The WSJ and Luxury Watches

One of the great things about Portfolio magazine is that it has, so far, managed

to avoid any kind of feature article on the subject of high-end watches. Any

reader of high-end glossies aimed at rich businessmen is by this point intimately

familiar with the pornography of wristwear: objects which apparently transcend

their "watch" status to become "timepieces" in much the

same way as high-end apartments invariably become "residences". As

often as not these articles are written by Nick Foulkes, a man who I imagine

regularly dashing off a thousand words on different types of tourbillion before

breakfast.

Of course, these articles aren’t written to be read, they’re written to attract

advertising from watch manufacturers. And so they all have an astonishing sameness

to them: they wonder at craftmanship, they extoll technological prowess, they

explain that expensive watches are genuinely collectible and can often rise

in value over time. The one thing they never do is cast a remotely critical

eye on the industry.

And so we encounter the fact that this weekend, the Wall Street Journal ran

an 11-page

advertising section devoted to collecting and investing in luxury watches.

But it waited until Monday, after all those ads had run, to put on its front

page (not the Pursuits or Weekend sections, mind, where articles on

watches normally appear) an investigation of how Patek Philippe and other watchmakers

bid

on their own product at auction in order to create the illusion that there’s

actually a secondary market for these things.

It’ll be interesting to see whether Patek Philippe stops advertising in the

WSJ as a result of this story. On the one hand, the paper has tarnished the

brand’s reputation. But on the other hand, it was careful to do so outside the

sections where buying watches is something worthy of feature-length examination

in and of itself. So long as such articles don’t appear directly opposite ads

for luxury watches, everything should be OK, no?

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