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Jagdish Saran Hindu P.G.

College
Amroha
Topic Rolex

FACULTY OF MANAGEMENT
Department of Business
Administration
M.J.P. Rohilkhand University,
Submitted By
Submitted to
Bareilly
Mohd Kamil
BBA Faculty
BBA-2nd Sem.

Roll No.
7178050025

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
It is my pleasure to acknowledge the assistance of a number of people without
whose help this project report could not be completed.
I express my profound sense of gratitude to my project guide BBA Faculty for
giving encouragement in taking up the project.
I am also thankful to all my faculties for motivating and librarian for making
available to me the important book in the library and the necessary guidance for
this project.
At last but not the least, I express my thanks to my parents, who provided me
support throughout this project. They have been a perennial source of
inspiration for me.
I am too small so thank GOD for anything & everything.

Mohd Kamil
BBA-2nd Semester
Roll No. : 7178050025

STUDENT DECLARATION
I Mohd Kamil hereby declare that this Project Report entitled Rolex,
submitted in the partial fulfillment of the requirement of Bachelor of Business
Administration (BBA) from Jagdish Saran Hindu PG College, Amroha. It is
based on primary & secondary data found by me in various departments, books,
magazines and websites & Collected by me under the guidance of my Project
guide BBA Faculty.

Mohd Kamil
BBA-2nd Semester
Roll No. 7178050025

Contents

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

Title

Page No.

Acknowledgement
Student declaration
Company profile
Findings of study
Conclusion
Suggestion
Bibliography

2
3
5-24
25
26
27
28

COMPANY PROFILE
Rolex SA
4

Type
Industry
Founded
Founder
Headquarters
Area served
Key people
Products

Privately held company


Watch manufacturing
London, United Kingdom (1905)
Alfred Davis
Hans Wilsdorf
Geneva, Switzerland
Worldwide
Jean-Frederic Dufour, (CEO)
Cellini
Day-Date
Datejust
Datejust II
Explorer
Explorer II
Daytona
GMT Master
GMT-Master II
Lady Datejust
Milgauss
Sea-Dweller
Sky-Dweller
Submariner
5

Yacht-Master
Yacht-Master II
Production output
Services
Revenue
Owner
Number of employees
Subsidiaries
Website

Rolex SA

751,285 COSC movements (2011)


Maintenance
Repair
US$7.4 billion (2012)
Wilsdorf Foundation
2,800
Montres Tudor SA
www.rolex.com

and its subsidiary Montres Tudor SA design, manufacture,

distribute and service wristwatches sold under the Rolex and Tudor brands.
Founded by Alfred Davis and Hans Wilsdorf in London, England in 1905 as
Wilsdorf and Davis, Rolex moved its base of operations to Geneva, Switzerland
in 1919.
Forbes ranked Rolex No.72 on its 2014 list of the world's most powerful global
brands. Rolex is the largest single luxury watch brand, producing about 2,000
watches per day, with estimated 2012 revenues of US$7.7 billion.
The company is owned by the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, a private trust.

History
Alfred Davis and his brother-in-law Hans Wilsdorf founded Wilsdorf and Davis,
the company that would eventually become Rolex SA, in London, England in
1905.[5] Wilsdorf and Davis' main commercial activity at the time involved
importing Hermann Aegler's Swiss movements to England and placing them in
high-quality watch cases made by Dennison and others. These early
wristwatches were sold to jewellers, who then put their own names on the dial.
The earliest watches from Wilsdorf and Davis were usually hallmarked "W&D"
inside the caseback.
In 1908 Wilsdorf registered the trademark "Rolex" and opened an office in La
Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. The company name "Rolex" was registered on
15 November 1915. The book The Best of Time: Rolex Wristwatches: An
Unauthorized History by Jeffrey P. Hess and James Dowling says that the name
was just made up. One story, never confirmed by Wilsdorf, recounts that the
name came from the French phrase horlogerie exquise, meaning "exquisite
clockwork"or as a contraction of "horological excellence". Wilsdorf was saidto
want his watch brand's name to be easily pronounceable in any language. He
also thought that the name "Rolex" was onomatopoeic, sounding like a watch
7

