Based on the amicable settlement between Swatch Group and the Competition Commission (Comco), which was signed in 2013, the company ETA has a supply obligation towards third-party customers until the end of 2019. The supply quantity agreed upon has - by a substantial amount - not been purchased by these third-party customers, and certain major customers did not place any orders for 2017, while ETA, due to its imposed supply obligation, must continue to maintain the capacity to deliver roughly 1.5 million mechanical movements. Therefore, Swatch Group requested from Comco that ETA should be allowed to offer and sell the non-purchased quantities to all its third-party customers. The Swatch Group proposal never intended to deviate from the amicable settlement but rather to supplement it in order to take the abusive customer behavior into account. This request has been rejected by Comco.
Swatch Group regrets Comco's decision and deems it utterly unrealistic. Swatch Group is forced to maintain the production capacities for third-party customers - with substantial financial and personnel expenditures - although in some cases, the third-party customers have drastically reduced or even completely dropped their order quantities. With this decision, ETA and Swatch Group must once again assume their customers' economic risk. In spite of the fact that major customers such as Sellita or Tudor have reduced their order quantities for 2017 by about 700,000 pieces in total relative to the previous year and although the difference between the effectively-ordered quantities and the spare capacity amounts to almost 900,000 pieces, ETA must maintain the determined capacities for the coming years in order to meet its supply obligation as defined by Comco. As a result, the decision of the Comco penalizes a market participant - ETA - which has made substantial investments in innovation and development of industrial capacity, while other market participants again preferred to focus their investments solely on marketing their products. In order to cover the additional costs arising from this enforced readiness to deliver, ETA will have to consider massive price hikes.
The Swatch Group Ltd
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The Swatch Group AG published this content on 27 October 2016 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 27 October 2016 07:11:07 UTC.
Original documenthttp://www.swatchgroup.com/en/services/archive/2016/statement
Public permalinkhttp://www.publicnow.com/view/E288CC5E9B74576A99BA14F15251695A966190E3
The Swatch Group SA is a Switzerland-based holding company engaged in the apparel and accessories industry. The Company's activities are divided into two core business segments: Watches and Jewelry, as well as Electronic Systems. The Watches and Jewelry segment includes the production and sale of branded watches, jewelry and quartz movements, notably the brands Breguet, Harry Winston, Blancpain, Glashuette Original, Jaquet Droz, Leon Hatot, Omega, Longines, Rado, Union Glashuette, Tissot, Balmain, Certina, Hamilton, Calvin Klein watches and jewelry, Swatch and Flik Flak. The Electronic Systems segment includes the production and marketing of electronic components, notably batteries and sports timing equipment. The Company also supplies products from these segments to third-party watchmakers. Swatch Group SA is represented worldwide through its subsidiaries and distributors, notably Tourbillion and Hour Passion, and operates Swiss production plants in Boncourt, Grenchen and Villeret.