The smash-and-grab Wednesday night in one of Switzerland’s most polished Alpine resorts, allegedly carried out by a 21-year-old suspect who rammed a stolen car into a Rolex boutique, is the latest sign that a Rolex store in the Alps now faces many of the same pressures as one in London or Paris.
The young man, who was tracked down by a police K9 unit after authorities launched a major search operation and found the stolen vehicle abandoned on the side of the road, highlights a paradox Rolex increasingly faces. As the brand reaches record levels of desirability and exclusivity, its retail locations have never become more attractive to criminals, even in a country known for discretion and low crime.
Social-media algorithms are exposing young viewers to luxury watches more than ever while a K-shaped economy keeps youth unemployment and cost-of-living pressures high in parts of Europe. The burglary in the Swiss town of Crans-Montana reflects a trend previous Rolex CEOs did not necessarily face. As the brand’s desirability reaches new highs, criminals are equipped with smartphones that have instant access to market values, resale premiums and WhatsApp groups. The heist came less than two weeks after the Audemars Piguet x Swatch “Royal Pop” release sparked mob scenes, pepper spray, store closures and arrests at malls.
But the latest incident may also strengthen the argument for Rolex’s growing preference for large flagship boutiques over smaller regional stores. Bigger locations can justify multi-million-dollar investments in reinforced façades, controlled entrances, private security, surveillance systems and secure inventory handling that smaller boutiques often cannot economically match.