Tariff normalization should expand U.S. margins by 200-400 bps or support targeted price relief to drive volume, strengthening market share and protecting brand equity through disciplined harmonization.
The U.S. will reduce tariffs on Swiss watches to 15% from 39%, removing a sudden cost shock that forced price hikes and shipment volatility since August. With the U.S. representing roughly one-fifth of Swiss watch exports, brands can stabilize pricing, restore wholesale momentum, and recapture margin while managing FX and gold cost headwinds.
Next 30-90 days: import costs fall sharply, enabling selective price rollbacks (3-5% on volume SKUs) or margin capture (200-400 bps on U.S. sales) depending on positioning. Expect accelerated shipments to restock U.S. doors, improved wholesale orderbook fill, and reduced gray-market risk as pricing is re-harmonized.
The tariff cut supports the relatively resilient U.S. luxury spend as China faces slower recovery and uneven demand. Pre-owned and Gen-Z value-seeking trends heighten sensitivity to cross-market price gaps; restoring tariff parity reduces arbitrage and gray-market leakage. With EU and Japan at 15%, Swiss brands regain level footing, increasing the importance of clienteling, waitlist management, and omnichannel service differentiation over blunt pricing.