking the unwinding of
the mainspring by two teeth in a part called the anchor form. The anchor form rocks back and forth releasing one
tooth and immediately thereafter engaging the other ;tooth in the escapement wheel. The alternative release and
;engagement of the escapement wheel permits kit to advance by tiny increments and these increments of rotation
are converted by the other gears into the second, minute, and hour movements of the watch hands.
But what makes the anchor from move? It is connected to a balance wheel which rotates back and forth,
and the balance wheel is, in turn, connected to a hairspring which coils and uncoils to keep the balance wheel in
motion. As each tooth on the anchor form disengages from the escapement wheel (the tooth actually slides away
from the wheel), it transmits enough power through the anchor form and balance wheel to the hairspring to coil it
slightly. As the ;hairspring uncoils, it rotates the balance wheel in the opposite direction, which in turn rocks the
anchor form in the opposite direction starting the next cycle in the regulating mechanism. This whole complex set
of movements goes on about 300 times a minute and produces the familiar ticking in the spring powered watch.
Even though all mechanical watch ;movements operate according to the principal just described, not all
movements are of the same quality. The quality of a movement is determined, in part, by the precision with which
the many tiny parts are made and, in part by the care that goes into adjusting the functioning of the components.
For example, Swiss manufacturers of premium watches have traditionally employed master watch-makers to
make all the many and time consuming adjustments needed to produce a highly accurate movement.
Then there is the whole matter of jewels. Since watch movements consist of many tiny parts, it is obvious
that friction ;and wear must be minimized, if watches are to be accurate and long lasting. In many watches,
26
though in far from all of them, this is accomplished by putting jewels at all the critical pivot and contact points in
the movement. On standard Swiss movement, for example, contains 15 jewels. Very high-quality movement may
contain as many as 30 jewels. While the purpose of jewels movements is generally well understood, the
contribution that they make to the cost and quality of watches is often misunderstood.
Many people assume that watches containing 15 or more jewels are expensive because the jewels are
expensive. Moreover, they assume that the number of jewels in watch movements indicates the quality of the
watch. The second of ;these assumptions is not necessarily true; the first is just plain false. With care exceptions
all jewels used in watchmaking - excluding, of course those used on the outside of a watch for decorative purposes
- are synthetic and quite inexpensive. Thus, the number of jewels in a movement has little to do with the price of a
watch. As regards the issue of quality, most movements containing 15 or more jewels are produced with the
precision and care required to make a fine timepiece. Yet some less scrupulous watchmakers, knowing that
consumers erroneously equate the number of jewels with quality, have fooled the public by putting out expensive
but crude timepieces containing many jewels. It follows that establishing the true quality of the standard spring-
powered watch is not an easy matter for the average consumer.
The issue is further complicated by the fact that there are tow different ;types of spring-powered watches.
27
to the hands of the watch. Yet the watch is conventional in the sense that it still depends on the oscillation of
moving mechanical parts to determine time increments. Consequently, electric watches though moderately
successful in the marketplace throughout the 1960s, did not capture the lion's of the medium and high price watch
market. And the innovations that followed the electric watch severely clouded its long-run commercial future.
28
Both display devices were seen as raising another problem. Industry experts seriously questioned whether
consumers would accept such a drastic change in the appearance of wristwatches. For this reason land because of
technical shortcomings discussed above, manufacturers now refers to electronic watches with contentional faces
that is, with hands as analog models and to those with numerical displays as digital models. The firms introducing
watches with the new faces did so in a tentative way. Only limited quantities of the watches trickled into the
marketplace in 1970 and 1971. Some manufacturers, including leading U.S. and non-U.S. firms remained out of
the race to get a digital watch on the market. Instead, they preferred to wait until the technical and marketplace
dust had settled before committing themselves to the "new look" in watches.
