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India’s textile sector has showcased significant fortitude, with exports recording a 9.59 per cent Y-o-Y increase in May 2026. This growth remains particularly noteworthy given the persistent economic volatility and demand-side constraints within key export destinations, including the European Union, the United States, and West Asian nations. According to data released by the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry, apparel exports mirrored this positive trajectory with a 9.84 per cent rise during the same period. Industry analysts suggest that this performance indicates a robust demand for Indian-made goods, bolstered by the sector's ability to maintain high quality despite inflationary pressures and supply chain disruptions.

Strategic diversification and competitive edge

To sustain this momentum, major Indian textile manufacturers - including firms such as Gokaldas Exports, Arvind, and Welspun Living - are aggressively redrawing their international strategies. Beyond relying on traditional markets, exporters are focusing on geographical diversification and capitalizing on emerging free trade agreements. The anticipated implementation of bilateral trade pacts with the UK and the European Union is expected to enhance India’s competitive positioning against regional rivals. While capacity constraints remain a notable challenge, many companies are adopting asset-light operational models and increasing investments in domestic manufacturing capabilities to meet the growing influx of trial orders from global retail majors seeking to optimize their supply bases.

Sustaining the global fabric

The Indian textile and apparel industry is a critical pillar of the national economy, contributing approximately 2.3 per cent to GDP and supporting over 45 million jobs. The sector encompasses the entire value chain from fiber to finished apparel. With a focus on enhancing global market share through value-added segments and modernization, the industry is currently supported by government export facilitation schemes and remains a primary supplier to global fashion retail leaders.

  

Paramount Textile Mills has announced the appointment of industry veteran Jayesh Saxena as President – Global Sales and New Business Strategy. This leadership change marks a deliberate shift in the company’s corporate roadmap, as it seeks to scale its international footprint and diversify into emerging product segments. A seasoned professional with over 35 years of experience in the home textiles sector, Saxena is tasked with driving aggressive market penetration and strengthening customer-centric sales frameworks across key global territories. His appointment is expected to provide the strategic rigor necessary for the company to transition from a traditional manufacturing entity into a more agile, innovation-led global competitor.

Mumbai office as an innovation incubator

As part of this growth initiative, the company is repurposing its Mumbai corporate office into a dedicated hub for product development and new category incubation. This facility will serve as the engine for the firm’s future-ready business development, focusing on high-value, design-driven solutions that resonate with evolving international preferences. By concentrating R&D and strategic sales teams in a singular, modernized location, Paramount aims to shorten lead times for innovation and deepen its partnership-based approach with global retailers. This phase of our journey is defined by our commitment to building a future-ready organization through targeted talent investments and enhanced operational capabilities, management noted, underscoring the shift toward high-margin, sustainable product portfolios as a primary driver for long-term stakeholder value.

Specialist in high-quality home textiles

Paramount Textile Mills is an integrated manufacturer specializing in high-quality home textiles and fabric solutions. It focuses on delivering sustainable, innovative products for both domestic and international markets. The company is currently executing a multi-year growth strategy centered on product diversification, operational excellence, and expanding its global footprint.

  

Global fast-fashion leader H&M has initiated a strategic restructuring of its supplier base in Bangladesh, signaling a phase-out of business ties with several long-standing garment manufacturing partners. As of late May 2026, the Swedish retailer has notified at least eight factories of its decision to scale back or terminate orders. This move occurs against a backdrop of persistent macroeconomic headwinds, including high inflation and sluggish consumer spending in key European and North American markets. While H&M has not disclosed the specific rationale for these adjustments, industry experts view the reduction as a broader effort by major brands to transition toward a more ‘agile and flexible’ supply chain that can better withstand the current volatility in global fashion retail.

Resilience amid industry contraction

Despite this localized pullback, Bangladesh remains a critical production hub for H&M, which sources approximately $3 to $3.5 billion in apparel annually from the region. The industry currently faces an inflection point; as global retailers seek to optimize costs, manufacturing hubs are increasingly forced to prioritize high-value production and stringent sustainability compliance over traditional high-volume output. ‘Brands are refining their sourcing approach to balance resilience with cost-efficiency,’ noted a trade analyst familiar with the development. As retailers continue to navigate an era of fragmented global demand, factories that demonstrate superior operational transparency and advanced technical capabilities are likely to retain their standing in the supply chains of major multinationals, even as others are cycled out of the vendor list.

