The Indian textile and apparel sector closed the first three quarters of FY26 with a marginal contraction of 0.26 per cent, reaching $23.25 billion as of December 2025. This decline reflects a high-stakes standoff between domestic exporters and global trade policy shifts. While overall merchandise shipments rose, the textile segment was stifled by the 50 per cent tariff on Indian garment imports enacted by the United States in late 2025. This move has fundamentally altered the competitive landscape, forcing exporters to offer deep discounts of up to 25 per cent to retain market share in their single largest destination.
Beyond Western trade barriers, the sector is grappling with regional disruptions in its secondary markets. Historically the primary destination for Indian yarn, Bangladesh implemented restrictive land-port import policies in early 2025, contributing to a 2.19 per cent decline in overall textile shipments. Furthermore, domestic cotton production is projected to reach a two-decade low this season. The Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) has recently urged the government to eliminate the 11 per cent cotton import duty to offset these supply shortages and rising input costs, which currently put Indian spinners at a structural disadvantage against duty-free competitors like Vietnam.
Despite the export cooling, the industry is finding a vital buffer in the domestic market, which is projected to grow by 10.5 per cent in FY26. Brands are increasingly focusing on the ‘Aspirational India’ segment in Tier-II and Tier-III cities to compensate for sluggish overseas volumes. Ready-made garments (RMG) have shown resilience, growing by 2.36 per cent during the nine-month period, driven by a surge in man-made fiber (MMF) adoption. Companies that integrated downstream operations have fared better, maintaining credit metrics by capitalizing on the $142 billion domestic market even as home textile exports to the US face fierce price competition from neighboring nations.
The Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) serves as the apex body for the entire textile value chain, representing manufacturers, exporters, and regional associations. It facilitates policy advocacy with the Ministry of Textiles, focusing on raw material security and ESG compliance. With India’s apparel market projected to reach $350 billion by 2030, CITI’s current strategy emphasizes diversifying export destinations to the UK and UAE to mitigate US-specific tariff risks.
The Indian textile sector has recorded a historic 158 per cent Y-o-Y growth in cotton imports during the December 2025 quarter, reaching 3.1 million bales. This volume spike was catalyzed by New Delhi’s strategic suspension of the 11 per cent import duty, which successfully corrected a severe price disconnect between domestic and global markets. At the peak of the quarter, ginned cotton based on India’s Minimum Support Price (MSP) was valued at approximately Rs 63,000 per candy, significantly exceeding landed Brazilian fiber, which entered ports at roughly Rs 50,000 per candy. While the duty-free window expired on December 31, 2025, the Cotton Association of India (CAI) anticipates total imports for MY 2025–26 will hit a record 5 million bales as mills continue to prioritize high-grade, contamination-free foreign fiber.
Despite improved raw material availability, Indian apparel manufacturers are navigating a contraction in overseas demand. The United States, which absorbs nearly 30 per cent of India’s $38 billion textile exports, implemented a 50 per cent tariff on Indian goods in August 2025, with further threats of an escalation to 500 per cent. The reinstatement of the 11 per cent duty on January 1, 2026, places us at a structural disadvantage against Bangladesh and Vietnam, who maintain permanent duty-free access, noted a delegation from the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI). With domestic consumption projected to decline by 2.9% this season due to these trade frictions, the industry is increasingly advocating for long-term fiscal stability to prevent production from shifting toward emerging textile hubs in East Africa.
The Indian textile industry is a major global player in yarn, fabric, and ready-made garment production. With core markets in the US and EU, the sector is currently expanding into technical textiles and high-value sustainable blends. Following the 2025 import surge, the industry anticipates a challenging 2026 as it balances rising MSP-linked costs against aggressive global tariff regimes.
The UK apparel manufacturing sector is witnessing a significant revival as retailers prioritize supply chain resilience over low-cost offshore alternatives. At the latest Source Fashion edition at Olympia London, visitor numbers increased by 16 per cent, reflecting a broader industry trend toward ‘nearshoring.’ With the UK clothing retail market projected to reach £50 billion in 2026, major players like Marks & Spencer and Next are increasingly engaging with the British Pavilion to mitigate global logistics disruptions. This shift is substantiated by recent data showing a 31 per cent reduction in lead times for firms utilizing local ‘just-in-time’ production models, a critical advantage as retailers navigate volatile consumer demand.