being wound. It is easily pronounceable in many languages and, as all its uppercase letters have the same size, can be written symmetrically. It was also short
enough to fit on the face of a watch.
In 1914 Kew Observatory awarded a Rolex watch a Class A precision
certificate, a distinction normally granted exclusively to marine chronometers.
In 1919 Wilsdorf left England due to wartime taxes levied on luxury imports as
well as to export duties on the silver and gold used for the watch cases driving
costs too high and moved the company to Geneva, Switzerland, where it was
established as the Rolex Watch Company. Its name was later changed to
Montres Rolex, SA and finally Rolex, SA. Upon the death of his wife in 1944,
Wilsdorf established the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, a private trust, in which he
left all of his Rolex shares, making sure that some of the company's income
would go to charity. Wilsdorf died in 1960; since then, the trust has owned and
run the company.
In December 2008, following the abrupt departure of Chief Executive Patrick
Heiniger for "personal reasons", the company denied that it had lost 1 billion
Swiss francs (approx 574 million, $900 million) invested with Bernard
Madoff, the American asset manager who pleaded guilty to an approximately
30 billion worldwide Ponzi scheme fraud.[9] Rolex SA announced Heiniger's
death on 5 March 2013.
As of 2010 Rolex watches continue to have a reputation as
status symbols. Innovations
Among the company's innovations are:
The first waterproof wristwatch "Oyster", 1926

The first wristwatch with an automatically changing date


on the dial (Rolex Datejust ref.4467, 1945)
The first wristwatch case waterproof to 100 m (330 ft)
(Rolex Oyster Perpetual Submariner ref.6204, 1953)
The first wristwatch to show two time zones at once (Rolex
GMT Master ref.6542, 1954)
The first wristwatch with an automatically changing day
and date on the dial (Rolex Day-Date, 1956)
The first watchmaker to earn chronometer certification for
a wristwatch (1910)
Automatic movements
The first self-winding Rolex wristwatch was offered to the public in 1931 (socalled the "bubbleback" due to the large caseback), preceded to the market by
Harwood which patented the design in 1923 and produced the first self-winding
watch in 1928, powered by an internal mechanism that used the movement of
the wearer's arm. This not only made watch-winding unnecessary, but kept the
power from the mainspring more consistent resulting in more reliable time
keeping.
Quartz movements
Rolex participated in the development of the original quartz watch movements.
Although Rolex has made very few quartz models for its Oyster line, the
company's engineers were instrumental in design and implementation of the
technology during the late 1960s and early 1970s. In 1968, Rolex collaborated
with a consortium of 16 Swiss watch manufacturers to develop the Beta 21
quartz movement used in their Rolex Quartz Date 5100. alongside other
9

manufactures including the Omega Electroquartz watches. Within about five


years of research, design, and development, Rolex created the "clean-slate"
5035/5055 movement that would eventually power the Rolex Oysterquartz.
Water-resistant cases
Rolex was also the first watch company to create a water resistant wristwatch
that could withstand pressure to a depth of 100 m (330 ft). Wilsdorf even had a
specially made Rolex watch (the watch was called the "DeepSea") attached to
the side of Trieste, which went to the bottom of the Mariana Trench. The watch
survived and tested as having kept perfect time during its descent and ascent.
This was confirmed by a telegram sent to Rolex the following day saying "Am
happy to confirm that even at 11,000 metres your watch is as precise as on the
surface. Best regards, Jacques Piccard".

Rolex GMT Master II gold and stainless steel (ref. 116713LN)


Collections
Rolex produced specific models suitable for the extremes of deep-sea diving,
caving, mountain climbing, polar exploration, and aviation. Early sports models
included the Rolex Submariner (1953) and the Rolex Oyster Perpetual Date Sea
Dweller. The latter watch has a helium release valve, co-invented with Swiss
10

watchmaker Doxa, to release helium gas build-up during decompression. The


Explorer (1953) and Explorer II (1971) were developed specifically for
explorers who would navigate rough terrain, such as the world famous Mount
Everest expeditions. Another iconic model is the Rolex GMT Master (1954),
originally developed at the request of Pan Am Airways to provide its crews with
a dual time watch that could be used to display GMT (Greenwich Mean Time),
which is the international time standard for aviation and was needed for
Astronavigation during longer flights.
Certified chronometers
Rolex is the largest manufacturer of Swiss made certified chronometers. In
2005, more than half the annual production of COSC certified watches were
Rolexes. To date, Rolex still holds the record for the most certified chronometer
movements in the category of wristwatches.
Ceramic bezels
The company is now starting to introduce ceramic bezels across the range of
professional sports watches. They are available on the Submariner, Sea DwellerDeepsea, GMT Master II and Daytona models. The ceramic bezel is not
influenced by UV-light and is very scratch resistant.
Brands