Sustainable apparel at affordable prices

H&M is a global fashion retailer known for offering high-fashion, sustainable apparel at accessible price points. It operates a vast sourcing network across Asia and Europe, focusing on knitwear, denim, and basics. The company is currently prioritizing supply chain resilience and ESG-driven traceability amid competitive global retail pressures.

  

Golden Goose continues to cement its trajectory as a leading ‘Next Gen’ luxury entity, reporting a 10 per cent Y-o-Y revenue increase to €173.2 million for Q1, FY26. This performance underscores the efficacy of the company’s strategic pivot toward a direct-to-consumer (DTC) architecture. By prioritizing controlled retail environments, the brand has expanded its DTC channel to represent 81 per cent of total revenue, a marked climb from 76 per cent in the previous year. This transition is not merely logistical but reflects a broader industry movement among luxury houses to reclaim ownership of the client relationship, thereby bypassing traditional third-party intermediaries to maintain higher margins and consistent brand storytelling.

Experiential retail and community engagement

Beyond mere transaction volume, the brand’s fiscal success is tethered to its experiential retail strategy. Notable 2026 initiatives include the inauguration of the inaugural Younique Café in Milan and the ‘Frutteria Golden’ concept store at Selfridges in London. These touchpoints leverage the company’s signature ‘Co-Creation’ model, where consumers engage directly with artisans to personalize footwear. While wholesale channels faced a 16 per cent contraction - partially attributed to deliberate inventory resets in South Korea and market volatility in the US - the strength of the store network, now numbering 232 locations, has provided a stable bulwark against broader macroeconomic headwinds. Silvio Campara, CEO noted, this community-driven approach is the core engine ensuring that Golden Goose remains relevant to a younger, experience-oriented demographic.

The ‘Perfect Imperfection’ ethos

Founded in 2000, Golden Goose specializes in luxury lifestyle apparel, accessories, and its iconic handcrafted, distressed sneakers. Headquartered in Italy, the brand maintains a global footprint across the Americas, EMEA, and APAC. Following the entry of strategic investors HSG and Temasek in 2025, the group is aggressively scaling its international presence. With a community exceeding 2.5 million ‘Dreamers,’ the brand focuses on scaling its retail network and enhancing artisan-led co-creation services to sustain its long-term financial growth and market positioning.

  

Abercrombie & Fitch Co has demonstrated remarkable fiscal agility, reporting its 14th consecutive quarter of net sales growth. For Q1, FY26, the company posted 1.5 per cent Y-o-Y increase in net sales to $1.11 billion - the figures slightly trailed analyst expectations of $1.12 billion. This top-line performance highlights a successful regional balancing act: robust consumer demand in the Americas and a standout 24 per cent rise in Asia-Pacific (APAC) revenue effectively offset the 10 per cent contraction in the Europe, Middle East, and Africa (EMEA) segment, which continues to face pressure from regional conflict.

Strategic navigation of global volatility

Management remains confident in its long-term trajectory, maintaining full-year 2026 guidance that anticipates net sales growth of 3 per cent to 5 per cent and an operating margin between 12 per cent and 12.5 per cent. To mitigate ongoing supply chain and geopolitical risks, the firm has intensified its focus on inventory control and agile promotional modeling. Furthermore, the company reported a notable fiscal victory regarding its tariff obligations; following a favorable Supreme Court ruling, it has applied for approximately $100 million in refunds, significantly lowering the projected annual impact of import tariffs to 20 basis points. As the company enters the second quarter, its commitment to a $450 million share repurchase program signals strong confidence in its underlying cash flow and ability to deliver sustained shareholder value.

Focus on brand building and store remodeling

Abercrombie & Fitch Co. is a global, omnichannel retailer operating brands including Abercrombie & Fitch and Hollister. Focused on apparel and accessories for men, women, and kids, the company operates over 750 stores worldwide. It currently prioritizes brand-building, store remodels, and disciplined capital allocation to drive consistent growth.

