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H&M and iconic British lifestyle brand Laura Ashley have announced a strategic kidswear partnership for the Spring/Summer 2026 season, marking a significant move toward ‘heritage-led’ retail.

Launching on May 21, 2026, the collection integrates archival floral prints and coastal motifs into contemporary silhouettes for babies and children. This initiative arrives as H&M navigates a complex fiscal landscape; the group reported a 1 per cent decline in local currency sales for Q1 FY26 but achieved a notable operating margin improvement to 3.0 per cent, up from 2.2 per cent the previous year. By leveraging Laura Ashley’s established brand equity - which saw an 81 per cent Y-o-Y growth in its womenswear and girlswear categories earlier this year - H&M is successfully pivoting toward high-margin, "emotional value" pieces that command stronger price resilience.

Operational resilience amid infrastructure consolidation

The collaboration reflects H&M's broader 2026 strategy of optimizing its physical footprint while deepening product relevance. As the group manages a reduction of 163 stores globally compared to 2025, it is increasingly relying on high-impact limited editions to drive footfall and online conversion. The Laura Ashley range emphasizes durability and technical material science, utilizing lightweight poplin, seersucker, and crinkle jersey to meet the growing consumer demand for ‘hard-wearing’ yet aesthetic children's apparel. By combining our archival prints with H&M’s design lens, we are introducing nostalgia to a generation that prioritizes both style and functional longevity, notes Helen Ashmore, Head-Design, Laura Ashley. This launch serves as a primary case study in how mass-market retailers are utilizing licensing to mitigate the ‘sustainability intent gap,’ offering natural-fiber-rich collections that retain higher resale value in an active secondary market.

H&M (Hennes & Mauritz) is a global fashion leader operating in 70+ markets. In 2026, the firm is prioritizing ‘profitable growth’ through store portfolio optimization and high-profile design collaborations. Currently, 30 per cent of sales are digital, with a fiscal focus on inventory productivity and margin expansion across its multi-brand ecosystem.

  

The Ministry of Textiles has officially countered a recent CNN International report that characterized Panipat as a dumping ground for Western fast fashion. In a detailed rebuttal released on May 14, 2026, the government asserted that India’s textile recycling ecosystem is a sophisticated Rs 22,000 crore ($2.29 billion) economy driven predominantly by domestic needs, not foreign waste. Contrary to claims of environmental negligence, a 2026 Ministry study, Mapping of Textile Waste Value Chain in India, reveals, 90 per cent of processed waste originates locally, with imports accounting for a mere 7 per cent. This data underscores a robust internal circularity where nearly 97 per cent of pre-consumer industrial scrap is recovered and reintegrated into the supply chain.

Scientific validation and the shift toward formalization

Addressing allegations of pollution and health risks, the Ministry cited a Life Cycle Assessment by IIT Delhi, which confirmed that recycling activities in clusters like Panipat reduce greenhouse gas emissions and fossil fuel depletion by 30–40 per cent compared to virgin fiber production. While the government acknowledged friction points - such as the management of blended synthetics and safety protocols in informal units - it highlighted the transition toward formalization via the Atal Centre of Textile Recycling and Sustainability. Isolated instances of non-compliance should not overshadow a sector providing vital resource efficiency and livelihoods, the Ministry stated. This defense marks a strategic effort to protect India’s reputation as a global sustainability partner in the evolving retail landscape.

India’s textile recovery network

The Ministry of Textiles oversees India's $150 billion+ textile industry, focusing on production, exports, and circularity. Key hubs like Panipat and Tiruppur lead in fiber recovery and upcycling. Future growth centers on the National Technical Textiles Mission, targeting high-value recycling to boost global competitiveness and environmental compliance.

  

The Southern India Mills’ Association (SIMA) has supported the petition by C Joseph Vijay, Chief Minister, Government of Tamil Nadu, to eliminate the 11 per cent import duty on cotton. This executive intervention comes at a volatile juncture for the apparel sector, where a 25 per cent rise in domestic cotton prices - climbing from Rs 54,700 to Rs 67,700 per candy in just two months - has severely compressed manufacturing margins. With yarn prices following suit, rising to Rs 330 per kg, the industry faces an acute liquidity drain that threatens the viability of India’s $184 billion textile business.

