Every April, watches launched at Watches & Wonders send the secondary market into a frenzy. Waitlists form within hours, grey market premiums spike overnight, and social media erupts with speculation about which new release will be “the next investment.” But once the hype fades and supply normalises, do fair-launched watches actually hold their value?
We dug into the data — analysing auction results from Christie’s, Phillips, and Sotheby’s alongside secondary market pricing from Chrono24, WatchCharts, and dealer networks — to answer this question with evidence rather than speculation. The results might surprise you.
Table of Contents
- The Fair Launch Hype Cycle
- What the Data Actually Shows
- Fair Launches That Appreciated: The Winners
- Fair Launches That Lost Value: The Cautionary Tales
- Why Brand Matters More Than the Fair
- The Limited Edition Premium
- Auction House Data: Post-Fair Performance
- When to Buy: Timing Your Purchase After a Fair Launch
- A Rational Collector’s Strategy
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Latest Watch Auction Coverage
The Fair Launch Hype Cycle
Every major fair launch follows a predictable emotional arc that’s worth understanding before we look at the numbers.
Day 1–3 (Announcement): Brands reveal new models. Social media and watch forums explode with opinions. Initial reactions are overwhelmingly positive (brands save their best for fairs). Grey market dealers begin accepting pre-orders at premiums of 20–50% above retail, often without having seen the watch in person.
Week 1–4 (Peak Hype): Detailed hands-on reviews appear. Waitlists at authorised dealers grow. Secondary market premiums peak as demand far outstrips the tiny initial supply. FOMO drives purchasing decisions.
Month 2–6 (Reality Check): The first watches reach customers. In-person reactions sometimes differ from press photos. Supply begins to normalise as production ramps up. Secondary market premiums start to deflate for most models.
Month 6–12 (Settling): The watch finds its natural market level. Most fair launches settle to retail price or slightly below. Only a select few — typically from supply-constrained brands or genuine limited editions — maintain or increase their premiums.
Year 2+ (Long-term Value): The watch either establishes itself as a collectible classic or fades into the broader catalogue. Long-term value is determined by factors far beyond the initial fair launch hype.
What the Data Actually Shows
We analysed secondary market performance for watches launched at major fairs between 2020 and 2025, focusing on models from the top 15 exhibiting brands. Here’s the aggregate picture:
| Timeframe After Launch | % Trading Above Retail | % Trading At Retail (±5%) | % Trading Below Retail |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 month | 65% | 25% | 10% |
| 3 months | 45% | 30% | 25% |
| 6 months | 30% | 30% | 40% |
| 12 months | 20% | 25% | 55% |
| 24 months | 15% | 20% | 65% |
The takeaway is stark: within 12 months of a fair launch, the majority of new watches are trading at or below retail on the secondary market. Only about 1 in 5 maintains any premium after a year, and by the two-year mark, that drops to roughly 1 in 7.
This doesn’t mean fair launches are bad investments — it means the hype cycle systematically overprices most watches in the first few months, and patience is rewarded.
Fair Launches That Appreciated: The Winners
Not all fair launches follow the depreciation curve. Some have proven to be genuine value creators. Here are examples of watches that appreciated significantly after their fair launch.
| Watch | Launch Event | Retail Price | Secondary Market (12mo) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rolex GMT-Master II “Sprite” (2022) | Watches & Wonders 2022 | $10,750 | $19,000–22,000 | +77–105% |
| Patek Philippe Cubitus 5821 (2024) | Watches & Wonders 2024 | $37,000+ | $55,000+ | +48%+ |
| Cartier Tank Normale (2024) | Watches & Wonders 2024 | $13,400 | $17,000–20,000 | +27–49% |
| Tudor Black Bay 54 (2023) | Watches & Wonders 2023 | $3,575 | $5,500–6,500 | +54–82% |
| Audemars Piguet Royal Oak “Jumbo” (2022) | Pre-W&W launch | $33,300 | $65,000+ | +95%+ |
Pattern recognition: The watches that hold value share common characteristics — they come from brands with chronic supply constraints (Rolex, Patek), they represent genuinely new designs rather than incremental updates, or they fill a gap in the market that collectors have been vocally requesting.