Beyond speed-to-market, the event highlighted a fundamental transition toward mandatory transparency. For the first time, exhibitors reported that sustainability is no longer a peripheral marketing tool but an operational necessity driven by the upcoming EU and UK Digital Product Passport (DPP) requirements. Under the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR), the destruction of unsold textiles will be banned starting July 2026, forcing brands to adopt circular business models. The energy this year is focused on textile science and traceability," noted Safia Minney, MBE. As businesses face potential fines of up to 10 per cent of global turnover for misleading environmental claims under the Digital Markets Act, the focus has shifted toward verified site-level data and climate-adaptive materials that align with new planetary boundaries.
Source Fashion is the UK’s premier gateway for responsible end-to-end garment manufacturing. Serving Tier-1 retailers and independent designers, the platform facilitates high-quality sourcing across international and domestic markets. Following record attendance in 2025, the initiative expects sustained growth as brands seek climate-resilient textiles. Established to bridge the gap between ethical producers and volume buyers, it remains a cornerstone for UK retail strategy.
While the Northern Hemisphere navigates peak winter, the 2026 Australian Open in Melbourne has become the staging ground for a significant breakthrough in material science. Boss has officially debuted NovaPoly, a proprietary recycled yarn developed in collaboration with Jiaren Chemical Recycling and NBC LLC. Unlike standard recycled polyesters that persist in landfills, NovaPoly integrates a specialized additive that accelerates degradation in anaerobic microbial environments. This launch positions the brand at the forefront of the $2.42 billion biodegradable textile market, which is projected to grow at a CAGR of 11.9 per cent through 2030.
The commercial viability of the fiber is being rigorously tested under professional match conditions by brand ambassadors Taylor Fritz and Matteo Berrettini. Comprising jerseys and shorts, the collection must maintain strict standards for thermal regulation and durability—traditionally a challenge for biodegradable synthetics. This isn't just about repurposing waste; it's about engineering a material's afterlife, states a group spokesperson. By utilizing both pre- and post-consumer textile waste, Boss is addressing the industry's microplastic crisis, as NovaPoly is specifically designed to mitigate synthetic fiber accumulation after its useful life.
The debut coincides with a broader ‘Claim 5 Touchdown’ strategic reset for Hugo Boss, which aims to optimize inventory and prioritize high-margin, innovation-led products. While the group anticipates a temporary sales consolidation in 2026, it is betting on ‘brand elevation’ through such exclusive material technologies. The NovaPoly-based Green collection is now available through global wholesale partners and e-commerce platforms, targeting a growing demographic of eco-conscious athletes. Following a one-year exclusivity period, the brand plans to license the yarn across the wider apparel sector, potentially establishing a new global benchmark for sustainable activewear.

As 2025 drew to a close, the global fashion and apparel industry gave a reminder that recovery is rarely uniform. What initially appeared to be a strong holiday quarter ultimately revealed a market split along clear lines. The final quarter of FY 2025, spanning October to December, underscored that festive demand alone was not enough to guarantee success. Instead, performance gravitated toward companies that balanced aspirational branding with disciplined pricing and near-flawless inventory control.
Rather than lifting the sector as a whole, the much-anticipated festive surge rewarded a narrower cohort of retailers, those capable of translating consumer caution into profitable demand. Shoppers were willing to spend, but only where value, perceived quality, and relevance converged.
The December quarter unfolded as a competitive contest for a consumer increasingly attuned to discounts yet unwilling to compromise entirely on brand or experience. In the US, spending remained steady but selective, shaped by inflation fatigue and lingering uncertainty around tariffs. Meanwhile, the UK and parts of continental Europe benefited from a timely cold spell that revived demand for winter assortments that had weighed on inventories earlier in the year.
The contrast in outcomes becomes clear when examining the Q4 performance of leading global players.
|
Brand/Group |
Region Focus |
Q4 Revenue/Growth |
Key Performance Driver |
|
Inditex (Zara) |
Europe/Global |
+10.6% (Sales)* |
High-quality inventory; early winter demand in EU. |
|
Next PLC |
UK |
£6.87B (Est. FY) |
Upgraded guidance due to strong full-price sales. |
|
Gap Inc. |
USA |
$3.9B (Q3) / +3% (Q4) |
Old Navy’s dominance and Gap brand’s reinvigoration. |
|
Abercrombie & Fitch |
USA/Global |
+5% (Q4 Growth) |
Record holiday sales; Hollister segment resurgence. |
|
H&M Group |
Europe/UK |
+2% (LCY) |
Strategic store updates and effective cost controls. |
|
THG Beauty |
UK/Global |
£370M (Q4) |
Strongest Q4 growth since 2021 (+7% Group). |
|
LVMH |
Luxury/Global |
€23.9B |
Louis Vuitton & Sephora (+10%) offsetting Dior flatlines. |
|
Nike |
USA/Sports |
$11.1B |
Better-than-expected "Women in Sports" category performance. |
*Constant currency for Nov 1-Dec 1, 2025.