  

Circularity as Strategy BRICS countries turn waste into competitive advantage

 

The global fashion industry’s long-standing take-make-dispose model is being reset as BRICS economies increase their transition toward circular production systems. What was once positioned as a sustainability ambition is now emerging as an economic safeguard one designed to stabilize raw material costs, reduce import dependency, and navigate tightening global trade compliance regimes.

According to ‘The BRICS Imperative’, the shift is no longer incremental. These economies are moving from voluntary recycling frameworks to formalized waste-to-value industrial pipelines, where discarded textiles are increasingly treated as strategic inputs rather than environmental liabilities. For global apparel brands, this signals a restructuring of procurement, manufacturing, and supply chain design.

Waste becomes input

The rising importance of urban mining, the extraction of value from post-consumer textile waste is one many catalyst. With cotton yields being affected by climate volatility and petroleum-linked synthetic fiber prices fluctuating sharply, manufacturers are reframing discarded apparel as a stable, domestic resource pool.

Across BRICS nations, the focus is shifting toward two dominant recovery pathways: advanced chemical recycling and mechanical fiber regeneration. While chemical recycling aims to break down complex blends into reusable polymers, mechanical systems focus on shredding and re-spinning fibers into new yarns. The combined objective is clear: decouple textile growth from virgin resource extraction.

However, the technical constraint remains important. Mixed fiber garments, particularly cotton-polyester blends continue to challenge large-scale sorting systems. The systematic review of 50 studies across BRICS research ecosystems identifies automated sorting technologies and AI-assisted fiber identification as emerging policy and investment priorities.

Policy push

Government regulation is pushing this transformation faster than market forces alone. One major driver is the growing adoption of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) frameworks, which shift end-of-life product accountability directly onto apparel producers and brands. Under EPR systems, companies are no longer only responsible for production efficiency they are financially and operationally liable for post-consumer waste collection, recycling, or safe disposal. This has triggered a redesign of business models across retail.

BRICS nation

Primary circular focus area

Challenge identified

Brazil

Solid waste management & re-use

Logistics and informal sector integration

Russia

Industrial symbiosis

Technology gaps in textile recovery

India

Resource efficiency & craft circularity

Addressing socio-economic inequalities

China

Comprehensive waste legislation

Scaling innovative business models

South Africa

E-waste and textile diversion

Infrastructure and capacity building

The policy difference across countries highlights an important limitation: circularity is not a uniform model. Infrastructure readiness, labor market structure, and industrial maturity vary significantly, forcing governments to adopt region-specific approaches rather than standardized frameworks.

Reverse loop economics

As regulatory pressure intensifies, firms are increasingly turning to reverse logistics as a core competitive lever. Reverse logistics, systems that move used garments from consumers back into production cycles have evolved from a cost center into a value recovery engine. Companies that successfully integrate return-to-manufacturer systems are reporting measurable operational gains, particularly in material efficiency and long-term input cost reduction. The reuse of locally recovered cotton, for instance, can reduce water consumption by up to 40 per cent, a critical metric as both environmental compliance costs and input volatility rise.

“The transition requires tailored strategies that consider the specific needs and contexts of each country to effectively utilize emerging technologies,” notes The BRICS Imperative, underscoring the need for decentralized implementation rather than uniform global standards. For the value fashion segment, where margins are structurally thin these efficiencies are becoming commercially decisive.

Circular hubs rise

A defining feature of the transition is the emergence of industrial circular hubs, particularly in India and China. These clusters are built around the processing of pre-consumer textile waste, such as cutting scraps from garment manufacturing units. Instead of entering landfill streams or low-value recycling loops, this waste is being converted into high-quality polyester yarn and blended textiles. This approach effectively bypasses traditional fiber supply chains, reducing exposure to volatile global commodity pricing especially in virgin polyester markets.

Beyond cost savings, these hubs serve a strategic purpose: insulating apparel ecosystems from geopolitical disruptions and raw material shocks. The BRICS review emphasizes that the scalability of these hubs depends less on technology alone and more on knowledge transfer, ecosystem coordination, and institutional support.

Industrial reset

The broader implication of this shift is structural. The BRICS textile ecosystem represents one of the largest integrated manufacturing bases in the world, spanning fiber production, yarn processing, garment manufacturing, and high-volume retail supply.

