H. Moser & Cie launched the Streamliner Flyback Chronograph in January 2020 as the brand's first integrated-bracelet sport watch, addressing the post-Royal-Oak-revival category that had taken over the Swiss luxury industry. The reference design was led by Moser CEO Edouard Meylan, with the goal of producing a Moser sport watch that did not look derivative of the Genta-era luxury-sport canon. The result was a cushion-shape case with a polished centre-section bezel, a knurled crown, and a seamless integrated bracelet that flows directly from the lugs (no visible spring-bar or end-link transition).
The launch was the Streamliner Flyback Chronograph at 42.3mm in steel with a flyback chronograph movement. 2021 saw the more accessible Streamliner Centre Seconds at 40mm steel with the simpler Cal. HMC 200 automatic (3-hand + central seconds, 72-hour power reserve). The Centre Seconds quickly became the most-coveted variant: it priced at approximately CHF 19,900 retail, well below the Royal Oak Jumbo and the Patek Nautilus 5711, and offered a similar construction philosophy with the distinctive Moser fumé dial visual identity.
Moser fumé dials are the brand's signature: a sunburst-grain dial that fades from a saturated centre to a darker outer ring, available in Funky Blue, Aqua Blue, Vantablack (the world's blackest pigment), Smoked Lime, Burgundy, and other limited colourways. The Streamliner Centre Seconds is offered with all of these dial options; the Funky Blue and Aqua Blue have the longest waitlists. The dial is intentionally minimalist: no Moser logo at 12 o'clock (a deliberate anti-branding stance the brand has held since the 2010s), no minute markers other than the rehaut, just hour markers and Moser-signature blade hands.
The Streamliner platform has expanded into the upper haute horlogerie. The Streamliner Tourbillon (2021) adds a flying tourbillon at 6 o'clock; the Streamliner Perpetual Calendar (2022) adds Moser's patented "Madman" perpetual calendar with leap-year indicator only on the caseback (no calendar wheels visible on the dial). Retail spans approximately CHF 19,900 (Centre Seconds steel) to CHF 100,000+ (Tourbillon and Perpetual). Production is small: estimated 500-1,000 pieces per year across all Streamliner variants. The Streamliner has effectively repositioned Moser from boutique haute-horlogerie maker to the integrated-sport-watch conversation alongside Audemars Piguet, Patek Philippe, and Vacheron Constantin.
