FW
Trade war can enhance Bangladesh exports
The US-China trade war can help enhance Bangladesh’s exports especially of garment, textile, IT and agricultural products.
The country can receive a lot of work orders, mainly shifted from China—the largest apparel supplier worldwide—because of the tariff war. Also, a higher domestic demand has propelled Bangladesh’s miraculous and extremely robust economic growth. At the end of the year, GDP growth is expected to hit 7.5 per cent.
But much depends on the continuation of trade privileges when the United Kingdom comes out of the European bloc. England is not only Bangladesh’s third largest export destination but also the hub for Bangladesh to reach other European countries. Both the European Union and the United Kingdom have promised to continue providing the generalised system of preferences facility after Bangladesh graduates in status from least developed to developing country. However, it is still a matter of concern how the Rules of Origin will be determined.
Bangladesh needs more entrepreneurs for new job creation and to reduce income inequality as the country is now on a development trajectory. Investing in good infrastructure, providing good logistics and easy facilitation can help develop an efficient global value chain, and thereby attract global companies to move their production centers to Bangladesh.
Surge in Chinese demand for Indian cotton
There has been a spurt in demand from China for Indian cotton. Five lakh bales will be shipped to China in the next two months.
It is to be noted Indian standard unit of 10 lakh equals 1 million.
The Cotton Association of India had estimated exports for the 2018-19 season to decline by 27 per cent to 50 lakh bales compared with exports of 69 lakh bales last year. India’s total cotton export shipment is around 32 lakh bales up to February 2019.
There has been uncertainty in the global cotton trade due to the ongoing trade war between the US and China. Though there will be no trade now with Pakistan for a few months, there’s good export demand for Indian cotton from many other countries like Bangladesh, China, Vietnam, Indonesia and many more. During the past couple of weeks, around four lakh to five lakh bales of cotton have been sold by Indian exporters to China for March-April shipments. Pakistan accounts for ten per cent of India’s cotton exports. India has already exported 6.5 lakh bales of cotton to Pakistan. Increase in export demand from other countries is likely to compensate for the loss of trade with Pakistan.
Prices of raw cotton are ruling below the minimum support price levels. The decline in the domestic prices has brought export parity.
Sports retailers differentiate with different looks
Sports retailers are differentiating themselves from their competitors in order to offer customers an unique shopping experience.
In the past, brands could dictate what sports collections had to look like, but the conservative sports looks won’t work in future.
A number of interesting small brands are delivering something special. These brands come from the fashion, luxury and sustainability segments. They are presenting themselves in a new way and with different approaches.
Tentree, based in Canada, has one goal: to plant one billion trees by 2030. Ten trees are planted per product sold. What started with one T-shirt has become an impressive collection and 58,230 trees have been planted in the European business alone and 25 million worldwide.
Templa, based in Australia, presents a young, very contemporary ski collection in the luxury segment. All materials and their processing are highly functional. Only the look is strikingly different: calf-length down coats, sack-like parkas, wide cargo pants.
With its strikingly colorful women’s collections, Blutsgeschwister serves around 350 fashion locations in Germany. The brand is known for parkas, hoodies and hooded jackets. Jackets and parkas are equipped with a water column and are therefore ideal for urban environments. In addition, the brand attaches great importance to sustainable production.
Pakistan raises credit limit
Pakistan is extending subsidised loan credit to the textile sector.
The Export Financing Scheme (EFS) has increased the credit limit for textile exports. The Long Term Financing Facility (LTFF) for investment in the textile sector has been enhanced. The loan credit under the EFS will be available at a subsidised mark-up of three per cent and under LTFF at five per cent.
In addition, the project financing limit will be raised. This will not only help cover the financing cost but also encourage large scale plants having an edge in economies of scale.
Textile exporters in Pakistan were facing difficulties as the share of the subsidised credit limit had dwindled to 27 per cent from 41 per cent in a year. The sector has been relying heavily on commercial loans. The discount rate was raised to 10.25 per cent from 5.75 per cent during the same period. More importantly, during the last year, the currency had devalued 35 per cent against the dollar. The cost of financing for textile projects has substantially increased along with the requirements of working capital and in the last five years imports of textile machinery have remained almost stagnant.
Textile exports make up around 60 per cent of the country’s total exports.
Polyester represents 55% of the world's fiber consumption
Polyester has grown to represent 55 percent of the world’s fiber consumption, and acts as a staple of our industry. The polyester industry in India is currently valued at $1.3 trillion (US).
Polyester is a synthetic polymer made of purified terephthalic acid (PTA) or its dimethyl ester dimethyl terephthalate (DMT) and monoethylene glycol (MEG), all derived during the refining and distillation of crude oil.
Originating from research headed by W.H. Carothers and working for DuPont on the development of synthetic fibers, British scientists Whinfield and Dickson took up the research in the late 1930s and eventually patented PET or PETE in 1941. Polyethylene terephthalate forms the basis for synthetic fibers like Dacron, Terylene and Polyester.