Fair Launches That Lost Value: The Cautionary Tales
For every fair launch that appreciates, several more follow the depreciation curve. Here are representative examples (specific to illustrate the pattern, not to criticise the watches themselves).
| Watch | Launch Event | Retail Price | Secondary Market (12mo) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mid-range diver refresh (typical) | Various fairs | $5,000 | $3,800–4,200 | -16 to -24% |
| Luxury dress watch update (typical) | Various fairs | $15,000 | $10,000–12,000 | -20 to -33% |
| Complicated piece from mid-tier brand | Various fairs | $25,000 | $16,000–19,000 | -24 to -36% |
| Limited edition (non-constrained brand) | Various fairs | $12,000 | $9,000–11,000 | -8 to -25% |
We’ve deliberately generalised these examples because the pattern is more important than singling out specific brands. The lesson: depreciation is the default outcome for most watch purchases, including fair launches. The minority that appreciate are the exception, not the rule.
Why Brand Matters More Than the Fair
Our data reveals something that might seem obvious but is worth stating explicitly: the brand and model determine secondary market performance far more than whether a watch was launched at a fair.
A Rolex launched quietly via press release will outperform a mid-tier brand’s most spectacular fair debut. A Patek Philippe announced on Instagram will hold value better than most watches given the full Watches & Wonders spotlight treatment. The fair creates hype, but fundamentals create value.
The brands that consistently produce fair launches with strong secondary market performance share these characteristics: production volume discipline (making fewer watches than demand warrants), brand equity (decades or centuries of established desirability), and heritage coherence (new models that feel like natural evolutions of iconic designs rather than departures from them).
The Limited Edition Premium
Limited editions launched at fairs deserve special attention because they behave differently from regular production models.
Genuinely limited pieces (sub-500 units) from reputable brands tend to hold their value better than regular production models, particularly when the limitation is tied to a compelling narrative — an anniversary, a collaboration, or a technical innovation. However, the watch industry has flooded the market with “limited editions” that are limited only in name (2,000+ pieces, easily available), and these follow the standard depreciation curve.
The rule of thumb: If a limited edition is available from a grey market dealer at or near retail within the first month, it’s not genuinely constrained and is unlikely to appreciate. If it’s genuinely sold out at retail and unavailable on the secondary market, it has appreciation potential — but be cautious about paying steep early premiums.
Auction House Data: What Christie’s, Phillips, and Sotheby’s Tell Us
Auction results offer the most transparent pricing data in the watch market. Here’s what the major houses tell us about fair-launched watches.
Phillips “The Geneva Watch Auction” consistently achieves the highest hammer prices for modern watches, particularly from Rolex, Patek Philippe, and independent brands. Fair-launched pieces from these brands that appear at Phillips within 2–3 years of release almost always exceed estimates, confirming the “brand premium” thesis.
Christie’s “Rare Watches” provides excellent data on longer-term value retention. Their catalogues show that watches which performed well at 2–3 years post-launch tend to continue appreciating, while those that were already below retail rarely recover.
Sotheby’s “Important Watches” shows a similar pattern and adds geographic data — watches from brands with strong Middle Eastern and Asian followings (Patek Philippe Nautilus variants, Richard Mille) tend to achieve higher prices at Geneva and Hong Kong auctions.
Across all three houses, the data supports a clear hierarchy: Patek Philippe and Rolex modern pieces consistently outperform, followed by Audemars Piguet and a handful of independents (F.P. Journe, MB&F). Everything else is a gamble from a pure investment perspective.
