Is a Luxury Watch a Smart Investment in 2026?
The Question Every Watch Buyer in Bangladesh Is Asking
You’ve worked hard. You’ve built something. And now you’re looking at a Rolex Submariner or an Omega Speedmaster not just as a reward, but as a financial decision. The question hanging in the back of your mind: is this actually a smart investment, or am I just telling myself a story to justify spending ৳15 lakh on a watch?
It’s a fair question. And unlike most articles that give you a breathless “yes, absolutely!” we’re going to give you the real answer. With data. With nuance. And with honesty about both the upsides and the risks.
Here’s the short version: certain luxury watches have outperformed the stock market, real estate, and gold over specific periods. A Rolex GMT-Master II appreciated over 500% between 2010 and 2026. Patek Philippe Nautilus models regularly trade at 150-300% above their original retail price. The global pre-owned luxury watch market has surpassed $30 billion.
But and this is important not every watch appreciates. Not every brand holds value. And buying the wrong model from the wrong seller can turn your “investment” into a very expensive lesson.
This guide will arm you with everything you need to make the right call. Whether you’re a first-time buyer in Dhaka considering your first luxury watch, or a collector looking to build a portfolio that works as hard as you do you’ll walk away knowing exactly where your money is best placed in 2026.
Let’s follow the numbers.
The Numbers Don’t Lie: Luxury Watch Market in 2026
Before we talk about individual watches, let’s look at the market they live in because the macro picture in 2026 is genuinely compelling.
The global luxury watch market is valued at approximately $50-80 billion and is projected to reach nearly $80 billion by 2033, growing at a steady 5-6% annually. Asia-Pacific dominates this market, accounting for roughly 40% of global revenue and that includes the rapidly expanding collector communities in Bangladesh, India, and Southeast Asia.
The pre-owned luxury watch segment has been the real story, though. This market has exploded past $30 billion, driven by authenticated resale platforms, growing collector confidence, and a fundamental shift in how people think about luxury watches not just as accessories, but as tangible, portable assets.
Here’s what the 2026 market looks like after the correction:
The speculative frenzy of 2021-2022 when watches were traded like stocks and every steel Rolex commanded absurd premiums has cooled. Prices peaked in early 2022, corrected through 2023 (some models dropped 20-30% from peak), and have since stabilised into what analysts call a “normalization phase.” The froth is gone. Speculative buyers have exited. What remains is a market dominated by genuine collectors, enthusiasts, and serious investors who understand fundamental value.
For buyers in Bangladesh, this is actually excellent news. The 2026 market represents a more rational entry point than anything we’ve seen in the past four years. You’re no longer paying a speculation premium. You’re paying for real value and that’s exactly where smart money wants to be.
Which Watches Actually Appreciate? A Data-Backed Analysis
Not all luxury watches are investments. Let’s be upfront about that. But certain models from specific brands, in specific configurations have track records that rival traditional financial assets.
Here’s what the data from Bob’s Watches, WatchCharts, and major auction houses actually shows:
The Blue-Chip Performers
| Brand & Model | 2010 Baseline | 2026 Value | Appreciation | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rolex GMT-Master II | ~$3,400 | ~$20,595 | ~506% | “Pepsi” and “Batman” references lead |
| Rolex Submariner | ~$3,000 | ~$17,295 | ~472% | Currently at 92% of all-time peak |
| Rolex Daytona | ~$7,500 | ~$30,000+ | ~370% | Steel models with up to 35% CAGR over 5 years |
| Rolex Datejust | ~$2,200 | ~$8,500+ | ~286% | Steady, less volatile the “blue chip bond” of Rolex |
| Patek Philippe Nautilus | Retail ~$30,000 | $80,000-$150,000+ | 150-300%+ above retail | Discontinued 5711 models command extreme premiums |
| Omega Speedmaster Pro | ~$3,500 | ~$5,500-7,000 | 60-80% retention | The “Moonwatch” holds value; vintage models appreciate strongly |
The Pattern Is Clear
The watches that appreciate most consistently share specific characteristics. They’re stainless steel sport models from heritage brands. They have iconic status within their brand’s lineup. Production is limited relative to demand. And they carry cultural weight stories, history, emotional resonance that transcends fashion cycles.