==============================================================================
The duties on watches and watch components imported into the United States were initially established by
the Tariff Act of 1930.8 Since then Executive Orders have modified the level of duties on several occasions. In
1936, as part of a reciprocal trade agreement with Switzerland, the U.S. Government reduced by one third the
duties levied on movements containing 1 to 17 jewels. These concessions lasted until the post-world War II years.
In 1951, U.S. watchmakers applied for relief (i.e., a hike in duties) under the escape-clause revisions of the Trade
Agreement Extension Act of that year. Three years later the President, responding to the U.S. Manufacturers
complaints and to the Tariff Commission's findings, raised by 50% the duties on movements in the 1 to 17 jewel
category.
Throughout the 1950s the U.S. watch industry pressed unsuccessfully for additional protection by
pleasing the "defense essentially" argument.
The escape-clause rates, set in 1954, were terminated in January 1967 by Presidential Proclamation : once
again the duties on movements in the 1 to 17 jewel category dropped by a third. At the same time, at part of the
Kennedy round GATT negotiations, the U.S. Government granted the first concessions on movements containing
more than 17 jewels. Beginning January 1, 1968 the duty on such movements was to be reduced, in five annual
stages, by a 50% total of 50%. The rates applicable to movements with 17 jewels or less were left untouched by
the Kennedy round.
As of the early 1970s, the tariff situation was as follows :-
3. Having 1 to 7
jewels $ 0.90-$1.80* No change No change
4. Having 7 to 17
jewels $ 0.90-$1.80* No change No change
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For each jewel in $0.90 No change No change
excess of 7
For each adjustment $ 0.50 No change No change
self-winding $ 0.50 No change No change
Watch cases $ 0.75 each + $ 0.60 each plus $ 0.37 each plus
30% ad val. 2 4% ad valorem 15% ad valorem
Source: U.S. Tariff Commission, Summaries of Trade and Tariff Information (1970).
Over the years the U.S. Watch industry's increasing reliance on overseas production has prompted the
industry to change its stance on the issue of tariffs. Before the Second World War and in the decade immediately
following it, U.S. watch manufacturers, though knot U.S. watch importers, lobbied hard for tariff protection. But
as the industry increased its dependence on foreign of supply, it started to sing a different tune. The companies
with overseas plants and those importing from foreign producers defected from the industry's protectionist
position. By the mid-1960s the industry was divided into two camps.
The events of 1967, the termination of the escape-clause rates, and the Kennedy round concessions proved
the few firms with jeweled-lever production in the United States to transfer it abroad. By the late 1960s when all
production was either ;foreign based or part of Bulova's and Timex's world-wide manufacturing systems, the
industry had adopted what could be regarded as a low key free trade position.
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Appendix – C
Because of a loophole in the U.S. tariff law, in the late 1950s many U.S. firms turned to watch assembling
in the Virgin Islands. The loophole hinged upon the stipulation l;that watches could be imported duty free into the
United States from its insular possessions provided that no article contained foreign materials valued at more than
50% of the total value of the article. With labour costs such a high proportion of total watch manufacturing costs,
it was not difficult to meet this criterion.
Watches assembled in the Virgin Islands from foreign parts first started to flow into the United States in
1959. Within a decade 15 different companies had assembly plants there. About half of the parts, by value, used
in the Virgin Islands operations came from Japan; another quarter came from Germany. The Swiss restricted by
law until 1971 from exporting parts, never gained a foothold.
By 1968 almost 15% of total U.S. watch imports came into this country via the Virgin Islands route. By
then article of imports and also started to come in from Guam. In order to limit this blossoming circumvention of
tariff duties, the U.S. Government had, in the previous year, put a quota on imports from the insular possession
limiting them to one-ninth of U.S. consumption in the prior year. Several firms, citing the quota as one reason for
their decision, shut down their Virgin Islands Plants. Yet most watchmakers continued their Virgin Islands
operations into the 1970s.
9
The U.S. insular possessions ;include the Virgin Islands,
Guam, and American Somoa.
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