Bridging the productivity deficit

The urgency of this policy shift is underscored by a widening supply-demand gap. While the Ministry of Textiles recently approved the Rs 5,659 crore ‘Mission for Cotton Productivity’ to address stagnant yields, the industry remains in a deficit cycle. Domestic production for the 2025-26 season is estimated at approximately 291 lakh bales, trailing a domestic demand of 328 lakh bales. Durai Palanisamy, Chairman, SIMA, emphasizes, while the Mission is a welcome long-term structural fix, the immediate 11 per cent tariff barrier renders Indian mills uncompetitive against Asian rivals who enjoy duty-free access to global fiber markets.

Safeguarding the value chain

Industry analysts warn that a shortage of even 1 lakh bales risks the livelihoods of 1 lakh workers across the value chain. By removing the import duty, the government could stabilize supply without impacting farmers, who remain insulated by a Minimum Support Price (MSP) currently 20 per cent above market rates. This fiscal recalibration is viewed as essential for India to reach its $350 billion textile vision by 2030, ensuring that regional clusters in Tiruppur and Coimbatore can maintain their export commitments amidst intensifying global competition.

A primary textile representative in South India

Founded in 1933, SIMA serves as the primary representative for the organized textile value chain in South India. Managing a diverse portfolio from spinning to technical textiles, the association oversees a membership of over 1,000 entities. SIMA is currently focused on facilitating the transition toward sustainable manufacturing and high-density planting systems to boost India’s long-term cotton self-reliance and global market share.

  

While the global apparel sector grappled with retaliatory tariffs and supply chain volatility in 2026, Pearl Global Industries (PGIL) leveraged its multi-national manufacturing footprint to post record-breaking financial results. The company crossed the landmark Rs 5,000 crore revenue threshold, finishing FY26 at Rs 5,025 crore, an 11.5 per cent Y-o-Y increase. This growth was primarily fueled by a strategic shift toward high-value-added products and a robust volume of 78.1 million pieces shipped.

Despite specific penal duties imposed by the US on Indian operations, PGIL’s presence in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Vietnam, and Guatemala allowed it to reroute production efficiently, maintaining a consolidated PAT of Rs 270 crore, up 17 per cent from the previous year.

Capacity expansion and strategic acquisitions drive future scale

To sustain this momentum, the Group has reached a total installed capacity of 101 million pieces per annum, with plans to inject Rs 200–250 crore in capital expenditure during FY27. A key component of this expansion includes the acquisition of an additional 10 per cent stake in PT Pinnacle Apparels, Indonesia, bringing PGIL’s ownership to 99.92 per cent. Pallab Banerjee, Managing Director, noted, while energy and logistic costs are rising due to Gulf conflicts, the company’s disciplined execution and pricing strategies - factoring in raw material hikes with global retail partners - position it to absorb these macroeconomic shocks. With a recent credit rating upgrade to [ICRA] A+ (Stable), the firm is transitioning from a regional exporter to a dominant global supply chain orchestrator.PT Pinnacle Apparels, Indonesia.

Global supply chain leadership

Pearl Global Industries is a premier multinational apparel manufacturer established in 1987, specializing in knits, woven, and activewear for top-tier global brands. Operating 25 units across five countries, the firm is currently executing a high-growth strategy backed by a Rs 5,025 crore revenue base and a stable [ICRA] A+ rating.

  

The End of Youth Obsession Retails shift toward the silver economy

 

Forget the youth obsession, the ‘Silver Economy’ is no longer peripheral, it is the nucleus of global retail growth. In 2026, women over 50 are the ultimate power consumers, wielding 75 per cent of US household wealth. This isn't just about volume; it’s about the stability premium. Compared to the fickle trends of Gen Z, these shoppers offer retailers higher margins, rock-solid loyalty, and a return rate that is almost 30 per cent lower than their younger counterparts.

The 50+ purchasing power matrix

Current market data highlights a stark contrast in consumption behavior between the traditional youth focus and the emerging silver surge. While Gen Z drives high-volume fast fashion with high return costs, the mature shopper operates on a high-investment, low-churn model. Retailers successfully capturing this segment are seeing a rise in Lifetime Value (LTV), as these shoppers often maintain brand relationships for decades rather than seasons.

