Editorial
The Clifton Baumatic is the watch that changed the conversation about Baume and Mercier. For years the brand lived in the shadow of its Richemont siblings, selling good-looking cases wrapped around bought-in movements. The Baumatic ended that story.
Baume and Mercier launched the Baumatic in 2018 alongside the BM13-1975A, their first serious proprietary automatic caliber. The name is a contraction of Baume and automatic, and the movement backs it up: COSC chronometer certification, a silicon hairspring for antimagnetic resistance, and a 5-day power reserve from a single barrel. That specification sits comfortably above what many Swiss houses charge considerably more for.
The 40mm Clifton case was already an established and well-regarded design, so pairing it with the new movement gave the Baumatic an immediate footing in a competitive segment. Within Richemont, this was a deliberate repositioning effort, and it largely worked.
The M0A10549 specifically is the steel bracelet variant, and bracelet quality has been a consistent complaint from owners: the clasp feels light relative to the rest of the watch and the links can develop play earlier than expected. Dial versions vary in finishing quality across production years, so inspecting the applied indices and dial surface in person matters before buying. The BM13-1975A is an in-house movement but Richemont service infrastructure means parts availability is not a concern; what is a concern is that independent watchmakers may not yet stock parts, so you are channeled toward authorized service.
Finally, resale values for this reference have not kept pace with the brand's marketing ambitions: you can find clean examples well below retail, which is good for buyers but worth knowing if you ever plan to sell.