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14 December 2021, 12:18 PM | #31 |
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Reminds me of one of my favorite Ali G skits.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48TR0vUPQCs "Everyone's seen one of these.... a Zen Diagram." "Business will be worth... wait for it.... that is such a big number, I couldn't write it that way".
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14 December 2021, 01:08 PM | #32 | |
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14 December 2021, 01:10 PM | #33 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1t-gK-9EIq4. The handshake seals the contract From the contract, there's no turning back The turning point of a career In Korea being insincere The holiday was fun-packed The contract still intact The grabbing hands grab all they can All for themselves, after all The grabbing hands grab all they can All for themselves, after all It's a competitive world Everything counts in large amounts The graph on the wall Tells the story of it all Picture it now, see just how The lies and deceit gained a little more power Confidence taken in By a suntan and a grin The grabbing hands grab all they can All for themselves, after all The grabbing hands grab all they can All for themselves, after all It's a competitive world Everything counts in large amounts Everything counts in large amounts Everything counts in large amounts |
14 December 2021, 01:35 PM | #34 | |
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This could be due partly to crazy inflation, people have lots of cash right now and they're losing purchasing power so they're seeking to park their money in assets in hopes to retain value. |
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14 December 2021, 01:38 PM | #35 |
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I do tend to agree with this perspective. The key question, as others have raised, is time. How long will it take? The worldwide economy seems to be on fire, with prices for everything from homes, cars, food, and more soaring.
At some point, watch prices will soften. They’ll likely continue to rise for a period as I do not feel we’ve seen the end yet. Maybe not even close. But EVENTUALLY, SOMETIME, I do agree the market will soften. I’ve been in this game since around 2003/2004 and have seen many different waves of prices and availability even in that short period of time. The only constant is change Buy and wear what makes you happy. Anything else is Tulip Mania Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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14 December 2021, 02:12 PM | #36 | |
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I think prices might level out a little but with every man and his dog looking at high end watches these days I dont think we'll ever see the price fall through the floor. The only way that'll ever happen is if Rolex ,AP Patek ect increase production and they'll never do that drastically |
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14 December 2021, 02:19 PM | #37 | |
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100% agree this is a manifestation of inflation into assets, but I totally disagree that it's the new norm though. Some of these bubbles like NFTs etc i feel will plummet at some point some items may not. I'd say things like property are far more likely to hold vs watches. NFTs, Crytpo, Magic Cards etc far more at risk... Cars will equalise back out for Toyotas etc... |
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14 December 2021, 03:04 PM | #38 | |
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You do know that gold just came out of a 10 year dip, and the dip before that lasted 20 years? Similar market dips have been seen in diamonds as well. |
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14 December 2021, 03:23 PM | #39 | |
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And then one day, on a cold January morning you wake up to realise that the Fed is pulling back its market propping and may even look to increase interest rates, and that there are several huge chinese companies who are on the brink of default with seemingly little government support forthcoming. Nobody knows what will happen. But something will happen. Prices today are not guaranteed tomorrow. |
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14 December 2021, 03:41 PM | #40 | |
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I still know guys sitting on the fence about buying a house from 20+ years ago. They are still renting today and still predicting housing is a bubble yet its increased at least 5-6 times the value since then. Something they could have bought for $250k back then is like $1.5M+ now. As they say "when you predict something for long enough it eventually comes true doesnt it?" Maybe another 30 years? maybe 50? who knows. I'll be dead by then. |
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14 December 2021, 03:45 PM | #41 | |
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14 December 2021, 05:14 PM | #42 | |
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Units/Flats are not as resilient as free standing houses. All I know is in Sydney anyway there is not a single free standing house under $700k anywhere in any suburb now. Median is now sitting at $1.5M. Brisbane is also flying for free standing houses. Units/Flats the demand for them is minimal. Everyone wants houses on its own land. The demand for flats and units have always been lower. |
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14 December 2021, 05:21 PM | #43 |
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Let me be, me and my tulip colored Rolexes. There is no bubble but those in my champagne.
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14 December 2021, 05:26 PM | #44 |
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Its not just watches. The entire environment is absolute scary. I would be very cautious
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14 December 2021, 05:34 PM | #45 |
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If you bought a watch at retail then you have nothing to worry about , even if you bought a watch at the current grey prices and intend on wearing it for the rest of your life you have nothing to worry about.