Notice what’s not on this list? Fashion watches. Smart watches. Mass-produced quartz pieces. Even some luxury brands don’t hold value the way Rolex, Patek Philippe, and top-tier Omega do. This distinction matters enormously when you’re thinking about watches as investments.
At Hourglass Emporium, we specifically curate our collection around models with strong value retention because we believe our customers deserve watches that work as hard as they do. When you choose a Rolex Submariner 126610LV or a Rolex Datejust 41 from our inventory, you’re choosing a model with a proven track record.
The 5 Factors That Drive Luxury Watch Value
Understanding why certain watches appreciate helps you make smarter buying decisions. Here are the five forces that separate a depreciating accessory from an appreciating asset.
1. Controlled Scarcity
Rolex reportedly produces around one million watches per year sounds like a lot, until you realise that global demand for specific references (Daytona, Submariner, GMT-Master) far exceeds that supply. Waiting lists at authorised dealers stretch for years. This deliberate supply constraint pushes demand to the secondary market, where prices are set by what buyers are willing to pay.
Patek Philippe operates on an even more extreme scarcity model, producing an estimated 60,000 watches annually a fraction of Rolex’s output. The result? Steel Nautilus and Aquanaut models trade at multiples of retail.
Why this matters for you: When supply is permanently constrained, the floor under prices stays firm. Unlike stocks that can be diluted with new share issuances, a discontinued Rolex reference will only become rarer over time.
2. Brand Heritage and Recognition
There’s a reason a steel Rolex Daytona holds more value than a gold watch from a lesser-known brand. Brand equity built over decades of consistent quality, cultural association, and marketing mastery creates a permanent demand base.
Rolex has been synonymous with success since the 1950s. Omega went to the moon. Patek Philippe has been crafting watches since 1839. That kind of heritage doesn’t get replicated overnight, and it acts as an insurance policy on your watch’s value.
3. Condition and Documentation
This is where many buyers in Bangladesh get it wrong. A genuine Rolex without its box, papers, and warranty card can be worth 15-25% less than the same watch with complete documentation. The pre-owned market rewards “full sets” original box, warranty card with matching serial number, hang tags, booklets.
Condition matters equally. A well-maintained watch with minimal scratches, original parts, and a verified service history commands significantly higher prices than a neglected piece. This is one reason buying from an authenticated source like Hourglass Emporium protects your long-term investment every watch we sell comes with verified documentation.
4. Material and Configuration
Here’s a counterintuitive truth: stainless steel sport watches from Rolex consistently outperform gold models in terms of appreciation. Why? Because steel models are more affordable at entry, have broader demand, and benefit more from supply constraints at authorised dealers.
A steel Rolex Daytona with a white “Panda” dial has historically shown a stronger appreciation curve than a yellow gold Day-Date. This doesn’t mean gold watches are bad investments they hold value backed partly by metal content but for maximum appreciation potential, steel sport references are the proven winners.
5. Discontinuation Effect
When Rolex discontinues a reference, supply becomes permanently fixed while demand continues. This is the single most reliable driver of dramatic appreciation in luxury watches.
The Submariner “Hulk” (Ref. 116610LV) discontinued in 2020 surged in value after its replacement was announced. The Patek Philippe Nautilus 5711/1A discontinued in 2021 saw prices skyrocket. If you can identify models likely to be updated or discontinued in coming product cycles, you’re positioning yourself ahead of a potential value surge.
Smart tip: Industry analysts suggest that certain Rolex references including specific Submariner Date and Datejust configurations could potentially receive updates in the 2027 product cycle. Buying current-production versions now could be strategically sound.
