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At the Grand Palais, Artistic Director Matthieu Blazy unveiled his second Haute Couture collection for Chanel, orchestrating a departure from traditional runway tropes. Drawing inspiration from a rare book of fables discovered within Gabrielle Chanel’s personal library, Blazy framed the Autumn-Winter 2026/27 collection as a sartorial fairy tale. The presentation, titled ‘Gaby and the Beanstalk,’ transformed the venue into a surrealist garden, featuring elaborate botanical motifs such as climbing vines and floral embroidery that integrated seamlessly with the house's signature tweed. By eschewing conventional bridal finales, Blazy underscored a commitment to the modern woman’s reality, culminating the show with a stark, understated black dress that honored the founder's legacy of independent elegance.

Crafting intimacy for the modern wardrobe

The collection highlights a shift toward high-concept, personalized luxury that prioritizes the experience of the wearer over external display. Blazy integrated hidden details - such as hand-painted silk linings, cryptic notes, and charms concealed within pockets - to foster a sense of private mythology. This approach reflects a broader retail trend of ‘quiet luxury’ where the value of couture is found in its construction and intimate purpose rather than overt ornamentation. Blazy’s technical prowess was evident in the architectural tailoring of fluid silhouettes, which the artisans at le19M executed to ensure ease of movement. By merging whimsy with wearable utility, the collection reinforces Chanel's strategy of maintaining its status as a pinnacle of heritage craft while successfully attracting a contemporary demographic that values both history and creative reinvention.

Prioritizing craftsmanship through Métiers d’art

Chanel is a global luxury powerhouse renowned for pioneering ready-to-wear, Haute Couture, and high-end accessories. Known for iconic designs like the ‘little black dress’ and quilted handbags, the house prioritizes craftsmanship through its Métiers d’art. With annual sales approaching $20 billion, Chanel focuses on exclusive retail expansion and heritage preservation.

 

Bangladesh’s ready-made garment (RMG) sector concluded the FY25-26 on a sobering note, with total export earnings settling at $38.70 billion - a 1.64 per cent Y-o-Y decline. While the industry experienced a temporary growth in June, analysts caution against interpreting this as a broader recovery, attributing the uptick to a favorable calendar shift rather than organic order growth.

The data reveals a significant divergence in performance; while shipments to the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada demonstrated resilience with modest growth, these gains were insufficient to counterbalance a 3.31 per cent slump in the European Union, the country’s largest market. This contraction highlights the mounting pressure on Bangladeshi manufacturers as buyers increasingly diversify their sourcing portfolios ahead of the nation's scheduled graduation from Least Developed Country (LDC) status.

Production constraints and competitive pressures

Beyond shifting trade patterns, the sector is grappling with systemic operational challenges that threaten long-term competitiveness. Industrial hubs, particularly in regions like Gazipur, have reported intermittent production halts driven by energy supply disruptions and escalating utility costs. Furthermore, the industry is navigating intensifying price competition from emerging manufacturing hubs. Buyers are adopting a more cautious approach, prioritizing supply chain stability and regional diversification, noted industry observers. With the phase-out of duty-free privileges on the horizon, manufacturers are under immense pressure to shift from low-cost, high-volume production toward technical textiles and complex garment categories to sustain their global market position and mitigate tariff exposure.

Backbone of the national economy

The Bangladesh RMG sector is the backbone of the national economy, accounting for over 84 per cent of total exports. It specializes in large-scale cotton and knitwear production for global markets. Currently, the industry is aggressively investing in sustainable manufacturing, circularity, and digital production management to maintain competitiveness. 

 

The upcoming Q2, FY26 earnings report from Levi Strauss & Co will serve as a definitive benchmark for the global apparel sector's capacity to defend operating margins. Wall Street consensus forecasts adjusted earnings per share of $0.24 on $1.52 billion in revenue, marking a 4.8 per cent Y-o-Y expansion. The real narrative, however, centers on how supply chain restructuring protects profitability. Following a landmark Supreme Court ruling invalidating certain emergency-powers-based tariffs, Levi's low reliance on Chinese manufacturing - estimated under 10 per cent - could unlock substantial cost-of-goods-sold efficiencies and multi-million dollar tariff refunds. This diversification provides a structural insulation that peers are currently struggling to match.

Monetizing the direct-to-consumer transition

Beyond supply chain advantages, the denim lifestyle giant is leveraging an aggressive direct-to-consumer (DTC) framework to bypass wholesale friction. DTC channels now drive over half of total sales, supported by category expansions into women's apparel and premium casual offerings. Transitioning into a DTC-first brand captures a broader addressable market while improving pricing power, notes Harmit Singh, Chief Financial Officer. By minimizing promotions and leveraging its global direct footprint, Levi’s upcoming performance will test whether diversified global sourcing can reliably convert top-line growth into sustainable retail profitability amidst a volatile regulatory landscape.

Founded in 1853, Levi Strauss & Co. is a global apparel pioneer famous for inventing iconic blue jeans. Operating across the Americas, Europe, and Asia, the brand is prioritizing direct-to-consumer expansion and premium denim lifestyle categories. For fiscal 2026, management expects full-year revenue growth of 5.5 to 6.5 per cent.

 

The administration of Ladakh has unveiled a strategic fiscal framework to boost the region’s Pashmina industry, aiming to transition from traditional pastoral practices to a modernized, scientific production model. Under the newly constituted Ladakh Pashmina Development Board (LPDB), Vinai Kumar Saxena, Lieutenant Governor has approved a Livestock Development Incentive Program offering a 25 per cent ‘top-up’ incentive on the total procurement value of raw Pashmina. By utilizing a Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) system, the government intends to ensure that financial support reaches the Changpa nomadic herders directly, thereby eliminating the influence of intermediaries and mitigating the risk of distress sales.