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14 December 2021, 05:54 PM | #46 |
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Our local AD has been busy weeding out the speculators/investors from their 116500 queue for a few years now and they still have c. 400 people listed on their books for one. The challenge remains that of supply vs demand. I have never known a situation where the shelves are completely bare of stainless steel sports watches. I am not convinced this is the "mania" phase referred to in the original post. People simply cannot buy the watches they want. If supply was to suddenly quadruple then that might soak up part of the latent demand and take the heat out of some of the less desirable models but I cannot see that denting what is happening with Daytonas.
Having just checked on Chrono24, there are 250 of the more desirable white dial 116500 Daytonas for sale worldwide. 17 of these do not have papers so that reduces the pool to 233 where provenance is more comfortable. A further 20 turn out to be mis-listed and have black dials or substitute dials which takes the pool down to 213. 13 of these are being sold by private sellers which provides little comfort in terms of comeback if there's an issue. So, 200 watches in total for a demand that is likely to be in the thousands (if not the tens of thousands). That is before you consider the challenge of how many of these watches are actually available geographically close to where you live. Around 90 of these are 2021 models but even if that trend continues in years to come, that is not sufficient to satisfy demand. As the end of the day, if you're wealthy enough to pay £10.5K for a new one, it's quite likely you're wealthy enough to pay £30K simply because it is something you want. People seem to think nothing of sinking £30K into a car which will be worth £12K in 3 years time. You're never going to have a situation where a secondary market Daytona is going to be worth less than list retail price so the downside is fairly limited. Most agree that the modern Daytona is a classic design. It is highly likely that the demand will never be met before the current model is discontinued which, in turn, will cause a further uplift in prices as all of those in the queue have to decide whether to buy the watch for their collections or give up altogether. This is more than just an economic model. |
14 December 2021, 06:45 PM | #47 | |
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Yep but one day people realise is a totally overrated watch or it gets linked with pedophiles or some other criminals or realise they’re actually a tad common vs pateks etc etc and demand can literally disappear. Can’t count of stuff like this being bullet proof. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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14 December 2021, 06:55 PM | #48 |
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M x V = P x Q
Keeping quantity, Rolex production (Q) constant, increased money supply coupled with new wealth (M) and the increased velocity (V) results in upward price pressure (P). I feel like a smart economist forecasting the next recession! Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
14 December 2021, 06:59 PM | #49 |
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We'll see what happens, it is hard to predict the future but I agree everything goes in cycles.
The current movements in Rolex is highly reflected that other brands also have limited supply. In addition, other brands that are very renowned in watch enthusiast community have not received the same love as Rolex - which could also change in the future, if they introduced some more consumer-palatable designs. Honorable mentions here are obviously Jaeger Lecoultre, Vacheron Constantin, Grand Seiko, IWC. I am absolutely baffled about the recent auctions of Hulks in the US - some of them fetching USD 94K! This is 90's Nautilus range for a freaking Rolex jeez Edit: As with many other fashion statements and items symbolising success/wealth, it will inevitably become unpopular/less popular. I saw a study in the US and the youth is predominantly wearing Apple Watch instead of Rolex in the upper socioeconomic layer, so this might give a shift in 5 years or so. Honestly, I am seeing that everyone has a Rolex these days - at least the places I go out, and the majority of these are not enthusiasts but rather want to flex. People who would never wear these kind of watches a couple of years back are wearing them now because of their value in symbol/fashion statement. It has really become what seems accessible to everyone as long as people want to spend the money at grey dealers, increasing the flex of wearing a Rolex. This will inevitably fall as notion which I think will influence the prices again. But obviously, it could as easily move the other direction and keep steady at a certain X% premium of retail price for ever. To me it just seems counterproductive for Rolex to have the current situation, as their watches have become 'too popular' in my opinion. They want to keep it exclusive and yet I see 7/10 wearing a Rolex at the high-end bars in the inner city, all of them new of course (who cares about Red Subs, PM Daytonas, Bakelite GMTs) and rarely if ever see any Patek, Jaeger, Audemars, Vascheron. So to me the Rolex watch has become a very cliché flex these places, and I personally much prefer the vintage ones that you almost never see - complimented a guy with a Red Sub last summer, it was a killer look on leather strap. He was very happy to see an enthusiast as everyone always told him "Nice Sub, why is it not on a bracelet?". |
14 December 2021, 07:02 PM | #50 |
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So glad I get to sit on the sidelines and laugh at all this madness as I have no desire to purchase anything new.
