A China-led restock in H2 can shift Swatch from a 2.2% H1 operating margin toward 4-6% over 6-12 months, restoring price integrity, strengthening shelf-space, and improving investor sentiment versus watch peers.
LVMH flagged a return to positive Mainland China momentum in Q3, triggering an 11% surge in Swatch Group shares as investors priced a faster recovery in Chinese demand and restocking. With Swatch having preserved capacity during the downturn, even a modest China-led replenishment in H2 can drive operating leverage, factory utilization gains, and margin recovery from a depressed 2.2% in H1.
Next 30-90 days: Chinese wholesale restocking likely begins selectively in Tier 1-2 cities and travel retail hubs (Hong Kong, Macau, Hainan), improving Swatch order intake and factory utilization. Share price rebound reduces near-term activist pressure but raises delivery expectations for H2; expect tighter allocation to high-velocity SKUs in mid-to-high segments to defend ASPs and reduce discounting.
After a protracted China slowdown, early Q3 signs of stabilization are lifting sector sentiment, with watches particularly sensitive due to wholesale dynamics and grey-market overhang. Gen-Z and millennial buyers remain value-conscious but respond to hero SKUs and limited drops, favoring brands that balance access and scarcity. Against peers, Swatch has higher operational leverage given verticalization; successful restocking can compress discounts faster than at diversified groups while reinforcing brand equity in the mid-to-high tiers.