So far oriented toward export-led growth, these economies are now increasingly focused on domestic consumption and regional supply resilience. Circularity, in this context, is not just an environmental transition but a macroeconomic strategy to stabilize industrial growth while reducing exposure to global supply chain shocks. As circular systems mature, they are expected to redefine competitiveness in global apparel markets. Countries that can efficiently close material loops will not only reduce environmental impact but also gain strategic insulation from commodity price cycles and regulatory tightening.

The transition from linear to circular fashion within BRICS economies signals a broader reengineering of global textile supply chains. What began as sustainability compliance has evolved into a core industrial strategy anchored in cost efficiency, resource security, and regulatory adaptation. As reverse logistics networks expand, recycling technologies scale, and policy frameworks tighten, circularity is no longer optional for apparel players operating in or sourcing from BRICS markets. It is rapidly becoming the baseline architecture of future-ready fashion systems.

  

Amazons 15 bn bet on France and the future of commerce

 

As Europe’s luxury sector enters a phase of austerity, a parallel transformation is unfolding in the continent’s retail foundations. What is leading this shift is Amazon, which has committed €15 billion to France over the 2026-28 period, its largest investment in the country to date. This is not simply a logistics expansion. It implies a reconfiguration of how retail value is created, distributed, and captured across Europe. While heritage brands recalibrate portfolios and reduce exposure to non-core assets, Amazon is deepening its role as the underlying infrastructure layer of commerce itself. The contrast is stark. On one side, luxury is tightening its focus on power brands. On the other, Amazon is building the physical and digital ‘pipes’ through which nearly every category of goods now flows.

Luxury pullback

The counter-movement is visible in the evolving strategy of LVMH. Facing volatility in aspirational consumption and asset valuations, the group has reportedly explored divestments of peripheral holdings such as Marc Jacobs and its stake in Fenty Beauty. This reflects a broader recalibration in luxury: a shift away from breadth and toward margin protection through brand concentration. Dior and Louis Vuitton remain central, while adjacent or non-core assets are seen as capital that can be redeployed more efficiently.

The difference with Amazon is structural rather than cyclical. Luxury is centring around identity and exclusivity. Amazon is expanding around access, speed, and logistics density.

France build-out map

Amazon’s €15 billion investment is heavily concentrated in last-mile compression, reducing time, distance, and friction between inventory and consumer demand. The strategy is built on regional hubs designed to decentralize inventory while increasing delivery velocity across France.

Table” Amazon’s France expansion blueprint (2026-28)

Project location

Planned permanent jobs

Functions

Colombier-Saugnieu

3,000

Regional hub for Southeastern France

Ensisheim

2,000

Gateway for cross-border EU trade (Est. 2027)

Illiers-Combray

1,000

Centralized distribution for Northern regions

Beauvais

1,000

High-velocity fulfillment for the Paris corridor

This expansion pushes Amazon’s French employment footprint to over 25,000 permanent roles since 2010, supporting a wider ecosystem estimated at nearly 100,000 jobs. The model is explicitly proximity-based. By repositioning inventory closer to demand nodes, Amazon has already shown up to 25 per cent reductions in travel distance per package at select sites, alongside measurable emissions reductions per shipment.

Efficiency focus in apparel

The implications for apparel retail are particularly significant. Fast-moving fashion categories are increasingly defined by logistics performance rather than design alone. Retailers such as Lands' End have integrated into Amazon’s fulfillment ecosystem to compress delivery times and stabilize inventory positioning across demand clusters.

As Andrew McLean, CEO of Lands’ End, noted in industry commentary, leveraging Amazon’s logistics scale enables brands to operate with responsiveness previously reserved for local retailers. In effect, Amazon is turning national-scale brands into hyper-local fulfillment actors.

The French e-commerce apparel market, projected to reach $26.8 billion in 2026, is growing at a 13.4 per cent CAGR. In this environment, delivery speed is no longer operational efficiency it is competitive differentiation.

Predictive commerce engine

A growing portion of Amazon’s French investment is directed toward Amazon Web Services and generative AI systems embedded within retail operations. The shift is from reactive fulfillment to predictive stocking. AI models increasingly forecast demand at granular SKU levels, pre-positioning inventory in regional hubs before purchase intent fully materializes.

