Phillips Geneva XXIII Brings the Patek Reference 2523 ‘South America’ to Auction May 9 — One of Two Yellow-Gold Examples, In Excess of CHF 5 Million Estimate

Phillips Geneva XXIII Brings the Patek Reference 2523 ‘South America’ to Auction May 9 — One of Two Yellow-Gold Examples, In Excess of CHF 5 Million Estimate

Richard Shults, GG (GIA)

Richard is the Chief Underwriter at Borro by Luxury Asset Capital and is a Graduate Gemologist, certified by the Gemological Institute of America (GIA).

One of only two known yellow-gold examples of the Patek Philippe Reference 2523 with a polychrome cloisonné enamel “South America” dial heads to the rostrum at Phillips Geneva Watch Auction: XXIII on May 9–10, 2026 at the Hôtel President — and it is the only example of the South America dial ever offered at public auction. Phillips lists the estimate in excess of CHF 5,000,000, but multiple market analysts have tagged the lot as a credible $10 million challenge given recent results for sibling references at the top of the World Time tier.

The watch was last seen publicly in October 1988 at a New York sale. Nearly four decades of private hands have followed. That alone reframes the lot: this is not a piece the trade has had a chance to repeatedly price. The 36mm yellow-gold case houses the two-crown world-time movement Patek developed in collaboration with Louis Cottier, with the second crown at nine o’clock rotating the city ring. The dial is built in cloisonné enamel — gold wires laid down to outline the South American continent, the cells filled with enamel powder and fired in a kiln. A handful of artisans worked the technique. Survival rates are low.

The 2523 reference itself carries a market record that conditions the estimate. In November 2019, a Eurasia-dial example of the same reference sold for CHF 7.05 million ($7.06 million) at Phillips Geneva. In 2021, another 2523 with a North America dial brought $9.95 million at the same house. The South America variant is rarer than either — only two yellow-gold examples are publicly documented — and the public-auction premium attached to verified, photographed, never-private-treaty provenance pushes the realistic ceiling toward eight figures. Phillips’s Aurel Bacs has previously called the 2523 family “the most important world-time wristwatches ever made by Patek Philippe.”

The sale itself runs more than 200 lots across two days. Beneath the headline, Phillips has loaded the catalogue with depth: a Rolex “The Dragon” Reference 6085 with cloisonné enamel by Nelly Richard; a Patek Philippe Reference 3998J-013 “Hieroglyph” dial; an F.P. Journe Chronomètre à Résonance Souscription No. 18; a 1950s Audemars Piguet Reference 5503; an Akrivia AK-06; and an Agassiz Watch Co. “Victory” pocket watch presented to Charles de Gaulle to commemorate Allied victory in WWII. Six lots in the calendar-and-astronomical-complications group anchor a smaller secondary narrative around perpetual calendars and equation-of-time mechanisms.

For collectors and lenders watching the broader market, the Geneva May calendar is dense. Sotheby’s runs Important Watches on May 10 at the Mandarin Oriental — itself headlined by a Rolex Daytona “Paul Newman John Player Special” Reference 6241 in 14k yellow gold and a Patek Padellone retailed by Tiffany & Co. with an estimate of £200,000–£400,000. Christie’s holds Magnificent Jewels on May 13. The watch and jewel block lands inside a Geneva luxury week with a combined low estimate north of $200 million.

The signal from the 2523 South America lot is narrower and more useful: Patek’s enamel-dial world-times are still pricing well above the broader vintage Patek index. Twentieth-century complicated wristwatches with verifiable cloisonné, intact movements, and clean ownership chains continue to behave like trophy stones — a thinning supply curve meeting collector demand that has compounded across the post-2020 cycle. Hammer-versus-estimate on this lot will tell the watch market whether the top-tier ceiling is still rising into 2026 or whether the spring is finally pressing back. The room opens at the Hôtel President in Geneva on Saturday, May 9.

Sources: Phillips — The Geneva Watch Auction: XXIII, The Value, WorldTempus, Time and Watches.

Related coverage: the May 2026 luxury asset market state-of-play · the $17.6M steel Patek 1518 record breakdown

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