11

Wristwatch Tudor Prince Date Day, Ref.: 76200


Rolex SA offers products under the Rolex and Tudor brands.
Montres Tudor SA has designed, manufactured and marketed Tudor watches
since 6 March 1946. Rolex founder Hans Wildorf conceived of the Tudor Watch
Company to create a product for authorized Rolex dealers to sell that offered the
reliability and dependability of a Rolex, but at a lower price.
Tudor watches are manufactured by Montres Tudor SA using movements
supplied by ETA SA. They are marketed and sold in most countries around the
world including the United States, Australia, Canada, India, Mexico, South
Africa, many countries in Europe, South Asia, the Middle East and countries in
South America, particularly Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela.
Montres Tudor SA discontinued sales of Tudor-branded watches in the United
States in 2004, but Tudor returned to the United States market in the summer of
2013 and to the UK in 2014.

12

Rolex watch models

Rolex Daytona stainless steel (ref. 116520)

Rolex Sea Dweller Deepsea with 3,900m depth rating (ref.


116660)

13

Rolex Yacht-Master

Rolex Daytona chronograph stainless steel, white dial (ref.


6263)
Rolex has three watch lines: Oyster Perpetual, Professional and Cellini (the
Cellini line is Rolex's line of 'dressy' watches). The primary bracelets for the
Oyster line are named Jubilee, Oyster and President.

14

Modern models
The name of the watch lines in catalogs is often "Rolex Oyster Perpetual
______" or "Rolex ______"; Rolex Oyster and Oyster Perpetual are generic
names and not specific product lines, except for the 36mm Oyster Perpetual
model. The Air-King is the least expensive Oyster Perpetual watch. The Date is
related to the Air-King but adds a date display. Certain models from the Date
and Datejust are almost identical, however the Datejust has a 36mm case and a
20mm bracelet compared to the Date's 34mm case and 19mm bracelet. Modern
versions of the Oyster Perpetual Date and Datejust models share Rolex's 3135
movement, with the most recent change to the 3135 movement being the
introduction of Rolex's "parachrom bleu" hairspring, which provides increased
accuracy. As the Date and Datejust share a movement, both have the ability to
adjust the date forward one day at a time without adjusting the time; this feature
is not confined to the Datejust. The Datejust is available in a wider range of
metals and has a greater range of dials available.
Notable models include:
Datejust
Daytona
Day-Date
GMT Master II
Milgauss
Oysterquartz
15

Sea Dweller
Submariner
Yacht-Master
Yacht-Master II
Price
In the UK, the retail price for the stainless steel 'Pilots' range (such as the GMT
Master II) starts from GBP 5,600. Diamond inlay watches are more expensive.
The book "Vintage Wristwatches" by Antiques Roadshow's Reyne Haines listed
a price estimate of Rolex watches that ranged between $650 and $75,000, while
listing Tudors between $250 and $9,000. The most expensive Rolex ever
produced by the Rolex factory was the GMT Ice reference 116769TBR with a
retail price of $485,350. A Forbes magazine article on the Swiss watch industry
compared the retail value of Rolexes to that of competing brands Corum,
Universal Genve and IWC.
Significant events
In tennis, Rolex is the official time keeper of Wimbledon and the Australian
Open, two of the four Grand Slams. In golf, it is the official time keeper for two
of the four majors, The Open Championship and the U.S. Open; the presenting
sponsor for one of the five senior majors, The Senior Open Championship; and
the official sponsor of the Women's World Golf Rankings. They are also the title
sponsor to the 24 Hours of Daytona, from which the Daytona model takes its
name, along with the Rolex Sports Car Series. In 2013, Rolex became the
official timekeeper to the FIA Formula 1 motor racing championship. Rolex has
also been the official timekeeper to the Le Mans 24 Hours motor race since
2001.
16

Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh had a specially designed experimental Rolex
Oyster Perpetual Deep-Sea Special strapped to the outside of their bathyscaphe
during the 1960 Challenger Deep / Mariana Trench dive to a world-record depth
of 10,916 metres (35,814 ft). When James Cameron conducted a similar dive in
2012, a specially designed and manufactured Rolex Oyster Perpetual SeaDweller Deep Sea Challenge watch was being "worn" by his submarine's
robotic arm.
Ex-Formula 1 driver Sir Jackie Stewart has advertised Rolex since 1968. Others
who have done so for some years include Arnold Palmer, Roger Penske, Jean
Claude Killy and Dame Kiri Te Kanawa
Tenzing Norgay and other members of the Hillary expedition wore Rolex
Oysters in 1953 at altitude 8,848 m on Mount Everest while there are
attestations and speculation that Sir Edmund Hillary either carried a Smiths
Deluxe or a Rolex to the summit, or both.
Mercedes Gleitze was the first British woman to swim the English Channel on 7
October 1927. However, as John E. Brozek (author of The Rolex Report: An
Unauthorized Reference Book for the Rolex Enthusiast) points out in his article
"The Vindication Swim, Mercedes Gleitze and Rolex take the plunge", some
doubts were cast on her achievement when a hoaxer claimed to have made a
faster swim only four days later. Hence Gleitze attempted a repeat swim with
extensive publicity on 21 October, dubbed the "Vindication Swim". For
promotional purposes, Hans Wilsdorf offered her one of the earliest Rolex
Oysters if she would wear it during the attempt. After more than 10 hours, in
water that was much colder than during her first swim, she was pulled from the
sea semi-conscious seven miles short of her goal. Although she did not
complete the second crossing, a journalist for The Times wrote "Having regard
to the general conditions, the endurance of Miss Gleitze surprised the doctors,
17

journalists and experts who were present, for it seemed unlikely that she would
be able to withstand the cold for so long. It was a good performance". As she sat
in the boat, the same journalist made a discovery and reported it as follows:
"Hanging round her neck by a ribbon on this swim, Miss Gleitze carried a small
gold watch, which was found this evening to have kept good time throughout".
When examined closely, the watch was found to be dry inside and in perfect
condition. One month later, on 24 November 1927, Wilsdorf launched the Rolex
Oyster watch in the United Kingdom with a full front page Rolex advert in the
Daily Mail. The Vienna Herald described the 1969 Apollo moon landing as: 'an
event almost as significant as the time a woman swam most of the English
Channel with a waterproof watch on.

Watches for POWs and help in the Great Escape


By the start of World War II Royal Air Force pilots were buying Rolex watches
to replace their inferior standard-issue watches. However, when captured and
sent to POW camps, their watches were confiscated. When Hans Wilsdorf heard
of this, he offered to replace all watches that had been confiscated and not
require payment until the end of the war, if the officers would write to Rolex
and explain the circumstances of their loss and where they were being held.
Wilsdorf was in personal charge of the scheme. As a result of this, an estimated
3,000 Rolex watches were ordered by British officers in the Oflag (prison camp
for officers) VII B POW camp in Bavaria alone. This had the effect of raising
the morale among the allied POWs because it indicated that Wilsdorf did not
believe that the Axis powers would win the war. American servicemen heard
about this when stationed in Europe during WWII and this helped open up the
American market to Rolex after the war.

