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Swatch reports good times

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The world's biggest watch group Swatch on Wednesday posted a 2013 net profit rise of more than 20 percent, beating market expectations and hailing a promising start to the new year.

Times look good for the company despite changes in the climate for luxury watch sales in the important Chinese market, it said.

The Swiss watchmaker posted a net profit of 1.9 billion Swiss francs ($2.1 billion, 1.5 billion euros) last year, it said in a statement.

Its operating profit soared 17 percent from the 2012 level to 2.3 billion francs, while its operating margin rose to 27.4 percent from 25.4 percent a year earlier.

The company attributed that increase to winning legal action late last year in the Netherlands against US jewellery group Tiffany & Co over a failed venture jointly to design and market luxury watches.

The numbers published on Wednesday were well above the expectations of analysts polled by financial news wire AWP, who had anticipated a net profit of 1.7 billions Swiss francs and an operating profit of 2.0 billion.

Swatch, most known for its brightly coloured plastic-cased watches, had already said in early January that its 2013 sales jumped 8.3 percent to 8.8 billions Swiss francs.

The watchmaker, which is also the leader in watch component production, said it had injected nearly 700 million francs into machinery, production infrastructure and sales outlets last year.

Despite these investments, the group said it held 1.8 billion francs in disposable cash at the end of January.

That was about the same level as last year before it snapped up US jeweller and watchmaker Harry Winston and Dubai-based Rivoli Investment, a company with a distribution network of more than 360 retail stores in the Middle East.

Hailing the strong results, the Swatch board proposed distributing a dividend of 7.50 Swiss francs per bearer share and 1.50 francs per registered share, up 11.1 percent from a year earlier.

Swatch also painted a rosy picture for the year ahead, pointing out that its watch and jewellery sales had been on an upward trend during the first month of 2014.

"All brands had an auspicious start," it said, stressing that "continued healthy growth is expected in 2014."

"Swatch Group is in an excellent position for both the future and for long-term growth," it said.

Following the news, the company saw its share price jump 4.32 percent to 555.50 francs a piece in midday trading, as the Swiss stock exchange's main index rose just 0.45 percent.

"Swatch Group showed solid results in 2013 despite the challenges in China," J. Safra Sarasin analyst Patrick Hasenboehler said in a note.

China's rising appetite for luxury goods had been a boon for the Swiss watch industry, but there sales-growth fell sharply there last year due in part to a Chinese government crackdown on corruption in the form of extravagant gifts.

But while the most expensive segments have felt the sting, Swatch's broad range has allowed it to weather the storm well.

The group operates in every price range, from the Flik Flak watches for children to prestigious timepieces under for instance the Breguet brand that can cost more than $1.0 million a piece.

The world’s biggest watch group Swatch on Wednesday posted a 2013 net profit rise of more than 20 percent, beating market expectations and hailing a promising start to the new year.

Times look good for the company despite changes in the climate for luxury watch sales in the important Chinese market, it said.

The Swiss watchmaker posted a net profit of 1.9 billion Swiss francs ($2.1 billion, 1.5 billion euros) last year, it said in a statement.

Its operating profit soared 17 percent from the 2012 level to 2.3 billion francs, while its operating margin rose to 27.4 percent from 25.4 percent a year earlier.

The company attributed that increase to winning legal action late last year in the Netherlands against US jewellery group Tiffany & Co over a failed venture jointly to design and market luxury watches.

The numbers published on Wednesday were well above the expectations of analysts polled by financial news wire AWP, who had anticipated a net profit of 1.7 billions Swiss francs and an operating profit of 2.0 billion.

Swatch, most known for its brightly coloured plastic-cased watches, had already said in early January that its 2013 sales jumped 8.3 percent to 8.8 billions Swiss francs.

The watchmaker, which is also the leader in watch component production, said it had injected nearly 700 million francs into machinery, production infrastructure and sales outlets last year.

Despite these investments, the group said it held 1.8 billion francs in disposable cash at the end of January.

That was about the same level as last year before it snapped up US jeweller and watchmaker Harry Winston and Dubai-based Rivoli Investment, a company with a distribution network of more than 360 retail stores in the Middle East.

Hailing the strong results, the Swatch board proposed distributing a dividend of 7.50 Swiss francs per bearer share and 1.50 francs per registered share, up 11.1 percent from a year earlier.

Swatch also painted a rosy picture for the year ahead, pointing out that its watch and jewellery sales had been on an upward trend during the first month of 2014.

“All brands had an auspicious start,” it said, stressing that “continued healthy growth is expected in 2014.”

“Swatch Group is in an excellent position for both the future and for long-term growth,” it said.

Following the news, the company saw its share price jump 4.32 percent to 555.50 francs a piece in midday trading, as the Swiss stock exchange’s main index rose just 0.45 percent.

“Swatch Group showed solid results in 2013 despite the challenges in China,” J. Safra Sarasin analyst Patrick Hasenboehler said in a note.

China’s rising appetite for luxury goods had been a boon for the Swiss watch industry, but there sales-growth fell sharply there last year due in part to a Chinese government crackdown on corruption in the form of extravagant gifts.

But while the most expensive segments have felt the sting, Swatch’s broad range has allowed it to weather the storm well.

The group operates in every price range, from the Flik Flak watches for children to prestigious timepieces under for instance the Breguet brand that can cost more than $1.0 million a piece.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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