Table: Comparative consumers by demography (forecasts 2026)

Metric

Women 50+ (Silver Economy)

Gen Z/Alpha (Trend Drivers)

Global Market Value (2026)

$15.75 bn (Specialized segment)

$241.88 bn (Broad market)

Avg. Return Rate (Online)

18-20%

44%

Spend per Item

High (Investment-focused)

Low to Mid (Volume-focused)

Primary Value Drivers

Material Integrity, Craft, Provenance

Viral Trends, Influencer discovery

Digital Adoption

Rising (Omnichannel/Webrooming)

Mobile-First / Social Commerce

Material integrity and ease with intention

The narrative of ‘more is more’ is being replaced by ‘ease with intention’. This consumer is increasingly discerning, seeking garments with provenance, a story of where and how the product was made. This has led to the widespread adoption of Digital Product Passports (DPPs), with 74 per cent of high-wealth consumers now willing to pay a price premium for fully traceable, sustainability-verified items. The shift is not just aesthetic but structural; retailers are moving away from over-designed capsules toward atmospheric retail environments that encourage lingering and tactile engagement.

For example, a shift is visible in mid-market brands like Next and Gap who have effectively premiumized their offerings to cater to the silver shopper. By moving into the accessible luxury space offering high-end fabrics like cashmere and organic silk within a streamlined retail footprint, they have captured the displaced luxury customer who has been priced out of traditional heritage houses.

Key Findings from the 2026 Retail Transition:

Showrooming vs. Webrooming: 67 per cent of shoppers in this demography engage in ‘webrooming’ (researching online but buying in-store), making the physical flagship store a critical touchpoint for validating quality.

Return on loyalty: Brands focusing on agile sourcing and material longevity are seeing a 15 per cent increase in repeat purchase rates among women over 50.

Regional dominance: The Asia-Pacific region, led by China and Japan, is projected to dominate the silver fashion retail market by 2030, driven by a rapidly aging yet increasingly affluent middle class.

The Silver Economy is the economic ecosystem surrounding the 50-plus demography, currently the fastest-growing consumer group globally. Originally focused on health and financial services, the sector has grown into premium apparel, longevity-focused beauty, and specialized digital retail. The market for middle-aged and elderly women’s clothing is projected to reach $15.75 billion by 2026, growing at a steady 5 per cent CAGR. This growth is underpinned by high disposable income and a cultural shift toward active aging. So far, fashion retail overlooked this group in favor of youth culture; however, the 2026 strategy reset has seen brands like Hermès and specialized high-street lines prioritize craftsmanship and material durability to secure long-term brand value and combat the high costs of the fast fashion churn.

  

Footprint up like for like down Primarks demerger comes at a critical

 

Associated British Foods’ decision to demerge Primark into a standalone listed entity, marks one of the most consequential shifts in global fashion retail this year. Seen as a move to unlock shareholder value by removing the conglomerate discount, the spin-off also places sharper scrutiny on the retailer’s operating fundamentals at a moment when expansion is masking deeper cracks in productivity.

Primark’s half-year results for the 24 weeks ended February 28, 2026 reveal this contradiction clearly. Group sales rose 2 per cent to £4.7 billion, but that growth was driven entirely by a 4 per cent contribution from new retail space. Strip out expansion and the underlying picture changes materially, with like-for-like sales falling 2.7 per cent a sign that existing stores are generating less revenue despite a broader footprint.

The regional mix makes this difference even starker. In the UK and Ireland, which account for 45 per cent of group revenue, sales grew 2 per cent while like-for-like sales rose 1.1 per cent, supported by stronger womenswear demand and digital engagement initiatives. But Continental Europe, representing 49 per cent of revenues, saw total sales decline 1 per cent and like-for-like sales dip 5.6 per cent. The US, despite delivering 12 per cent sales growth, also reported a 5.6 per cent decline in comparable sales, underlining that expansion-led growth is compensating for lower store productivity.