18

On 10 March 1943, while still a prisoner of war, Corporal Clive James Nutting,
one of the organizers of the Great Escape, ordered a stainless steel Rolex Oyster
3525 Chronograph (valued at a current equivalent of 1,200) by mail directly
from Hans Wilsdorf in Geneva, intending to pay for it with money he saved
working as a shoemaker at the camp. The watch (Rolex watch no. 185983) was
delivered to Stalag Luft III on 10 July that year along with a note from Wilsdorf
apologising for any delay in processing the order and explaining that an English
gentleman such as Corporal Nutting "should not even think" about paying for
the watch before the end of the war. Wilsdorf is reported to have been impressed
with Nutting because, although not an officer, he had ordered the expensive
Rolex 3525 Oyster chronograph while most other prisoners ordered the much
cheaper Rolex Speed King model which was popular because of its small size.
The watch is believed to have been ordered specifically to be used in the Great
Escape when, as a chronograph, it could have been used to time patrols of
prison guards or time the 76 ill-fated escapees through tunnel 'Harry' on 24
March 1944. Eventually, after the war, Nutting was sent an invoice of only 15
for the watch, because of currency export controls in England at the time. The
watch and associated correspondence between Wilsdorf and Nutting were sold
at auction for 66,000 in May 2007, while at an earlier auction on September
2006 the same watch fetched A$54,000. Nutting served as a consultant for both
the 1950 film The Wooden Horse and the 1963 film The Great Escape. Both
films were based on actual escapes which took place at Stalag Luft III. It was
also reported that in November 2013 the Rolex Speed King owned by Flight
Lieutenant Gerald Imeson during the Great Escape was sold for 60,000.
Murder investigation
In a famous murder case, the Rolex on Ronald Platt's wrist eventually led to the
arrest of his murderer, Albert Johnson Walkera financial planner who had fled
from Canada when he was charged with 18 counts of fraud, theft, and money
19

laundering. When the body was found in the English Channel in 1996 by a
fisherman named John Coprik, a Rolex wristwatch was the only identifiable
object on the body. Since the Rolex movement had a serial number and was
engraved with special markings every time it was serviced, British police traced
the service records from Rolex and identified the owner of the watch as Ronald
Platt. In addition, British police were able to determine the date of death by
examining the date on the watch calendar. Since the Rolex movement was fully
waterproof and had a reserve of two to three days of operation when inactive,
they were able to determine the time of death within a small margin of error.

Counterfeits

20

Counterfeit Rolex watches displayed at the National Intellectual


Property Rights Coordination Center in Arlington, Virginia, USA
(2008)
Rolex watches are frequently counterfeited, often illegally sold on the street and
online. Counterfeit Rolex Watches vary in quality, with some using the cheapest
of movements and others using automatic movements, some even with an ETA
movement. However, most counterfeit watches are easily identifiable by
jewellers and other experts. O.J. Simpson wore a counterfeit watch during his
murder trial.
Hans Wilsdorf Foundation
Rolex SA is owned by the private Hans Wilsdorf Foundation, which is
registered as a charity and does not pay corporate income taxes. In 2011, a
spokesman for Rolex declined to provide evidence regarding the amount of
charitable donations made by the Wilsdorf Foundation.

Gallery

21

Award-winners
Young Laureates Award
2014
Neeti Kailas, India, Develop a unique system to carry out
early and mass screenings of newborns in resource-poor
settings

to

monitor

hearing

consequent loss of speech.

22

loss

and

prevent

the

Olivier

Nsengimana,

Rwanda,

Save

Rwandas

Grey

Crowned Crane, which faces increasing threats to its


habitat and a growing illegal trade, in order to conserve
Rwandas biodiversity.
Francesco Sauro, Italy, Lead a multidisciplinary team of
scientists to explore ancient quartzite caves in table-top
mountains between Venezuela and Brazil and uncover the
secrets behind the landscapes evolution.
Arthur

Zang,

Cameroon,

cardiovascular-disease

Reduce

mortality

in

the

countries

rate
with

of
a

shortage of cardiologists by using a Cardio-pad medical


tablet to perform cardiac examinations and permit remote
readings.
Hosam Zowawi, Saudi Arabia, Develop faster laboratory
tests for superbugs and raise awareness of antibiotic
resistance in the Gulf States through an education
campaign.
2012
Sumit Dagar, India, Develop a Braille smartphone to
improve life for India's blind people
Karina Atkinson, United Kingdom, Foster research and
responsible tourism in a bio-diversity hotspot
Selene Bif, Italy, Revive traditional storytelling to craft a
new narrative for Afghanistan
23

Maritza Morales Casanova, Mexico, Build a park for


environmental education in the Yucatn
Arun Krishnamurthy, India, Restore urban lakes in India
Erika Cullar, Bolivia, Train local people in the Chaco
Region to protect the biodiversity of this environment.
2010
Jacob Colker, United States, Enable smartphone users to
become

volunteers

by

donating

spare

minutes

to

charitable, scientific and community organizations.


