If unchecked, the CPO price gap will shift volume toward value-led players, compressing network margins and risking brand coherence, but coordinated guardrails and cost-side optimization can defend profitability and strengthen Rolex's and Bucherer's market position in certified resale.
A sharp pricing divergence has emerged in Rolex's Certified Pre-Owned program, with Bucherer reportedly charging almost three times the CPO premium of The 1916 Company. While Rolex affirms retailers set prices independently, sustained dispersion risks channel conflict, customer confusion, and arbitrage, pressuring both brand equity and network economics.
Over the next 30 to 90 days, lower CPO premiums at The 1916 Company will likely redirect price-sensitive traffic and trade-ins away from higher-premium retailers, including Bucherer. Expect faster sell-through where premiums are compressed, mounting pressure on inventory aging and markdown risk at higher-price locations, and rising customer questions about program coherence.
Pre-owned watch prices remain below 2022 peaks, with mainstream demand references having corrected materially, increasing consumer price sensitivity. Gen-Z and younger HENRY consumers value authenticity, certification, and sustainability, positioning CPO as a growth lever if pricing is clear and consistent. Macro headwinds from China slowdown and uneven US demand elevate the role of omnichannel and data-driven pricing; peers like Richemont's Watchfinder validate the strategic importance of certified resale and refurb standards. In this context, large price spreads risk driving traffic to value-led competitors and to cross-border digital marketplaces.