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James Dowling's avatar

Several years ago at Basel, when Hermès had just bought its 25% share of Vaucher, two dial firms and a case manufacturer; I asked the CEO of Montres Hermes if they had a goal of becoming a fully fledged watch manufacturer.

He responded by telling me a story about their silk scarves - he told me that after WW2, the production of their scarves involved 20+ suppliers. There were people who grew the chrysalises, people who imported them to France, people who unspun the chrysalis, those who then spun the silk into a thread….and so on. But now they own every part of the chain, not because they really wanted to breed silk moths in South America. But because the one thing that a luxury client expects from the product is consistency, and you can only guarantee that consistency if you actually control every step of production.

Which is why I expect Hermès to be successful in the battle for the Sandoz watchmaking empire.

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Sherman McCoy's avatar

A few more interesting things:

-Hermès acquired John Lobb (Paris) in 1976

-There is a brief mention in the Acquired episode of annual handbag output - 120,000 units(!); this is attributed to a WSJ article. I found this shocking in comparison with the annual production figures of, e.g., Patek and AP

-Hermès is the cigar ashtray purveyor par excellence, in my humble opinion!

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