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14 December 2021, 07:32 PM | #51 | |
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14 December 2021, 07:43 PM | #52 | |
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You are kind of illustrating my point, I completely agree but these startup entrepreneurs, high net worth individuals, have absolutely no problem going to an AD buying a watch - honestly many of them would probably never buy 2.5X premium on it, as they are business savvy and know what things are worth. The problem in the price and in my opinion its inevitable collapse is that if it were only succesful entrepreneurs and HNWI that bought, the 800K produced a year would probably suffice quite okay with all the second hand ones on top of it. The grey prices are driven by the excessive demand from average joe's that has either saved 10K for the first time of their life to buy watch to flex with. I see them all over town honestly, expensive watch, cheap shoes, suits, shirts, cars, whatever... Not that it is not okay, I am no snob myself but I am not overpaying for a Rolex as it does not reflect the actual value of the watch, but rather an Instagram-version of the person you want to be when you own the watch - which has nothing really to do with the watch but rather with whether you buy the watch or invest the money in starting your own business ;) |
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14 December 2021, 08:18 PM | #53 |
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Love the "reaching" comments!
Just for clarity, I'm not "reaching" at all here. I currently have 5 Rolexes myself so if the market turns that will only reduce the value of my own pieces, although as I've said many, many times I genuinely have no concern for the future value of my own watches - I buy them to wear and enjoy, and once they're bought it's a sunk cost as far as I'm concerned, never to be seen again. Plus I'm only interested in picking up one other reference, and that's a discontinued model that isn't considered overly "hot" or difficult to find. So I have no vested interest in the market either way. My reason for the thread is that I'm an economist by qualification (and historically, by trade), and from an academic perspective I find it interesting to see behaviour that (so far at least) follows the pattern of a classic economic bubble. Now, I'm the first to admit that a lot of economics is effectively educated guesswork (with the emphasis on 'educated'), but it's still prediction-based without the benefit of a crystal ball. Of course, nothing in life is set in stone until it happens - I just thought it'd be an interesting comparison to highlight. So when might something happen and what form it might take? Who knows - some of these stages can take years. The unfortunate thing about economic bubbles is that they are predominantly only recognised as such AFTER the event. That said, I just think it's a foolhardy person who will try to claim that many of the current prices aren't delusional and driven by greed, with vast numbers of the non-WIS public trying to jump on board. All I'm saying is, the signs are there.... |
14 December 2021, 09:41 PM | #54 | |
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I have gone out with my wife walking our dog on the trails near our house, dressed like bums, with me wearing a watch and her some jewellery that costs more than 95% of new cars out there. And doing the same driving my kid's car for a quick errand. Of course, we were wearing it for our own enjoyment. Dissimilar to people you are alluding to. Sometimes you just never know. |
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14 December 2021, 09:57 PM | #55 |
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Hear, hear! I completely agree - I am not trying to be prejudice, and I am totally on board with the thousands of people who enjoys the watches :D I meet plenty of HNWI who does not look like they are shoving cash, but again to the point earlier - they don't need to look like it because they got it (by not excessively wasting money on status symbols).
Sure some of the ones I judge will inevitably be misjudged, but honestly I am pretty sure the majority are not - including several close friends of mine (extended to their friends) have no idea what they are slapping on their wrist, other than it was expensive and is shining :p While they are not as shallow as others, I am still baffled by the lack of appreciation of the craftsmanship as the focus is more on the symbolism of the watch. I wore my vintage Seamaster the other day to a party, 34mm on black crocodile strap, and half of them were like "why are you not wearing your Rolex? It is much nicer" - ehhh, I am rotating watches and highly appreciate the patinated enamel-like dial of the Seamaster and the elegant look/lack of bulkiness. But they don't care 'cos it's a shit old small watch at 1/15th the price of my Rolex :p |
14 December 2021, 10:13 PM | #56 | |
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The OP is right by the way. This whole thing started when the economy went bonkers in 2016. That’s a fact. It will crash when the economy crashes. That will happen sooner or later. Probably sooner. If I were smart I should sell my whole collection now and hold the money. When the economy crashes then I can buy a mansion on a lake.
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14 December 2021, 10:23 PM | #57 |
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If you buy the watch because you like wearing it, you will still enjoy the watch even when the market crashes. It’s the same watch doesn’t matter what the market says.
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14 December 2021, 10:33 PM | #58 |
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14 December 2021, 10:40 PM | #59 |
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Exactly.... People buy some assets (e.g. cars) knowing they will fall in value. Others speculate in the stock market hoping for a gain. I have paid a premium in the grey market twice now for a watch and I have no problem having done so. I have the enjoyment of the watches in my possession and that feeling is impervious to market fluctuations. Those who have purchased watches in the current market hoping for investment returns should be more nervous. They're unlikely to take a bath but, at the end of the day, you should only buy a watch to enjoy it (whether it be worn on your wrist or forming part of your collection).
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14 December 2021, 10:41 PM | #60 | |
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