Chronos Holding: Difference between revisions

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* 1973, May - Administrator [[Henry Favre]] has died; [[Jack W. Heuer]] is appointed a new member of the board of directors
* 1973, May - Administrator [[Henry Favre]] has died; [[Jack W. Heuer]] is appointed a new member of the board of directors
* 1973, July - [[Mireille Strasser]] is appointed a power of attorney
* 1973, July - [[Mireille Strasser]] is appointed a power of attorney
* 1974, November - [[Jean Hegetschweiler]] is moved from administrator to administrator-delegate; [[Roger Lévy]] now lives in Bienne
* 1975, May - First Vice-President [[Karl Obrecht]], [[Jean-Louis Borel]], [[Hans Kurth]], and [[Michel Meyrat]] are no longer part of the Board of Directors; [[Erich Kocher]] is appointed director; [[André Favre]] is no longer second vice-president; [[Pierre Renggli]] is appointed first vice-president; [[André Brasey]] is appointed second vice-president
* 1975, May - First Vice-President [[Karl Obrecht]], [[Jean-Louis Borel]], [[Hans Kurth]], and [[Michel Meyrat]] are no longer part of the Board of Directors; [[Erich Kocher]] is appointed director; [[André Favre]] is no longer second vice-president; [[Pierre Renggli]] is appointed first vice-president; [[André Brasey]] is appointed second vice-president
 
* 1977, November 9 - The company reduces its share capital from 21,150,000 to 2,115,000 francs by reducing the nominal value of the 150,000 registered shares from 100 to 10 francs, and that of the 12,300 bearer shares from 500 to 50 francs
 
* 1978, January - [[Jean Hegetschweiler]], who remains a member of the board of directors, is no longer a delegate and director; his signature and [[Mireille Strasser]]'s are extinguished; [[Heinz Hämmerli]] (already administrator) gets signing authority, as does [[Richard Locher]]; the company moves to Faubourg du Lac 6, the offices of [[ASUAG]]
 
* 1978, June 23 - First Vice-President [[Pierre Renggli]], Second Vice-President [[André Brasey]], [[Charles Blum]], [[François Du Pasquier]], [[André Favre]], [[Peter Haas]], [[Jean Hegetschweiler]], [[Jack W. Heuer]], [[Numa Jeannin]], [[Jean-François Krebs]], [[Roger Lévy]], and [[Paul Tuetey]] have resigned; the board of directors is now composed of President [[Gérard Bauer]], First Vice-President [[René Retornaz]], Second Vice-President [[Eduard Rentsch]], [[Heinz Hämmerli]], and [[Erich Kocher]]; [[Johann Affolter]] is appointed power of attorney
* 1979, January - Second Vice-President [[Eduard Rentsch]] is no longer a member of the Board of Directors; [[Pierre Pont]] is appointed second vice-president
* 1979, June 30 - Chronos Holding announces that it will no longer pay a dividend and will suspend repayment of certain loans
* 1983, December 19 - Following a special meeting of shareholders the decision is taken to dissolve Chronos Holding; [[Heinz Hämmerli]] is no longer part of the administration; his signature and [[Johann Affolter]]'s power of attorney are extinguished; the liquidation will be carried out by [[Gérard Bauer]], [[Carl Meyer]], [[René Retornaz]], [[Pierre Pont]], and [[Erich Kocher]]
* 1986, December - The liquidation of Chronos Holding is completed and the company name is deleted


[[Category:Watchmaking organizations]]
[[Category:Watchmaking organizations]]

Revision as of 01:52, 8 November 2024

Chronos Holding AG was an organization of Swiss watchmaking companies founded in 1966 and headquartered in Bienne. Its stated purpose was "Facilitate the merger of existing watch companies."

As of 1972, Chronos Holding owned 23% of the shares of SAPHIR Group, which included Jaeger-LeCoultre and related companies. Henry-A. Favre served on the board representing these interests.

Chronos Holding was established on April 14, 1966 to facilitate the concentration of existing watchmaking companies and brands. It was initially capitalized at 5 million francs, though it quickly grew much bigger. Gérard Bauer was the chairman of the board, with Karl Obrecht and Philippe de Weck serving as first- and second-vice chairmen. Many other notable names in watchmaking, including Théodore Renfer and Pierre Renggli of ASUAG, also served on the board.

The organization made its first acquisition on October 13 of that same year, purchasing Cyma Watch Co. for 2 million francs. This was financed entirely by the issuance of new shares, increasing share capital of Chronos Holding to 7 million francs. At its shareholder meeting on September 8, 1967, 50,000 new shares of 100 francs were issued and purchased, increasing share capital to 12 million francs.

On June 28, 1968 Chronos Holding purchased Ernest Borel & Cie for 3 million francs. This was accomplished by issuing 3,000 bearer shares valued at 500 francs each and 750 bearer bonds at 2000 francs each, increasing share capital to 13.5 million francs. This sum was given to Raoul de Perrot, owner of Enest Borel. The company issued 50,000 new registered shares of 100 francs each on October 29 of that year, increasing share capital to 18.5 million francs.

On December 17 of that year Chronos Holding purchased Manufactures des Montres Doxa SA for 4 million francs. This involved 2000 bearer shares of 500 francs each as well as 3000 bearer bonds of 1000 francs issued to Max Jaggi. Jean-Louis Borel of Ernest Borel was appointed to the board of directors that same day, replacing Silvan Kocher, who died. The next day, December 18, Ernest Borel & Cie SA changed its company name to Synchron SA in anticipation of becoming a holding company for the Ernest Borel and Doxa brands. On March 27, 1969, Synchron becomes "Synchron SA, Fabriques d'Horlogerie Réunies" as Doxa and Cyma are merged into it. The new company is lead by Jean-Louis Borel and Ernest Schnegg and is valued at 2.375 million francs thanks to the investment of 1.625 million francs from Chronos Holding.

Chronos Holding added a second group of watchmakers on February 10, 1969. Société Anonyme de Participations Industrielles et Commerciales was purchased from Henri Niess for 3.3 million francs, including 1.65 million in bonds and the rest in shares. SAPIC had been established in 1927 by the LeCoultre family to hold their watchmaking operations, adding Paris-based Etablissements Ed. Jaeger in 1937 to form Jaeger-LeCoultre. Vacheron & Constantin was also brought in that year but was bought out in 1965 by George Ketterer. This was likely the impetus for Niess to sell SAPIC to Chronos Holding.

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