This creates a compounding flywheel: faster delivery improves conversion rates, which generates richer behavioral data, which further refines forecasting accuracy. The result is a self-reinforcing efficiency loop that reduces cost per unit while increasing system responsiveness. Retail is no longer just transactional. It is becoming anticipatory.

Retail power shift

The broader implication for Europe’s retail is a binary choice. Companies either operate inside Amazon’s infrastructure stack or compete against it using fragmented legacy systems. The €15 billion French expansion positions Amazon not merely as a marketplace operator but as a systemic utility for commerce. Its infrastructure scale, 200+ fulfillment centers and approximately 80,000 trailers globally creates a barrier that is increasingly difficult for regional logistics networks to match.

In parallel, European luxury’s consolidation strategy signals retreat into high-margin defensibility rather than infrastructure expansion. One side is optimizing exclusivity. The other is optimizing access.

Ownership of the ‘Pipes’

The emerging retail order in Europe is being defined less by brands and more by infrastructure ownership. Amazon’s French investment underscores a decisive shift: control of logistics networks now translates directly into control of commercial velocity. As luxury consolidates around iconic brand equity, Amazon is embedding itself deeper into the operational backbone of retail. The result is a re-architecture of commerce itself, one where the most valuable position is no longer the storefront, but the system that makes the storefront function.

  

An EssilorLuxottica subsidiary, FGX International is intensifying its engagement with younger demographics by launching a high-profile capsule collection in collaboration with ITV Studios’ blockbuster reality series, Love Island. This strategic move seeks to bridge the gap between traditional over-the-counter eyewear and social media-driven fashion trends. By embedding its flagship Foster Grant brand within the high-energy aesthetic of the Love Island franchise, the company is positioning its affordable accessory line as a essential component of contemporary ‘villa-ready’ style.

Channeling cultural trends into eyewear

The six-piece limited-edition collection leverages the massive reach of reality television to drive retail footfall at CVS and digital conversion via Amazon and the brand's own e-commerce portal. Mark Flanagan, Director – Design, Foster Grant, notes, the partnership was a logical extension of the brand's heritage, stating, the project celebrates personality and the confidence inherent in great eyewear. Each frame, bearing names such as ‘Coupled Up’ and ‘Bombshell,’ serves as a targeted product placement intended to resonate with fans of the series. Priced between $16.99 and $20, the line prioritizes accessible luxury, ensuring the styles remain competitive in a crowded market for non-prescription sunglasses.

Broadening market appeal

This initiative reflects a broader shift among accessory manufacturers to utilize entertainment marketing to overcome the commoditization of over-the-counter eyewear. By incorporating functional features like scratch-resistant lenses and comprehensive UV protection into trend-focused designs, FGX International is addressing the demand for value-conscious, fashion-forward products. This collaboration represents a tactical effort to capture market share among Gen Z and millennial consumers who prioritize aesthetic alignment with their favorite digital entertainment over traditional brand loyalty.

www.bastillepost.com

Headquartered in Smithfield, Rhode Island, FGX International is a global leader in designing and marketing non-prescription reading glasses and sunglasses. A subsidiary of EssilorLuxottica, its portfolio includes Foster Grant and Magnivision, alongside licensed eyewear for major brands like Ironman and Steve Madden. The company focuses on combining innovation with accessible fashion.

  

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has outlined a strategic roadmap for India’s textile industry, aiming to scale textile exports to $100 billion and total production to $250 billion by 2030. Speaking at the TEXPROCIL Export Awards in Mumbai on May 25, 2026, the Minister emphasized the necessity of strengthening the domestic value chain from farm to fashion. As global trade dynamics shift, the government is incentivizing manufacturers to move beyond traditional labour-cost advantages, focusing instead on integrated infrastructure such as the PM MITRA Parks and advanced technical capabilities to remain competitive.

Scaling competitiveness through technology

To achieve these ambitious targets, the industry is being urged to embrace disruptive technologies including artificial intelligence, robotic sewing, and digital printing. With global retailers increasingly mandating traceability and lower carbon footprints, sustainability is no longer optional. The government is reinforcing this transition by launching initiatives like the Advanced Certificate Program in International Trade (ACPIT) to upskill the workforce. Sitharaman noted, while geopolitical fragmentation and carbon border adjustment mechanisms present significant hurdles, they also create opportunities for India to establish itself as a reliable, high-value alternative for global brands seeking to diversify their sourcing away from single-country dependencies.

