(Photo credit: Wrist Aficionado)
A decade ago, platinum was more valuable than gold, but the tables have turned. Today, gold commands $2,656.30 per ounce, nearly triple platinum's $954.20.
Yet, at Rolex, platinum remains the “noblest of metals.” The metal’s purity and weight set it apart in the brand’s hierarchy. A Rolex Day-Date 40 in platinum is 48% more expensive than its gold counterpart, and the platinum Daytona commands a 67% premium — even after Rolex’s 14% increase on Daytona gold references this January.
The signature ice-blue dial, reserved for platinum Day-Date, Cosmograph Daytona and Perpetual 1908 models, underscores the metal’s elite status at Rolex.
Platinum has lost its luster as a safe-haven asset, a status gold retains during economic uncertainty, leading to declining demand and price pressures for platinum.
But in watchmaking, raw material costs tell only part of the story. The complexities of crafting platinum timepieces — its density, specialized machining requirements and the wear it imposes on tools — are what’s adding significant costs to manufacturing platinum watches.
(Data: Macrotrends)