Tag
Heuer plans to unveil a smartwatch among a wave of partnerships
expected at the world’s biggest watch fair this week as luxury
watchmakers fight back against Apple.
The
Swiss watch brand, the biggest at French luxury group LVMH, will
announce it is teaming up with U.S. chip maker Intel Corp to create a
digital version of one of its best-selling model, industry sources have
said.
Tag
Heuer is planning to launch next autumn a smartwatch version of its
Carrera watch that will offer many of the same functions as the Apple
watch such as geolocation, distance walked and altitude.
The
major difference is that the watch will be a digital replica of the
original Tag Heuer black Carrera, known for its bulky, sporty allure,
and will look like the original.
“People
will have the impression that they are wearing a normal watch,” Tag
Heuer Chief Executive Jean-Claude Biver told Reuters in an interview at
Baselworld, the industry’s biggest fair where retailers place their
orders for the year.
Biver
agreed with Swatch Group Chief Executive Nick Hayek who said the
smartwatch “would increase the cake” for the industry as a whole.
“Apple will get young people used to wearing a watch and later maybe they will want to buy themselves a real watch,” Biver said.
The
jury is still out on whether Apple’s smartwatch will be a major success
once it hits the stores next month but Swiss watch makers have been
busy trying to come up with attractive alternatives ahead of time.
Many
analysts predict Apple’s watch, to be priced from $349 to $17,000, will
dent sales at several Swatch Group brands, such as Tissot and Omega.
JPMorgan estimates 33 percent of Swatch Group’s profit is exposed to
Apple’s watch threat.
Swatch
Group has told analysts it will integrate near field communication
(NFC) into several of its watch brands, first Swatch, then Tissot and
Omega.
It
said its competitive advantage would be longer battery life than
Apple’s watch as its smartwatches, having more limited capabilities,
would require less energy. Apple watches must be recharged every 18
hours, meaning they typically cannot be worn overnight.
Tissot,
which has long been making watches with touch screens, on Wednesday
unveiled its new connected T-Touch fitted watch with a solar battery.
Makers
of traditional mechanic watches such as Hermes and family-owned Patek
Philippe said there would always be demand for the real thing.
Their
argument is that the technology of smartwatches such as that of Apple
will be obsolete after a few years while luxury watches could last
centuries. They also pointed out that Apple’s watch needed an iPhone to
be in close proximity to function fully.
“When
you are buy a Patek Philippe, you buy a timeless piece of art,” said
Patek Philippe Chairman Thierry Stern. “It would be as if you told
people to no longer buy paintings but TV screens projecting the image of
a painting.”
Stern
also said he believed many consumers would prefer wearing a traditional
watch with a suit or a black tie, rather than a smartwatch.
Both Patek Philippe sand Hermes said they had no plans to market smartwatches.
“For
the moment, Hermes is observing what is going on,” said Guillaume de
Seynes, a managing director at Hermes. “We still do not know how the
smartwatch market will evolve.”
Posted by : Gizmeon
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