Region

Total sales growth

Like-for-like (LFL) growth

Share of total revenue

UK & Ireland

+2%

+1.1%

45%

Continental Europe

-1%

-5.60%

49%

US

+12%

-5.60%

6%

Total Primark

+2%

-2.70%

100%

This table underscores what may become the defining challenge for a standalone Primark: growth is increasingly being purchased through physical expansion rather than organic sales momentum. For investors, that raises questions about the scalability of Primark’s high-volume, low-margin model, especially in weaker consumer markets.

Europe emerges as the pressure point

Continental Europe has become the critical stress zone. Markets such as Germany and France, once central to Primark’s expansion logic, are now being weighed down by sluggish discretionary spending and cautious consumers. The 5.6 per cent like-for-like decline in the region has prompted Primark to extend re-energising initiatives beyond the UK, including sharper assortments and refreshed merchandising.

The contrast with the UK is significant because it shows the model can still work when product relevance and digital touchpoints align. But Europe’s weakness also exposes a vulnerability that demerger makes harder to obscure: without ABF’s broader portfolio cushioning volatility, Primark’s regional underperformance will be judged more directly.

America’s growth puzzle

The US presents a different kind of challenge. Double-digit total sales growth suggests expansion traction, but declining like-for-like sales point to what analysts increasingly view as a productivity trap. New store launches are generating early demand, but sustaining volumes once novelty fades is proving more difficult. For a retailer built on dense footfall and price-led impulse buying, sustaining profit in the US requires far more than adding stores. It demands repeat traffic, localized assortments and stronger omnichannel engagement, areas where more digitally mature rivals already have an advantage.

Margin pressure meets competitive heat

Compounding productivity concerns is rising competitive intensity from ultra-fast fashion players, especially Shein, which increased its UK market share to 3.5 per cent in 2025. Primark’s response has been defensive but necessary, with trend-driven launches such as ‘Major Finds’ and campaigns like ‘Shockingly Chic’ aimed at retaining younger shoppers.

That strategy, however, has carried a margin cost. Adjusted operating profit fell to £471 million, while operating margins fell to 10 per cent amid markdown-led inventory clearing. For a business whose investment thesis rests on scale efficiencies, margin erosion adds a second pressure point alongside slowing comparable sales. The broader sector implication is significant. Primark’s long-standing reliance on store-only traffic, once a cost advantage, increasingly looks like a structural risk as cross-border e-commerce reshapes value fashion consumption.

Click-and-collect as a hybrid hedge One of the clearest signals of Primark’s evolution is its nationwide Click & Collect rollout across all 187 stores in Great Britain. Rather than replicate the costly home-delivery economics of pure-play e-commerce rivals, the retailer is using digital ordering to deepen store productivity. The model is showing operational and commercial promise. Smaller format stores can now offer access to over 5,000 products, significantly growing assortment depth without larger footprints. Incremental pickup purchases are also driving additional basket growth, while avoiding last-mile delivery costs helps preserve Primark’s price positioning. More importantly, the initiative may offer a blueprint for the standalone company’s next phase not abandoning its store-first identity, but using digital tools to strengthen it.

Demerger brings opportunity and exposure

With over 485 stores across 19 countries and annual revenues of £9.5 billion, Primark enters its standalone era with formidable scale. But the demerger also removes the protective optics of diversified group reporting. As an independent business, investors will focus far less on store openings and far more on whether existing stores can grow productively.

That makes the current moment important. Primark’s expansion engine remains intact, but the underlying economics of that growth are under pressure. The spin-off may unlock valuation upside, but sustaining it will depend on whether Primark can convert footprint expansion into durable productivity gains. In that sense, the demerger is not merely a corporate restructuring. It is a stress test of whether one of value fashion’s biggest success stories can adapt to a retail landscape increasingly defined not by scale alone, but by efficiency, digital agility and resilience.

  

Yarn Expo Shenzhen 2026 GBA connectivity and AI innovation drive mid year sourcing

 

The global textile industry is preparing for a strategic return to the South China manufacturing heartland as Yarn Expo Shenzhen 2026 gears up for its June 9–11 edition. Located at the Shenzhen Exhibition and Convention Center (Futian), the fair arrives at a pivotal moment for the Asia-Pacific market, which remains the world’s largest regional hub for fibers and yarns. As global demand is projected to push the sector to a valuation of $108.5 billion by late 2026, the fair provides a critical mid-year checkpoint for suppliers and buyers navigating accelerated sourcing timelines.

