Editorial
The Pontos Automatic 40mm is Maurice Lacroix's clearest value proposition: a well-dressed steel automatic with honest finishing at a price that undercuts most Swiss dress-watch competition. The case proportions are right, the dial is restrained, and 100 metres of water resistance gives it daily-wear credibility that many dress watches lack. If you want a Swiss automatic that looks expensive without the in-house premium, this is where ML makes its case.
Maurice Lacroix launched the Pontos line in the early 2000s as its entry into the integrated-lug dress-sport segment, and the 40mm Automatic has been the range's accessible anchor since its current generation arrived around 2016. The brand never pretended the ML112 was proprietary , it is an ETA 2824-2 base, the same movement found in watches from Tissot to Hamilton, regulated and cased by ML. What the Pontos offered instead was a house aesthetic: polished lugs blending into a brushed case middle, applied indices, and a sunray dial that reads more expensive than its price suggests.
Maurice Lacroix used the Pontos platform to establish credibility before investing in genuine in-house development for its higher lines, so the 40mm sits at the foundation of that strategy. It has been updated in detail rather than redesigned, which means the reference has aged without becoming obsolete.
The ML112 is a solid movement but it is not decorated, and if you open the caseback expecting Geneva stripes and a rotor with finishing work, you will be disappointed. Water resistance is rated at 100 metres but the crown is not screw-down, so treat it as splash-proof in practice rather than a true dive candidate. Grey-market pricing on this reference varies widely because dealers discount heavily to move volume, so paying retail is hard to justify.
The dial's applied indices can develop adhesion issues on older examples if moisture has gotten inside, which points to the importance of checking crown gasket condition when buying used. This reference competes directly with the Longines Master Collection and Tissot Le Locle, both of which offer more movement history and comparable finishing at similar price points, so the decision often comes down to case preference.