The table reflects an industry increasingly defined by execution rather than exposure. Inditex’s performance reaffirmed the strength of its vertically integrated model, with timely inventory alignment allowing Zara to capitalise on early winter demand across Europe. Next PLC’s results highlighted the resilience of full-price selling in an otherwise promotion-heavy market, while Gap Inc. and Abercrombie demonstrated that brand reinvention can still unlock growth even in mature retail landscapes.
Luxury and sportswear followed parallel but distinct trajectories. LVMH relied on the continued desirability of Louis Vuitton and Sephora to offset softer performance at Dior, while Nike’s relative stability came from targeted growth in women-led sports categories rather than broad-based demand.
Viewed across the full financial year, 2025 marked a turning point for the global fashion industry. The opening quarters were weighed down by tariff anxieties, fragile consumer confidence, and lingering inventory imbalances. Yet the second half of the year brought a measurable shift in tone, as companies tightened operations and recalibrated growth expectations.
Overall, the global fashion market grew an estimated 3 to 4 per cent in 2025, modest by historical standards but notable given the volatility that defined the year. Growth was no longer driven by store expansion or aggressive discounting. Instead, it came from improved gross margin discipline, cleaner assortments, and a renewed emphasis on profitability over volume.
Market leaders such as Inditex and Next sustained double-digit full-price sales growth, while turnaround narratives most notably Gap Inc. proved that brand relevance remains a powerful counterweight to macroeconomic pressure. Across the board, management teams showed a clear preference for earnings quality, resisting the temptation to chase top-line growth at the expense of balance-sheet health.
In the US, Q4 marked a quiet resurgence of specialty retail. Brands that communicated clearly, priced transparently, and offered distinct product stories emerged as winners in a crowded marketplace.
Gap Inc.’s performance encapsulated this shift. Reporting its eighth consecutive quarter of positive comparable sales, the company benefited from a sharpened focus on everyday staples enhanced with trend-led updates. High-impact social media campaigns helped reconnect the brand with younger consumers who had drifted toward ultra-fast fashion platforms.
Abercrombie & Fitch delivered one of the season’s most convincing validations of strategic repositioning. Its transition toward elevated casualwear translated into record holiday sales and reaffirmed full-year growth, signalling that its multi-year brand reset has achieved durability rather than novelty.
Across the UK and Europe, agility proved decisive. Next PLC emerged as a standout by navigating cost-of-living pressures with a highly integrated omnichannel model that blended digital efficiency with store-led fulfilment. Strong fourth-quarter trading prompted multiple upgrades to full-year profit guidance, reinforcing investor confidence in its operating model.
THG Beauty added a layer of innovation to the festive race. Its Lookfantastic brand recorded a sharp spike in UK sales, aided by an unconventional partnership with Uber Eats that captured last-minute gift demand. The move illustrated how speed and convenience have become critical differentiators even within premium beauty retail.
As the entered 2026, uncertainty has not disappeared, it has merely shifted shape. Tariffs remain the most immediate concern, particularly in the U.S., where apparel duties fluctuated sharply toward the end of 2025. Many brands have already absorbed between 100 and 190 basis points of margin impact, prompting renewed urgency around supply chain diversification.
Near-shoring is expected to increase, with production gravitating toward Mexico, Central America, Turkey, and North Africa as companies seek insulation from policy volatility. At the same time, signs of fatigue are emerging within ultra-fast fashion. Late-2025 data suggests consumer spending is gradually rotating back toward domestic value retailers as quality, fit, and ethical considerations regain importance.
Overlaying these shifts is the rapid advance of artificial intelligence. The coming year is poised to usher in early forms of ‘agentic commerce’ where AI-driven shopping assistants evaluate products on attributes ranging from fabric composition to carbon footprint. Retailers that fail to make their assortments machine-readable risk invisibility in this new discovery ecosystem.
The close of 2025 offers a clear lesson: the middle of the market has not vanished, but it has evolved. Scale alone no longer guarantees success, nor does relentless discounting. Competitive advantage now lies in data intelligence, brand clarity, and operational restraint.