Luxury Watches vs. Traditional Investments: An Honest Comparison
If you’re spending ৳15-25 lakh on a watch, you deserve to know how it stacks up against other places that money could go. Here’s an honest comparison.
| Factor | Luxury Watch (Blue-Chip) | Stock Market | Real Estate (Bangladesh) | Gold |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avg. Annual Return | 8-18% for top Rolex references | 9-12% (S&P 500 historical) | Varies widely; often illiquid | 5-8% long-term |
| Liquidity | High global secondary market, can sell within days | Very high | Very low months to years | High |
| Enjoyment While Holding | Yes you wear it daily | No | Yes if you live in it | No |
| Portability | Extremely portable | Digital | Not portable | Moderate |
| Inflation Hedge | Strong prices rise with inflation | Mixed | Mixed | Strong |
| Entry Cost | ৳8-30 lakh for investment-grade | Any amount | ৳50 lakh+ in Dhaka | Any amount |
| Expertise Required | Moderate know models, brands, condition | Moderate to high | High | Low |
| Counterparty Risk | Low if authenticated | Moderate (market risk) | Moderate (legal, title risk) | Low |
| Tax Efficiency | No capital gains tax on personal items in most cases | Subject to tax | Subject to tax | Subject to tax |
| Generational Transfer | Excellent heirloom value | Moderate | Complex (legal) | Good |
The Honest Take
Luxury watches aren’t going to replace your stock portfolio or your retirement plan. They’re not meant to. But as a diversification tool a tangible, portable, enjoyable asset that sits outside traditional financial markets they offer something genuinely unique.
You can’t wear a stock certificate. You can’t pass down a mutual fund at your daughter’s wedding and have it carry emotional weight. You can’t look at your wrist during a tough meeting and draw confidence from your real estate portfolio.
A luxury watch does all of that while if you choose wisely holding or growing its value. That’s the sweet spot. It’s not stocks or watches. It’s stocks and watches, each playing a different role in a well-rounded financial life.
The Bangladesh Advantage: Why Now Is the Right Time
If you’re in Bangladesh and considering a luxury watch as an investment, the timing in 2026 is genuinely favourable. Here’s why.
The market correction is your friend. The 2021-2022 price bubble has deflated. Speculative buyers are gone. You’re entering at normalised prices the most rational entry point since 2019. For patience-oriented investors, buying in a corrected market is textbook smart.
Bangladesh’s luxury market is early-stage. The domestic wristwatch industry is valued at ৳180-200 crore, growing at 10% annually. The collector community is expanding rapidly, with vibrant Facebook groups and increasing awareness of luxury horology. Being an early participant in a growing market means you benefit as the broader community matures and demand rises.
Currency diversification. A luxury watch priced in global secondary markets (denominated in USD/EUR/CHF) provides a natural hedge against taka depreciation. As the Bangladeshi economy grows and integrates further with global luxury markets, locally held authenticated watches become increasingly liquid.
Rolex raised retail prices again. Rolex implemented price increases of up to 8% in early 2025, and further increases are expected. Each retail price hike pushes secondary market prices up with it meaning pre-owned pieces bought at today’s prices benefit from tomorrow’s retail increases.
Cultural alignment. Luxury watches hold particular significance in Bangladeshi culture as wedding gifts, as markers of professional achievement, and as family heirlooms. This isn’t just financial investment; it’s investment in something your family and community genuinely values.
The opportunity is clear: authenticated luxury watches, bought at post-correction prices, from a trusted reseller in Bangladesh, with proper documentation to protect long-term value. That’s exactly what Hourglass Emporium offers and why more discerning buyers in Dhaka, Chittagong, and Sylhet are choosing us.
The Risks Because Honest Advice Matters
We wouldn’t be doing our job if we only told you the good news. Here are the real risks of treating luxury watches as investments and how to mitigate them.
Not every watch appreciates. The models showing 300-500% gains are the top performers. Many watches even from respected brands depreciate 20-40% immediately after purchase and never recover. Fashion watches, non-iconic references, and oversaturated models can lose significant value. The fix: stick to proven models with strong secondary market data.
