29 March 2015

Ten grand? For a watch?

Fortune has an article by Philip Elmer-DeWitt about a ridiculously-priced Apple Watch:
The price differential between Beijing and New York City is more than double the cost of a round-trip ticket. Remember the customers carrying bundles of cash who queued up last September of 2014to buy as many iPhones as Apple would sell them? It could happen again.
“We saw this with the iPhone,” said Asymco’s Horace Dediu in a podcast recorded Thursday. “We’ll see it in spades with the gold Apple Watch.” Most analysts expect demand will be strongest for Apple’s aluminum and steel watches, which start at $349 and $549, respectively. Dediu believes Wall Street may be underestimating the intangible appeal of a ten thousand dollar gold watch. Especially one given as a gift, especially in China, with its rich tradition of over-the-top gift giving.
The gold watch has something else going for it. Unlike the value of a Rolex, say, which can range from a few thousand dollars to tens of thousands, the price of the Apple Watch in each of its global markets is fixed; it’s listed on the website.
“It’s like currency,” says Dediu. Factor in local taxes, and you can calculate with some precision what he calls the “global arbitrage opportunities.”
For example, the entry level gold watch, the 38mm 18-Karat Rose Gold with a white sport band (photo) retails in the US for $10.000. The same watch is listed on Apple’s Chinese website for $12,045. Beijing imposes a seventeen percent value added tax. Hong Kong does not. “If someone smuggles one of these into China,” says Dediu, “they’ll pay for their flight ticket, and then some.” He reports that, in Boston, Massachusetts, there were still queues for the iPhone 6 Plus in January of 2015, almost five months after it launched. “They’re mostly Chinese,” he says. “They’re doing it as a business.”
It can be a rough business, as a documentary film shot outside Apple Stores in New York City last September demonstrated. It might be even rougher in April, when buyers could be carrying bundles of cash in units of $10,000. That’s cash that will go almost directly to Apple’s bottom line. Dediu estimates that the margin on a $10,000 gold watch could be as high as 90%. “I wouldn’t be surprised if in the first few months the demand for gold is far, far higher than we imagined,” he says. “They’ll just be out of stock, permanently.”
Rico says there certainly are people with enough money (and stupid enough to part with ten grand) to buy a $10,000 watch, but he ain't one of them (even if he had ten grand, and wore a watch)...

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