As LVMH chairman Bernard Arnault observed in his year-end reflection, desirability remains the most effective defence against macroeconomic noise. In an industry navigating slower growth and sharper scrutiny, that principle appears set to define the winners of the next cycle.
Trident Group is strategically recalibrating its export architecture as it debuts the ‘Visible Invisible’ collection at Heimtextil 2026 in Frankfurt. This move comes at a pivotal juncture, with the India-UK Free Trade Agreement (FTA) - signed in July 2025 - eliminating 8–12 per cent import duties and positioning India to overtake Turkey as the third-largest textile supplier to the UK by year-end. Concurrent negotiations for an India-EU FTA are nearing a January 26 conclusion, promising a similar zero-tariff advantage across the 27-member bloc.
To bypass traditional intermediary constraints, Trident has appointed dedicated Directors for Germany and France. This localized leadership structure is designed to secure deeper penetration into Europe’s $140 billion home textile market, which currently demands high-performance, sustainable solutions. Despite a challenging Q2 FY26 marked by margin compression due to elevated input costs, the group reported a steady 9.14 per cent Y-o-Y jump in net profit, reaching Rs 91 crore. The firm is leveraging this financial stability to pivot toward high-margin value-added linens that align with the EU’s stringent Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) regulations.
The ‘TG Collection’ showcased at Messe Frankfurt integrates Artificial Intelligence in design and supply chain optimization, a core theme of this year's fair. By combining responsibly sourced cotton with advanced performance finishes, Trident is addressing the 71 per cent growth in buyer inquiries reported in recent quarters for sustainable home textiles. As the industry scales toward a $350 billion valuation by 2030, Trident’s vertical integration - from yarn to finished bed and bath suites - provides a critical cost hedge against global logistics volatility and shifting sourcing patterns.
Headquartered in Ludhiana, Trident Limited is a vertically integrated global leader in home textiles (bath and bed linen), eco-friendly paper, and chemicals. Serving major retailers in 100+ nations, the group reported FY25 revenues of Rs 7,047 crore. Established in 1990, Trident is currently expanding its manufacturing capacity to meet a $100 billion national export target by 2030.
The Indian textile and apparel (T&A) industry has achieved a landmark Rs 60,000 crore in investment commitments for FY25-26 cycle, signaling a robust long-term outlook despite immediate trade headwinds. This capital influx is largely anchored by the PM MITRA Mega Textile Parks and the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme, which alone has drawn proposals exceeding Rs 28,711 crore. These initiatives aim to consolidate the fragmented value chain, reducing logistics overheads that traditionally inflate Indian garment costs by 10-12 per cent compared to regional competitors.
Significant momentum is building within the seven approved PM MITRA parks, where investment MoUs worth Rs 27,434 crore have already been finalized. Major foreign players are lead-funding this expansion; Finland’s Infinited Fiber Company and Singapore’s RGE have committed nearly Rs 9,000 crore combined for high-tech fiber projects in Tamil Nadu. This shift toward man-made fibers (MMF) and technical textiles is a strategic response to the volatility of domestic cotton yields, which hit a 20-year low this season.
While domestic investment thrives, exporters face a dual-front challenge: the 11 per cent reinstated cotton duty and a 50 per cent US tariff on Indian textiles effective since late 2025. In response, the Ministry of Textiles has launched a ‘40-country roadmap’ to diversify exports beyond the US and EU. The focus is now on high-value segments and utilizing FTAs to regain the 15 per cent cost advantage currently held by rivals like Vietnam," stated an industry analyst during the January 2026 sectoral review.
The Indian textile industry contributes 2.3 per cent to the GDP and is the nation's second-largest employer with 45 million workers. Dominating global exports in cotton-based home textiles, the sector is aggressively scaling toward a $350 billion valuation by 2030. Historically rooted in cotton, it is now rapidly modernizing through the National Technical Textiles Mission and sustainable recycling initiatives.
In its January 2026 World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) report, USDA has revised global cotton production downwards by 350,000 bales to 119.43 million bales from December 2025 projections. Coupled with a forecasted rise in global consumption to 118.92 million bales, this tightening supply has pushed the global stocks-to-use ratio below 63 per cent, signaling firmer price foundations for the upcoming quarters.