Counterfeits destroy value. A fake watch is worth nothing. A genuine watch bought without proper documentation loses 15-25% of its value. In Bangladesh, where the authenticated reseller infrastructure is still developing, this risk is real. The fix: only buy from verified, trusted sources. At Hourglass Emporium, every piece goes through our rigorous multi-point authentication because your investment depends on it. You can learn more about our process.
Market cycles exist. The 2022 correction proved that luxury watches aren’t immune to price drops. If you buy at a market peak and need to sell during a correction, you could take a loss. The fix: adopt a 3-5 year minimum holding period. The data consistently shows that luxury watches perform best as medium-to-long-term holds, not quick flips.
Liquidity isn’t instant. While the global secondary market is liquid, selling a watch in Bangladesh specifically may take longer than selling stocks. The fix: buy models with strong international demand (Rolex sport references, Omega Speedmaster) that can be sold globally if needed.
Condition risk. Wearing your investment daily means wear and tear. Deep scratches, damaged crystals, or lost documentation all reduce value. The fix: regular servicing, careful wearing, and keeping all original packaging and papers safe.
Being clear-eyed about risks isn’t pessimism it’s the foundation of smart investing. The buyers who succeed are the ones who understand both sides of the equation.
How to Buy a Luxury Watch Like an Investor
Ready to make a move? Here are the principles that separate smart buyers from impulse purchasers.
1. Buy the seller first, the watch second. In the pre-owned market, the seller’s credibility is your greatest insurance. As Hodinkee the world’s leading watch authority consistently emphasises, provenance and authentication are non-negotiable. This is why trusted resellers like Hourglass Emporium exist we stake our reputation on every piece we sell.
2. Prioritise “full set” watches. Original box, warranty card, matching serial numbers, hang tags, booklets. A complete set adds 15-25% in resale value over a “watch only” piece. Always insist on documentation.
3. Focus on steel sport references. The data is consistent across years and market cycles: stainless steel sport models from Rolex (Submariner, GMT-Master, Daytona), Patek Philippe (Nautilus), and Audemars Piguet (Royal Oak) hold and appreciate value better than dress watches or precious metal models.
4. Understand your holding period. Most luxury watches hit their lowest resale point 3-5 years after purchase, then stabilise and begin appreciating. If you’re buying pre-owned, much of that initial depreciation has already been absorbed by the first owner giving you a better entry point.
5. Track the market. Use platforms like WatchCharts and the Bob’s Watches Market Report to monitor secondary market prices. Understand whether a model is trending up, stabilising, or correcting before you commit. Being informed is free. Being uninformed is expensive.
6. Keep impeccable records. Store your warranty card, purchase receipt, service history, and any authentication certificates in a safe place. These documents are almost as valuable as the watch itself when it comes time to sell.
7. Buy what you love then verify it holds value. This might be the most important principle. The best watch investment is one you’re thrilled to wear every day. Financial returns are a bonus on top of the daily joy of owning a genuine masterpiece. If you buy purely for profit and don’t love the watch, you’ll be tempted to sell at the wrong time.
Investment-Grade Picks at Hourglass Emporium
Here are specific models from our current collection that combine personal enjoyment with strong investment fundamentals:
| Watch | Why It’s Investment-Grade | Price Tier |
|---|---|---|
| Rolex Submariner 126610LV | Iconic green Cerachrom bezel, strong demand, proven appreciation history | ৳18,75,000 |
| Rolex Datejust 41 | The reliable blue-chip steady appreciation, universal appeal | ৳17,75,000 |
| Omega Speedmaster Moonshine Gold | Precious metal Moonwatch limited production, NASA heritage | Premium tier |
| Omega Seamaster Diver 300M | Master Chronometer certified, James Bond lineage, excellent value retention | Mid-range |
| Grand Seiko SBGR325 | Rising collector demand, exceptional finishing, still “discoverable” pricing | Mid-range |
| Zenith Chronomaster El Primero | Home of the first automatic chronograph heritage play with upside | Mid-range |
Every piece is authenticated, documented, and ready to become part of your story and your portfolio.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is a luxury watch really a good investment in 2026?
