Swiss franc per U.S. dollar (Source: LSEG)
Switzerland and the U.S. may have agreed in principle to cap American tariffs on Swiss exports at 15 percent, but the Swiss franc keeps rising as investors seek refuge not only in gold but also in Switzerland during times of geopolitical uncertainty.
For Rolex, which already raised prices on Jan. 1, a stronger franc acts like a tariff that never expires. This begs the question of whether another price increase could follow before year-end. Costs, including labor, are largely paid in francs, while much of the brand’s revenue is earned in foreign currencies, especially dollars, its largest market.
The franc has gained 3 percent in the past two months alone, after a 14 percent rise already last year, reaching about 0.77 francs to the dollar, its strongest level since 2015. For many Rolex employees who are frontaliers, workers who live in France and commute to manufacturing sites around Geneva, a rising franc is not all bad news.
For Rolex, a second price increase this year would not be unprecedented. In 2025, the brand raised prices in January and again in May. It also implemented two rounds of increases in both 2024 and 2023. Rolex is likely awaiting the U.S. Supreme Court decision on the Trump tariffs, expected before June, before deciding whether to implement another price adjustment this year.