The production squeeze is primarily driven by significant downward revisions in the United States and India. US output has been revised downwards by 2 per cent to 13.9 million bales due to poor weather conditions in the Delta region, where national average yields fell by 8 per cent to 856 pounds per acre. Similarly, India faces a 3 per cent decline due to uneven monsoons and pest pressure. Conversely, China’s crop forecast was raised by 1 million bales, though this gain was insufficient to offset the losses from other major exporters.
For apparel manufacturers, the report highlights a critical shift: ending stocks are projected to fall by 1.5 million bales to 74.48 million. With trade volumes remaining essentially flat, retailers must navigate a landscape of higher input costs. This inventory drawdown is expected to accelerate the industry's transition toward synthetic blends and recycled fibers as brands seek to de-risk their portfolios from the volatility of natural fiber yields.
The World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) is the definitive monthly report used by the global textile industry to project raw material costs. Covering major cotton hubs like China, India, and the US, it dictates the pricing of yarn and fabric globally. Current industry plans focus on diversifying sourcing to mitigate the impact of the 20-year low yields seen in key regions this season.
The Indian textile and apparel (T&A) industry is currently navigating a period of intense fiscal strain following the reinstatement of an 11 per cent cotton import duty on January 1, 2026. Coupled with the 50 per cent US tariff on Indian textile imports active since August 2025, this policy shift has placed the sector’s global competitiveness at a critical juncture.
Domestic cotton production is projected to hit a two-decade low this season, intensifying the demand-supply gap. The Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) recently petitioned Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan for a permanent waiver of import duties. Industry leaders argue that imported cotton - typically accounting for only 6.8 per cent of domestic consumption - serves specialized high-value export orders rather than displacing local crops.
Indian manufacturers face a structural disadvantage compared to regional rivals. Nations like Bangladesh and Vietnam continue to offer duty-free access to raw cotton, granting their exporters a 10–15 per cent cost advantage. With the US absorbing nearly 28 per cent of India's textile exports (valued at $11 billion in FY25), the added 11 per cent duty on raw materials further erodes the slim margins of domestic MSMEs already struggling under the weight of trade barriers.
As the Union Budget 2026 approaches, the sector is lobbying for a predictable policy roadmap to unlock private capital. A permanent duty removal is seen as essential to prevent a potential 30 per cent decline in order volumes. The government’s response will determine if the industry can reach its ambitious $350 billion valuation target by 2030.
India’s textile industry is the nation’s second-largest employer, supporting over 45 million livelihoods. With a current market size of approximately $174 billion, it dominates global exports in cotton-based apparel and home textiles. The sector is currently transitioning toward high-performance technical fibers and sustainable manufacturing to offset rising raw material costs.
The Indian Ready-Made Garment (RMG) sector has entered a high-stakes period of advocacy as the Apparel Export Promotion Council (AEPC) submitted its formal wishlist for the Union Budget 2026-27. At the heart of the appeal is a request for a dedicated Focus Market Scheme (FMS) for the United States. Following the imposition of a cumulative 50 per cent tariff on Indian textiles by Washington in August 2025 - comprising reciprocal and ad valorem duties - exporters are struggling to maintain a foothold in their largest market, which traditionally accounts for 28 per cent of India's apparel shipments.
To counter the ‘tariff wall,’ Dr A Sakthivel, Chairman, AEPC has proposed the issuance of freely transferable incentive scrips equivalent to 20 per cent of the Free On Board (FOB) value for US-bound exports. This intervention is designed to protect margins that have compressed to near-zero levels as manufacturers absorb costs to prevent order diversion to rivals like Vietnam and Bangladesh, who currently face significantly lower US duties of approximately 20 per cent. Additionally, the council is lobbying for a hike in interest subvention to 5 per cent for MSMEs, citing a 30% surge in working capital requirements due to extended credit cycles.
The industry is also prioritizing long-term structural shifts to mitigate natural fiber volatility and meet strict EU sustainability norms. Demands include a 100 per cent accelerated depreciation on capital assets over two years and the creation of a Green Transformation Fund providing 5 per cent soft loans for eco-friendly infrastructure. With domestic cotton yields projected to hit a two-decade low, these measures aim to transition the sector toward high-value Man-Made Fiber (MMF) products and technical textiles, ensuring the industry stays on track to reach its $350 billion valuation target by 2030.
The AEPC is the official body facilitating Indian garment exports globally, representing over 8,000 member exporters. It focuses on market diversification across 111 countries and technology upgradation for MSMEs. Strategically, the council aims to expand India’s MMF footprint and achieve a $37 billion export milestone by leveraging new Free Trade Agreements (FTAs).
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