SimonC wrote:
It was £2,600 then, today the same watch (although granted it has a different movement) is over £10,000.So, in other words it has more than doubled in real terms, which is too much really; £10k for that watch is actually bordering on the preposterous to be honest really.
That's not really an apples-to-apples comparison. The current Chronomat isn't the same watch now as it was in 1999. The two-tone MOP Evo increased in price by roughly 50% from the time it was introduced to now. If we apply that same increase to the older-gen Chronomat's price the year it was discontinued (the year the Evo was introduced) that would bring its current retail price to approximately $7800 US - still a pretty hefty increase, although not on a par with £10k. If the price increase were in line with inflation, then it should cost around $6300, although that doesn't take the price of gold into account, which has increased substantially in the last year or so. That said, the rate of increase on non-gold models is only slightly better: an all-steel Evo on Pilot sold for $4500 in 2005, the year it came out. Today, retail is $6500, or an increase of 44%. If it were in line with inflation, it should cost $5300.