Navigating global trade volatility

Despite the challenging environment - marked by supply chain disruptions and protectionist trade policies - India’s textile sector showed resilience in FY26, with exports reaching approximately $33.5 billion. Recent trade agreements, including the India-EU FTA concluded in early 2026, are expected to provide the necessary preferential access to bolster value-added segments. Industry players like Gokaldas Exports have already begun to mirror this focus, achieving significant productivity gains and margin expansion through tighter cost management. The overarching mandate for the industry remains clear: position Indian textiles as a premium, sustainable offering rather than a cost-competitive commodity, ensuring long-term integration into global value chains.

The Indian textile sector is a primary pillar of the nation’s economy, contributing roughly 2.3 per cent to GDP and supporting approximately 60 million livelihoods. It encompasses a vast value chain including cotton, man-made fibers, and technical textiles. Current growth is driven by infrastructure investment, export-linked incentives, and a push toward sustainable manufacturing.

  

Global Sourcing Expo Sydney 2026 Bridging the gap in global apparel procurement

 

The upcoming Global Sourcing Expo Sydney, scheduled for June 16–18, 2026, at the International Convention Centre (ICC) Sydney, is poised to redefine how Australian fashion brands, wholesalers, and retail buyers engage with the international manufacturing community. As supply chain complexities mount, the expo serves as a critical nexus, offering an expansive platform for face-to-face engagement with over 600 exhibitors from across the globe. By consolidating suppliers from diverse manufacturing powerhouses—including India, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Thailand, Indonesia, and beyond—the event enables sourcing professionals to bypass digital-only procurement, allowing for firsthand verification of production capabilities, material quality, and operational compliance.

A world-class destination for sourcing and strategy

The expo floor is designed to function as an immersive ecosystem, providing a rare opportunity for businesses to compare product offerings, pricing structures, and Minimum Order Quantities (MOQs) in a side-by-side environment. Co-located with the China Clothing, Textiles & Accessories Expo, the event creates a comprehensive sourcing destination that encompasses the full spectrum of the supply chain, from raw textiles and technical fibers to finished apparel, footwear, and home furnishings. For modern retailers, this convergence of international manufacturers represents more than a trade show; it is a strategic facility for building resilient partnerships that can withstand global market volatility.

Advanced learning and industry expertise

Beyond the exhibition floor, the event distinguishes itself through a rigorous professional education program. MCed by esteemed fashion business journalist Patty Huntington, the Global Sourcing Seminar program is curated to address the most pressing issues in contemporary fashion, such as the integration of Artificial Intelligence in supply chain management, the implementation of circular sustainability models, and the evolution of retail aesthetics. The speaker lineup features industry heavyweights, including Marianne Perkovic of the Australian Fashion Council, Alex Schuman of Carla Zampatti Fashion, and Natasa Pitra-Grbic of PITRA, who will deliver evidence-based insights tailored to the current realities of global trade.

New to the 2026 edition is the "Learning Lab," an interactive, on-floor initiative that provides bite-sized, practical insights for busy professionals. These drop-in sessions facilitate direct engagement with subject matter experts, enabling attendees to navigate real-world case studies and obtain immediate, actionable guidance between scheduled meetings.

The masterclass for scalable success

For those seeking an intensive strategic experience, the final day of the expo will host the "Global Sourcing Summit Masterclass" with industry specialist Jude Kingston. Titled From Concept to Commercial Success: Building a Scalable, Sustainable Fashion Business, this full-day masterclass is engineered to help designers and established brands alike refine their operational frameworks. By focusing on the intersection of creative vision and commercial feasibility, the masterclass offers participants guided pathways to strengthen sourcing decisions, optimize sales strategies, and embed sustainable practices in ways that enhance long-term profitability.

As the industry converges on Sydney, the Global Sourcing Expo remains the definitive venue for stakeholders aiming to sharpen their competitive edge. With the event approaching, professionals are encouraged to review the exhibitor list, register for the masterclass, and finalize their schedules to ensure they maximize the strategic value of this high-impact, three-day event.

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