SSIH SSIH (
Société Suisse pour l'Industrie Horlogère), originated in 1930 with the merger of the
Omega and
Tissot companies. Swiss watch quality was high, but new technology, such as the
Hamilton Electric watch introduced in 1957 and the
Bulova Accutron tuning fork watch in 1961, presaged increasing technological competition. In the late 1970s, SSIH became insolvent due in part to a recession and in part to heavy competition from inexpensive Asian-made quartz crystal watches. These difficulties occurred even though it had become Switzerland's largest, and the world's third largest, producer of watches. Its creditor banks assumed control in 1981.
ASUAG ASUAG (
Allgemeine Gesellschaft der Schweizerischen Uhrenindustrie), formed in 1931, was the world's largest producer of watch movements and the parts thereof (
balance wheels,
balance springs, assortments, watch stones ("jewels")). ASUAG had also integrated an array of watch brands in 1972 into a sub-holding company,
General Watch Co. ASUAG failed similarly in 1982.
The Swatch Group ASUAG/SSIH was formed in 1983 from the two financially troubled predecessor companies, ASUAG and SSIH. Taken private in 1985 by then-CEO
Nicolas Hayek, with the understanding of the Swiss banks and the financial assistance of a group of Swiss private investors (in particular
Stephan Schmidheiny and
Esther Grether), it was renamed
SMH (Société de Microélectronique et d'Horlogerie) in 1986, and ultimately Swatch Group Ltd in 1998. The "
swatch" brand of watch was launched in 1983, by the
ETA SA CEO
Ernst Thomke and his engineers. The quartz watch was redesigned for manufacturing efficiency and fewer parts, and the styling and design were updated. == Brands ==