A: For the right models yes. Stainless steel sport references from Rolex, Patek Philippe, and Audemars Piguet have consistently outperformed inflation and, in many cases, traditional investments over 10-15 year periods. The key is buying authenticated pieces with full documentation from trusted sources, focusing on proven models, and holding for at least 3-5 years.
Q: Which luxury watch brand holds its value best?
A: Rolex leads for overall value retention and liquidity it’s the most traded luxury watch brand on the secondary market globally. Patek Philippe leads for maximum appreciation, especially steel sport models like the Nautilus. Omega (particularly the Speedmaster Professional) offers strong value retention at a more accessible price point.
Q: How much does a Rolex appreciate per year?
A: It varies significantly by model. Top-performing references like the GMT-Master II have shown compound annual growth rates of 12-18% over 15 years. The Daytona has shown up to 35% CAGR over certain 5-year periods. More conservative models like the Datejust appreciate steadily at 3-5% annually. Not all Rolex models appreciate research specific references before buying.
Q: Can I buy investment-grade luxury watches in Bangladesh?
A: Yes. Hourglass Emporium is Bangladesh’s premier authenticated luxury watch reseller, offering Rolex, Omega, Grand Seiko, and more all with verified documentation that protects your investment’s long-term value. Our collection is specifically curated around models with proven value retention.
Q: What’s the minimum budget for a watch that holds value?
A: Entry-level investment-grade pieces start around ৳5-8 lakh for models like the Omega Speedmaster Professional or pre-owned Rolex Oyster Perpetual. For the strongest appreciation potential (Rolex Submariner, GMT-Master, Daytona), budget ৳15-30 lakh. Remember: authenticated, documented watches from trusted sellers hold value far better than undocumented pieces.
Q: Is it better to buy new or pre-owned for investment?
A: Pre-owned often offers a better entry point because the initial depreciation has already been absorbed. A 3-5 year old Rolex Submariner in excellent condition with full documentation gives you most of the investment upside with less downside risk. However, new watches from brands with strong waiting lists (like Rolex) can command immediate secondary market premiums.
The Verdict: Smart Money, Smarter Wrist
Let’s bring it all together.
Is a luxury watch a smart investment in 2026? The answer is a qualified, data-backed yes but only if you approach it with the same discipline you’d bring to any serious financial decision.
The watches that perform best as investments share clear characteristics: heritage brands, iconic references, stainless steel construction, limited supply, and impeccable documentation. Rolex, Patek Philippe, and Omega lead the pack. The post-correction 2026 market offers the most rational entry point in years. And the cultural significance of luxury watches in Bangladesh as wedding gifts, professional milestones, and family heirlooms adds emotional value that no stock ticker can match.
But the single most important factor? Where you buy.
An authenticated watch with full documentation from a trusted reseller is an investment. The same watch without papers, from an unverified Instagram seller, is a gamble. The difference between the two can be 15-25% in resale value or, in the worst case, the difference between genuine and counterfeit.
At Hourglass Emporium, we exist to bridge that gap. Every watch in our collection is authenticated, documented, and backed by a team that genuinely cares about your investment because our reputation grows when your watch’s value does.
The smartest investment you’ll ever make is one you can wear on your wrist, pass down to the next generation, and enjoy every single day. We’re here to make sure it’s the real thing.
Explore our investment-grade collection at Hourglass Emporium.
📞 Hotline: +880 1973 676 591 💬 WhatsApp: +880 1973 676 591 📧 Email: info@hourglassemporium.com 🌐 Visit: hourglassemporium.com
Your money deserves to work as hard as you do. Let’s put it on your wrist.