The strategic edge of the Greater Bay Area

Shenzhen’s position within the Greater Bay Area (GBA) offers an unparalleled ‘efficiency ecosystem.’ The city acts as a physical bridge between upstream raw material suppliers and downstream manufacturing giants across Guangzhou, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia. This geographical advantage allows attendees to collapse the traditional supply chain, linking design and production with immediate market access.

Wilmet Shea, General Manager, Messe Frankfurt (HK) , emphasizes, the fair’s primary strength lies in its ability to convert regional logistics into tangible business outcomes. By centralizing the right decision-makers in a high-tech corridor, Yarn Expo Shenzhen enables exhibitors to raise brand visibility in an increasingly crowded global market.

A structured showcase for specialized sourcing

To facilitate high-speed matching between suppliers and buyers, the 2026 edition features eight clearly defined product zones. This structure allows visitors to compare technical specifications and sustainability credentials across diverse fiber categories:

• Natural & luxury fibers: Dedicated zones for Cotton, Silk, Quality Wool, and high-end Cashmere.

• Sustainable & bast fibers: A specialized Green Linen Yarn zone reflecting the industry’s shift toward eco-conscious materials.

• Technical & synthetic innovation: Areas for Chemical and Fancy yarns, focusing on functional aesthetics and performance sportswear.

This year, the synergy with the concurrent Intertextile Shenzhen Apparel Fabrics fair is stronger than ever. As the apparel fair intensifies its focus on AI and digitalization, Yarn Expo serves as the foundational layer, showcasing the ‘smart fibers’ and sustainable blends- such as Lyocell-blends—that drive digitalized fashion production.

Innovation and sustainable Exchange

The 2026 fringe program is designed to go beyond mere product displays, offering a platform for ‘market-driven exchange.’ With one-to-one business matching sessions and trend forums, the fair addresses the growing adoption of AI in textile design and the rising demand for Global Recycled Standard (GRS) compliance.

Exhibitors like New Zealand-based Woolyarns (Perino) note, the Shenzhen fair is essential for reaching the ‘knitting community’ of the Greater Guangzhou area, providing a distinct market entry point that complements the larger Shanghai autumn shows. Domestic leaders also highlight the mid-year timing as a strategic advantage, as it avoids overlaps with major overseas exhibitions and captures the high-tech requirements of the Yangtze River Delta and GBA brands.

A comprehensive value chain platform

By running alongside PH Value and Intertextile Shenzhen, Yarn Expo 2026 provides a 360-degree view of the textile value chain. From raw fiber processing to finished knitwear and smart apparel, the combined platform serves as a barometer for the technological and ecological shifts defining the industry’s future. For stakeholders looking to secure margins in an era of rapid digitalization, Shenzhen remains the indispensable mid-year destination.

  

India's primary apparel manufacturing hubs are navigating an increasingly complex trading environment where rising operational inputs test bottom-line defense. Overcoming these sector-wide margins pressures, Coimbatore-based KPR Mill achieved an all-time high quarterly revenue of Rs 1,784.65 crore for Q4, FY25 ending March 31, 2026. This sequential rise of 21.6 per cent from the previous quarter underscores the strategic leverage of a fully vertical configuration, enabling the manufacturer to optimize execution across its raw material supply lines even as overall industry demand patterns fluctuate dynamically.

Multi-segment performance anchors group bottom line

The group's commercial resilience was significantly fortified by diversification. While the core textile division generated a dominant Rs 5,435 crore for the full fiscal year, a sharp 70 per cent increase in profitability from its alternative sugar and ethanol operations cushioned broader manufacturing challenges. This balanced operational portfolio allowed the enterprise to achieve an 11.1 per cent Y-o-Y expansion in quarterly consolidated net profit, reaching Rs 227.17 crore.

By insulating its cost structure against volatile cotton price bands, KPR Mill maintained a robust operating margin of 20.3 per cent, confirming that comprehensive backward integration remains a vital protective framework for large-scale garment exporters targetting high-volume international retail accounts.

