Heard about this a good few weeks ago. They expect 7 figures, but it's THE Paul Newman and someone will no doubt pay it.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic..._medium=socialAmong vintage collectors, certain timepieces are known as holy grail watches. They’re the ones that inspire bidding frenzies and, subsequently, bragging rights.
So far, nothing tops a stainless-steel Patek Philippe that sold for $11.1 million at Phillips auction house in November. Patek produced only 281 of these 1941 wristwatches, mostly in gold; only four are known to have been made in stainless steel.
Also among the most coveted is the Daytona Rolex, a limited run of sports watches produced from 1966 until the mid-1970s, made famous by the actor and philanthropist Paul Newman, who wore one daily in the ’70s. In May, an 18-karat gold “Paul Newman” Daytona fetched $3.7 million at Phillips in Geneva. A year earlier the company sold a stainless-steel version for $2 million. But neither of those had ever graced the blue-eyed star’s wrist.
Now some lucky person will be able to buy the holiest of holy grail watches: Paul Newman’s actual Paul Newman Daytona.
“You ask 100 collectors over dinners what’s on their shopping list—the Paul Newman Daytona Rolex,” says Aurel Bacs, senior consultant for watches at Phillips, which is running the auction in New York on Oct. 26.
Phillips estimates that Newman’s stainless-steel Daytona Rolex wristwatch will fetch more than $1 million. That’s conservative; given its provenance and good condition, vintage watch enthusiasts are throwing numbers as high as $10 million.
Heard about this a good few weeks ago. They expect 7 figures, but it's THE Paul Newman and someone will no doubt pay it.
I'll be surprised if this doesn't make $8-10 million.
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It's a good read. Not for the speculation about how much the auction will raise, but for the story of the watch itself and the reason why it is now being auctioned.
How about a whip-round on here and then we can take turns wearing it....................................I'll get my coat
Yep the story of how it got passed down is great. The reason for auctioning even moreso: http://nellnewmanfoundation.org/
You can get his Ranch Dressing a darn sight cheaper!
Is it purely down to it being THE WATCH, or is the fact it's for the foundation going to help it achieve this value?
Am I the only one who thinks it's a little.... ugly...?
Ugly is probably the wrong word. But I definitely don't see the appeal aesthetically speaking.
I may pop a bid in
10p says it does $10m +.
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We got a lot of members here and some wealthy I imagine (not me unfortunately), perhaps we should all club together and buy it, divide the cost into shares and it can be used as an investment!
Seriously though, I like the watch but the buyer is just paying for the link to Newman but if some bad news came out about him the value would crash..
Estimates of final sale price range from £7m to £10m+ and a new world record.
Paul will be along shortly to tell us that it is a ratty old piece of tat.
Let's put it in context, the exact same Watch with no providence would be a little over £100k, so that is actually a hefty premium just because of who owned it.
Last edited by Wallasey Runner; 15th October 2017 at 22:31.
Nice little excuse for a trip across The Pond to the Big Apple.
Sadly I will only be there with a box of popcorn in my hand rather than a bidding paddle, but my seat is booked.
Ironically, I suspect there will be the biggest gathering of Paul Newman Daytonas ever seen on the wrists of the audience in the auction room...
MW
Whoever does not know how to hit the nail on the head should be asked not to hit it at all.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Very nice watches.
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Looking at the catalogue I see Newman's Daytona is lot number 8 - has a estimate of $1m what's the betting it will go much higher https://www.phillips.com/detail/ROLEX/NY080117/8
personally I am more interested in Lot 9 which is identical to a watch I own
Whoever does not know how to hit the nail on the head should be asked not to hit it at all.
Friedrich Nietzsche
I've left $10m (in M&M's) on the book so Dr Watchevil will have to top that.
Back in the real world, and highjack alert, what would Aldrins stolen Speedy now be worth?
If it ever does show up its going straight back to Uncle Sam. I understand all Apollo flown Speedys had to be handed in after the Aldrin fiasco?
What was that engraved '43' inside 105.012 allegedly found on a Californian beach? A student put it in a local ad and sold it for $175!
Newman connection or not, they`re an.........odd....... looking watch - all that empty dial space..
They could do with five lines of text in different colours to fill it out a bit..
Hodinkee have a video on the thing as it was in their office. Unfortunately hardly any footage of the thing other than standard shots.
Last edited by Andyg; 22nd October 2017 at 20:41.
Whoever does not know how to hit the nail on the head should be asked not to hit it at all.
Friedrich Nietzsche
I suspect it may not go for as much as people think... definitely not $10m, unless perhaps it's seen as more of donation towards the cause than the purchase of a watch.
I suppose if two or three characters become convinced the watch is 'theirs', things may get a little silly.
All in a good cause, I suppose.
I'd rather have a silver dial 6263 myself, though I know that's not the same.
Some lovely watches out of the 50. that 37mm Cosmograph is fantastic (Mike prob has a boxful)
So we've discussed the money, who do we think is going to buy it ??
Think I'll throw a cheeky bid in for lot 42 - the Mark 1 DRSD and if I don't get that I'll wait until lot 48 and grab the Milsub.
Then I woke up...
I discussed this with Mike Wood, either an investment consortium, put it in a bank vault for 10 years and resell or a very well heeled private individual collector - in which case it will never been seen again.
I asked if Rolex themselves would be interested, but Mike thought not.
I think will do over 10mil if you are billionaire collector whats 12mil
More than possible, but I think it was a special order. The engraving was ordered by Newman himself.
As for estimates, a fellow I know in the business believes it will be between 3-5million, but that's a pure guess. There are lots of people in the world who can afford more and unlike Cars, this is small, cheap to run and can easily be moved between countries without problem.
time will tell.
Whoever does not know how to hit the nail on the head should be asked not to hit it at all.
Friedrich Nietzsche
This one will cost you less without the connection but still big money for eBay.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/ulk/itm/201793532297
What a nice thing for James Cox to do.
A welcome reminder that there are still some selfless souls around.
some stunners in those 50!
I hope it goes to a watch lover. Sadly though like many things these days I can possibly see it going to someone without much real interest, a billionaire that wants it because he/she can have it and because it’s the watch that everyone talks about.
I see it going for $10m but $20 million plus wouldn’t surprise me. If you were worth 5 or 10 billion or more then it’s pocket change, but you get the quodos that goes with it.
P.S. is quodos even a word I’m now thinking
Especially as watches such as these confer upon the owner the ability to effectively carry around millions of pounds around with them on their wrists, with 99% of people completely unaware of the fact. I don't think it'd even register as a Rolex to many (at a distance where they'd be unable to read the dial).
In fact, it's better than that, as the value will be (for the next little while at least) roughly fixed vs. the fluctuations of a currency.
That could be quite useful even to someone who (for whatever reason) disliked Paul Newman and/or his watch.