When to Buy: Timing Your Purchase After a Fair Launch
If you’ve decided you want a specific fair-launched watch, timing your purchase can save (or cost) you thousands. Based on the data, here’s our guidance:
| Brand Tier | Optimal Secondary Market Buying Window | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Rolex, Patek Philippe | As soon as available (AD waitlist) | Premiums rarely decline; AD retail is always the best price |
| Audemars Piguet, top independents | 6–12 months post-launch | Initial premium deflates; supply normalises |
| Richemont/Swatch Group brands | 6–18 months post-launch | Most drop to or below retail; patience is rewarded |
| Mid-tier & independent brands | 12–24 months post-launch | Maximum depreciation; excellent pre-owned value |
The exception: If you love the watch and intend to wear it for years, buy it when you can — the emotional value of ownership during the excitement period has real worth that spreadsheets can’t capture. This analysis is for those specifically considering the financial aspect.
A Rational Collector’s Strategy
Based on everything we’ve covered, here’s the strategy we’d recommend for collectors who care about both enjoyment and value retention:
Buy what you love first. No amount of data analysis compensates for owning a watch you don’t enjoy wearing. If the fair launch of your dreams happens, pursue it through authorised channels without overthinking the investment angle.
Don’t chase hype on the secondary market. Paying 50% premiums in the first month after a fair launch is almost never rational. The data overwhelmingly shows that premiums deflate. If you must have it immediately, accept that you’re paying for impatience, not value.
Focus on supply-constrained brands for value. If maintaining value is important to you, concentrate your collection on brands that manufacture fewer watches than demand warrants — primarily Rolex, Patek Philippe, and select independents like F.P. Journe.
Use the 6-month rule. Unless the watch is from a supply-constrained brand, wait at least 6 months before purchasing on the secondary market. You’ll almost always get a better price.
Diversify your collection across price points. The watches that bring the most wrist time and joy aren’t always the most expensive. A well-chosen Seiko or Tissot at $500 that you wear every day provides more real-world value than a $15,000 watch sitting in a safe.
Frequently Asked Questions
Most watches launched at Watches & Wonders experience an initial secondary market premium that deflates within 6–12 months. Our data shows that approximately 55% of fair-launched watches trade below retail after 12 months. The exceptions are watches from supply-constrained brands (Rolex, Patek Philippe) and genuinely limited editions, which tend to maintain or increase their premiums.
Generally, no — not on the secondary market. Premiums are highest in the first month after a fair launch and typically decline over the following 6–12 months. The smart move is to get on the authorised dealer waitlist (where you pay retail) and wait for your allocation. If buying on the secondary market, waiting 6+ months usually means better prices for all but the most supply-constrained brands.
Rolex and Patek Philippe consistently lead in value retention across all data sources. Audemars Piguet (particularly the Royal Oak) also performs strongly. Among independents, F.P. Journe, MB&F, and A. Lange & Söhne show above-average value retention. Brand supply discipline and established collector demand are the primary drivers of long-term value.
Genuinely limited editions (sub-500 units) from reputable brands tend to hold value better than regular production models, especially when tied to a compelling narrative. However, the market is flooded with watches that are ‘limited’ in name only (2,000+ pieces). A good test: if a limited edition is available from grey market dealers at or near retail within the first month, it’s not genuinely constrained and is unlikely to appreciate significantly.
For Rolex and Patek Philippe, join the authorised dealer waitlist immediately — retail is always the best price. For Audemars Piguet and top independents, the optimal secondary market window is 6–12 months post-launch. For Richemont and Swatch Group brands, 6–18 months is ideal. For mid-tier and independent brands, 12–24 months post-launch typically offers the best pre-owned value.
The three major watch auction houses are Phillips (The Geneva Watch Auction), Christie’s (Rare Watches), and Sotheby’s (Important Watches). All three hold major sales in Geneva in May and November, with additional sales in New York, Hong Kong, and London. Modern watches launched at fairs can appear at auction within 1–3 years of release, providing transparent price discovery for collectors.
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This article was researched with the help of AI. While we strive to keep all information accurate and up to date, there may be errors. If you notice any discrepancies, please contact us.


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