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How Much Gold Will The Apple Watch Require?

IMG Auteur
Publié le 11 mars 2015
355 mots - Temps de lecture : 0 - 1 minutes
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SUIVRE : Bugs Copper
Rubrique : Marchés

TidBITS asked recently how much gold Apple's new smartwatch would be likely to consume. Based on the estimated production figure of 1 million units per month, each containing 2oz of 18-carat gold, it sensationally claimed that Apple would require 24 million ounces of gold annually, or roughly 30 percent of world production.

Gold bugs could be excused for yelping with excitement! But what seems too good to be true has a habit of turning out that way.

On Monday Apple announced the gold watch would cost US$10,000. Huffington Post sounded a word of warning, calling it "extremely expensive for something that could be obsolete in the next year". Bloomberg was already on record with a sceptical opinion piece entitled "Apple Watch Won't Rescue Gold Bugs".

According to Alix Steel, much could depend on whether the watch is seen as a piece of electronics or jewellery. With demand for gold in technology currently languishing, it has a much better chance of succeeding as jewellery in key markets like China where young people "eat up 18-carat gold items", she suggested.

What might also prove troubling about the perception of the gold watch stems from Apple's announcement that its new product is crafted from 18-carat gold that is twice as hard as "standard gold."

Understanding this involves a fair amount of advanced metallurgy, but basically instead of alloying gold with other metals such as copper or silver to make it tougher, Apple is mixing its gold with low-density boron carbide ceramic particles. According to Dr Drang, writing on Leancrew, it "allows them to make 18-carat gold that has, on a volume basis, less gold than regular 18-carat gold."

As the chart shows, this reduces the amount of gold Apple needs to use per watch significantly.

It'll be interesting to see whether consumers think it's cheeky to call the watch 18-carat when it has less pure gold in it than traditional 18-carat of the same volume. And even if they do, will it prevent the company from reaching its ambitious-sounding sales targets? We're certainly not prepared to bet against Apple's supreme marketing skills or the loyalty of its customers!

 

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Hublot ( http://www.hublotnation.com/2013/09/13/magic-gold-hublots-exclusive-material/ ) says that it is keeping the gold--boron-carbide fusion exclusive. So how did Apple get a license? Or did Apple find a work-around? Lire la suite
user4779 - 10/03/2015 à 11:26 GMT
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