Manmade fiber manufacturers to expand capacity
Manmade textile industry is on the cusp of turnaround with a revival in its demand in the last few weeks following producers’ ability to fix prices of their products in the wake of stabilising crude oil prices.
Sensing this opportunity, leading manmade fiber and yarn players have chalked out massive investment plans to expand their capacity and grab large share in the world market. Filatex India, for example, has envisaged Rs 275 crore (US$ 39.24 million) expansion plan to raise their production capacity of yarn and power to reduce its production cost and improve its EBIDTA margins for this year.
Trading at $85.10 a barrel in the world market, crude oil price gradually slipped to the level of $49.79 a barrel towards the end of December and gradually picked up again to trade currently at $65.05 a barrel. Most importantly, crude oil price is holding above $60 a barrel since February 1 which allowed synthetic yarn, fabric and textile manufacturers to fix their product prices for long term. Prices of synthetic yarn and fabric moved in tandem with crude oil prices, being the latter the sole raw material of the former.
Levi’s consumers can design their jeans
US consumers of Levi’s will be able to go to Levi.com and design their own pair of jeans through the brand’s FLX technology.
Consumers will be able to start with seven of Levi’s most popular fits, including the 501. From those seven fits, using a variety of design combinations, they’ll be able to design over a thousand combinations of their own personalized jeans. Consumers can handpick their desired wash, the type of wear pattern, whether or not they want deconstruction and if so, where and what size. They can opt to over-dye their jeans in a myriad of colors like pink, black and green, and can choose from a select set of images and words to have etched on their jeans for further personalization. The jeans will be produced and shipped and delivered to consumers’ homes in a matter of days.
FLX technology is the company’s digitized finishing solution to streamline the process through eco-friendly lasers. With this, the company shifts its focus of providing a finished good to the consumer to providing a blank canvas. This eliminates the risk that comes with designing for long lead times and consumers’ ever-changing tastes and needs. This phase of customization is aimed at deepening consumers’ connection with the brand.
Jobs shrink in UK retail
The UK retail sector’s share in employment is falling.
Retail’s share of employee jobs in the United Kingdom has fallen from 10.8 per cent in 2003 to 9.5 per cent now. The country now has a lower share of workers in wholesale and retail than Germany.
Retail’s shrinking share of the UK workforce which dates back to 2003 is equivalent to 3,20,000 missing employee jobs.
This steady employment share decline has been absorbed by a buoyant labor market. The absolute reduction in retail employee jobs has been small. at 28,000 since 2003, compared to a 7,50,000 fall in manufacturing employee jobs, and has been in the context of a three million overall increase in employment.
However, this long-term decline has taken a more worrying turn recently. Retail workers now have a higher rate of redundancies than any other sector. Those leaving retail are now also more likely to become unemployed than leavers from any other sector.
Ex-retail workers are also staying unemployed for longer than ex-workers from other sectors. And this increased unemployment risk has been most significant for younger workers, with three in five unemployed ex-retail workers aged under 30, despite barely a third of retail’s workforce being in this age bracket.
Investors from Dubai explore Bangladesh
Bangladesh has awakened the interest of investors from Dubai.
The country seeks investments in skill development, human resource augmentation, power and energy sector capacity building, ICT, agro-processing and fisheries. Bangladesh wants to emerge as a hub for technological, trade, business and financial connectivity and is geared toward creating more fluidity in the business and investment sectors and streamlining bureaucratic hurdles.
The investors have sought longer visa approvals for business and support for acquiring land areas for developing industrial facilities. The business leaders also highlight the need for adopting better technology at comparatively lower cost profiles.
When it comes to investing in Bangladesh, there are complaints of bureaucratic hurdles – including the presumably lengthy renewal processes and the unavailability of smoother international payment systems – particularly in foreign exchange transactions.
Since the garment sector is growing very fast in Bangladesh, foreign investors choose the country as an investment destination in the textile sector. The available workforce at a reasonable wage, duty-free market access to major export destination, preferential location in the heart of the Asia-Pacific region and policy support have acted as a catalyst to attract foreign investment in the textile and apparel industry.
Bangladesh is seeking FDI from Singapore, India, Japan, China, Thailand and other countries.
Global Consumer Confidence at its peak in India: Survey
As revealed in the latest Conference Board Global Consumer Confidence Survey, global consumer confidence in India is at peak. The survey, conducted in collaboration with Nielsen, polls more than 32,000 consumers in 64 countries across Asia-Pacific, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa and North America.
India had a Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) score of 133 in the fourth quarter of 2018 edging past the Philippines (131) and Indonesia (127). India maintained its number one position from the third quarter when it scored 130 on the index whereas Philippines and Indonesia were joint fourth in Q3 of 2018 with an identical score of 126.
South Korea has the most pessimistic consumers in the world. People there are worried about rising inflation, lower wage growth, a weak stock market, unemployment and global trade uncertainties.
Meanwhile, the Global Consumer Confidence Index increased one point to 107 in fourth quarter of 2018, the highest in 14 years.
The main indicators measured by Conference Board CCI are optimism towards job prospects, health of personal finances and spending intentions in the next 12 months.