Scaling processing efficiencies

KPR Mill is a leading Indian vertically integrated textile enterprise, producing cotton yarn, knitted fabrics, and ready-made garments for global retail markets. Utilizing an asset base featuring 370,000 spindles and an annual capacity of 177 million garment pieces, the group plans to further scale its processing efficiencies. Historically rooted in the Tirupur-Coimbatore apparel cluster, the corporation recorded total income of Rs 6,784 crore for FY26.

  

Scheduled for mid-2026, the 16th edition of Intex Bangladesh serves as a critical barometer for the nation’s shifting textile landscape as manufacturers move away from basic cotton commodities. With over 200 exhibitors from 10 countries, the exhibition highlights a decisive transition toward Man-Made Fibers (MMF) and synthetic blends. This shift is an industrial necessity; as Bangladesh targets a 10 per cent global share in the MMF apparel market by 2030, sourcing hubs are increasingly prioritizing high-performance yarns and activewear fabrics. Data indicates, synthetic apparel now constitutes nearly 50 per cent of global trade, yet remains underrepresented in local production, making the technical textiles on display at Intex essential for mid-market competitiveness.

Navigating regulatory compliance through traceable supply chains

Beyond material innovation, the summit focuses on the operational challenges posed by the EU’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR). International buyers are no longer just seeking competitive pricing but are demanding verified data on chemical usage and carbon footprints. The dialogue has shifted from pure aesthetics to the digital transparency of the fiber," noted an industry consultant at the preview event. By integrating ‘Sustainability Zones’ and showcasing recycled polyester and organic linen, Intex 2026 facilitates the localized sourcing of compliant raw materials. This proximity is vital for maintaining the ‘Short Lead Time’ advantage that remains Bangladesh’s primary defense against regional competitors like Vietnam and Cambodia in the high-fashion segment.

Organized by Worldex India, Intex is a premier international textile sourcing platform connecting global yarn and fabric suppliers with South Asian garment manufacturers. It focuses on the EU and US export markets, facilitating trade in premium and sustainable materials. The 2026 roadmap emphasizes supporting Bangladesh’s LDC graduation transition through technical textile networking and supply chain digitalization.

  

In collaboration with the Textile Innovation Exchange (TIE), the Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA) has institutionalized a strategic framework designed to shift the industry from a volume-centric model to one defined by high-value innovation. During a high-level executive seminar held in May 2026, industry leaders addressed a critical paradox: while Bangladesh has achieved unprecedented manufacturing scale, unit prices for apparel in the European Union declined by 3.84 per cent in 2025, even as export volumes surged. This discrepancy underscores an urgent need for structural transformation to maintain global relevance.

Strategic transition to high-value segments

Mohammad Hatem, President, BKMEA, emphasized, the era of relying on inexpensive labor and energy is effectively over. The new collaborative model focuses on ‘Innovation Circles’ within factories, targeting measurable improvements in productivity and resource efficiency. The initiative prioritizes the diversification of the product basket into technical textiles, performance activewear, and man-made fiber (MMF) blends. Data presented at the seminar indicated, systematic factory-level interventions could reclaim lost margins by reducing waste and optimizing chemical processing, which currently accounts for a significant portion of operational overhead.

Addressing the LDC graduation challenge

The industry is currently navigating the final countdown to its Least Developed Country (LDC) graduation scheduled for November 24, 2026. This transition threatens to impose tariffs of 10–12 per cent in key markets, potentially disrupting trade flows. TIE’s implementation model aims to prepare approximately 800 mid-to-top-level professionals annually to lead digital transformation projects. By integrating AI-enabled industrial systems and ensuring compliance with the EU’s Digital Product Passport requirements, manufacturers are positioning themselves not just as suppliers, but as innovation-capable partners.

Driving nation’s export sector

The Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association represents over 2,500 member factories, driving the nation's premier export sector. Primarily focused on the EU, US, and emerging ASEAN markets, the association oversees a vast portfolio ranging from basic essentials to performance knitwear. With a financial outlook geared toward reaching a $63.5 billion national export target for FY2025-26, BKMEA is currently prioritizing green manufacturing, boasting over 270 LEED-certified facilities to ensure long-term sustainability and trade competitiveness.

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