Reese Fernandez, The Philippines, Help impoverished
women earn a decent wage by upcycling waste, turning it
into high-value "eco-ethical, elegant" products
Nnaemeka Ikegwuonu, Nigeria, Improve the lives of
farmers in Nigeria through the development of an
interactive, rural radio service
Piyush Tewari, India, Train a network of police ofcers and
volunteers to provide rapid medical care to road accident
victims in Delhi
Bruktawit, Ethiopia, Tackle the high child mortality rate in
Ethiopia through a television series designed to teach
children about health
Laureates
2008
24

Talal Akasheh, Jordan, Cultural Heritage, Help conserve


ancient Petra from the ravages of time and tourism
Tim Bauer, The Philippines, Applied Technology, Reduce
pollution from motorized tricycles in Asian cities
Andrew McGonigle, Italy, Applied Technology, Develop a
way

to

predict

volcanic eruptions using

a remote-

controlled helicopter
Andrew Muri, South Africa, Environment, Provide training
and jobs to young people orphaned by AIDS
Elsa Zaldvar, Paraguay, Applied Technology, Combine
loofah and plastic waste to make low-cost housing
Kikuo Morimoto, whose work is to revive Cambodian silk
producing,

particularly

as

means

employment for Cambodian villagers

25

of

providing

FINDING
With a visibility across 20 countries, the analysis tracks which markets have the
highest affinity for luxury watches and how they change over time. For the first
time since the study launched in 2004, China overtook the US as the country
exhibiting the highest demand for luxury watches, representing 23 per cent of
all watch-related searches.
In fact, most of the global demand was fuelled by the East. Beyond China,
Japan, India and Russia saw increases over last year, while most western
markets experienced significant market share drops, especially the US,
Germany and Italy.
Brazil, often described as a fast-emerging luxury market, remained stagnant this
past year, neither gaining nor losing market share in comparison to other luxury
watch markets.

26

Conclusion
All the watches shown here definitively indicate a second zone time.
We all travel and we have all experienced what it means to change the time
when arriving in a new time zone with its zone time. Changing time can be
very easy if the watch is up to date, but can also be a pain in the ass if you
bought an expensive gimmick that considers being a real GMT / UTC or Dual
Time watch.
When arriving at your new location, lets say New York after leaving Vienna, it
is essential that you will NOT loose you correct time when changing the zone
time. What does this mean? You watch must guarantee you that you can
independently change the hours in one-hour-steps by e.g. pulling out the crown
in its first position without stopping the movement. Actual minutes and seconds
must neither stop nor change, only the hours should.
So lets say we started in Vienna and we flew to New York. New York time zone
is six hours behind Paris time zone. We pull out the crown and just turn back the
hours hand in six single steps. Our watch will now show the correct New York
time. As we use a GMT / UTC or Dual Time watch our second zone time
indication, either realised by a second hour hand or a second little watch on the
dial, will now show us the correct time in Vienna, our home time. Since within
an intelligent mechanism the date indication is always linked to the main time
display our watch will now of course change the date to the next day at
midnight in New York and not at midnight in Vienna.
27

SUGGESTION

The simple stainless steel with the white gold bezel or the
white gold combo
I would pick the white gold. I find the two-tone yellow gold
photographs well but in person it doesn't have the safe
effect.
On a Date just II I would definitely go with white gold/steel,
particularly if you are going for a dial with diamond
accents. IMO a 41mm dress watch in two-tone with
diamonds is pretty over-the-top, and the white gold would
help to tone it down.
We surely anticipate in educational you whichever &
rsquos on offer at the promotes and thus, now we have
made a decision to examine around the most up-to-date
collection of Rolex watches which is on offer at many of
the suppliers now best Rolex replica. In truth, the most
recent collection of Rolex watches has surpassed all of the
other companies by giving each item in beginning from
Dollar100. Whether or not you acknowledge but this
continues to be the lowest priced price tag, now we have
read at this point on the promotes and so on a high profile
company. As a result, it truly is mandatory to find these
excellent patterns you should obtaining your best goods
on the collection of Rolex watches. Its huge good to
impress you with such points on a daily basis, since it is
28

our responsibility to offer the very best media offered


within the promotes. When you are planning to get this
stuff, then visit the promotes and buying your most recent
patterns at once.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Newspaper
Business Line
Financial Express
The Economic Times
Hindustan Times
The New Indian Express
Website
www.rolex.com
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolex
www.google.co.in

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