Scaling productivity through scientific integration

To address long-standing challenges of low yields and fragmented payment cycles, the Board has sanctioned an Rs 8 crore revolving fund for the All Changthang Pashmina Growers Cooperative Marketing Society. This facility replaces the historical 8-to-10-month payment lag with an upfront 50 per cent disbursement, followed by the balance within two months. These measures are foundational to the government's ambitious target of doubling the Pashmina goat population from 2 lakh to 4 lakh within three years. Moreover, the administration is prioritizing a significant jump in per-animal yield - aiming to increase output from 200 g to 350 g through advanced combing tools and improved breeding techniques. According to industry assessments, these interventions are essential for scaling the supply of premium-grade, ethically sourced natural fibre to meet the growing global appetite for sustainable luxury textiles.

The Ladakh Pashmina sector is centered on the production of ultra-fine cashmere fibre derived from Changthangi goats reared by nomadic Changpa pastoralists in high-altitude plateau regions.

The industry currently focuses on raw fiber extraction, which supplies luxury apparel markets globally. Recent growth plans emphasize scientific livestock management, cooperative-led procurement, and professionalized retail marketing via platforms like the "Brand Ladakh" showroom in New Delhi. While the sector has historically faced liquidity and supply chain hurdles, the new fiscal policy aims to secure long-term financial viability for herders and stabilize the supply of this heritage commodity for the international textile market.

 

Scoop International is set to return to Olympia National, London, from July 19–21, 2026, anchoring its SS'27 edition with a heightened emphasis on international designer discovery. The trade show has secured a significant presence from the Italian Trade Agency, which is coordinating a delegation of 32 brands to showcase premium collections across womenswear, leather goods, and accessories. This influx of continental craftsmanship underscores London’s enduring status as a primary destination for high-end European labels seeking to penetrate the UK market. With over 220 exhibitors confirmed, the event continues to refine its signature ‘highly selected edit’ strategy, prioritizing quality and design-led identity over sheer volume to meet the demands of modern independent retailers.

Strategic dialogue and market connectivity

The SS'27 edition introduces an expanded slate of industry discourse through its ‘Fireside Chats,’ designed to bridge the gap between creative collection debuts and practical retail operations. By moving beyond traditional exhibition layouts, the platform aims to address the challenges of supply chain transparency and the growing consumer demand for sustainable, founder-led businesses. Industry observers note, the show’s ability to act as a gateway for emerging talent - many of whom utilize Scoop as their exclusive trade platform—remains a core driver of its influence. By fostering direct connections between international artisans and UK buyers, the event serves as a vital barometer for current seasonal sentiment, ensuring that luxury and lifestyle retailers can secure standout, market-ready collections ahead of showroom appointments.

Facilitating connections

Scoop International is a premier UK-based fashion and lifestyle trade show launched in 2011. It specializes in curated womenswear, luxury homewares, and lifestyle accessories. The event operates on a semi-annual schedule, supporting independent retail growth by facilitating high-level wholesale connections between emerging global designers and premium boutique buyers.

 

Purbani Group has reached a significant environmental milestone as its export-oriented manufacturing unit, Karim Textiles, secured the prestigious LEED Gold certification. This recognition underscores the conglomerate's transition toward resource-efficient operations, focusing on stringent water conservation, energy optimization, and advanced waste management protocols. By integrating these internationally recognized green building standards, the group is better positioned to meet the rigorous sustainability mandates now enforced by European and North American retail giants.

The certification arrives as the Bangladeshi textile sector increasingly views green infrastructure as a primary lever for market competitiveness. Industry data confirms, Bangladesh currently hosts nearly 300 LEED-certified industrial facilities, with the country maintaining a global lead in green factory density. While this shift reflects proactive investment in modernization, market analysts emphasize, the financial viability of these upgrades remains contingent on buyer commitment. Sustainability is no longer a peripheral advantage but an operational necessity," noted a senior trade consultant. However, manufacturers require consistent price premiums from global brands to offset the high capital expenditure required for LEED-compliant machinery and infrastructure. As Purbani Group continues to align its spinning, dyeing, and garment sewing operations with global benchmarks, the firm aims to balance its long-term decarbonization goals with the necessity of maintaining cost-efficient production in a volatile global trade environment.

Purbani Group is a vertically integrated textile conglomerate established in 1973. Its core operations span spinning, yarn dyeing, fabric manufacturing, and garment sewing. The group maintains a strong international presence, focusing on high-quality apparel for global markets. Purbani consistently pursues sustainable growth through modernization and green certification of its facilities.

 

The National Council of Textile Organizations (NCTO) has formally petitioned the US Trade Representative (USTR) to institute aggressive trade enforcement measures against apparel imports originating from regions implicated in forced labor. As the industry faces mounting scrutiny over human rights violations, NCTO is advocating for a strategic application of Section 301 duties to shield domestic manufacturers from predatory pricing models that rely on unethical labor. Kim Glas, President and CEO, NCTO, emphasizes, current trade dynamics place US producers at an artificial disadvantage, arguing, robust policy intervention is essential to prevent long-term industrial erosion. The proposed recommendations aim to recalibrate the competitive landscape by penalizing non-compliant foreign entities while simultaneously bolstering regional trade partners.

Strengthening Western Hemisphere integration

Central to the NCTO’s proposal is the preservation of duty-free status for textiles circulating within the USMCA and CAFTA-DR corridors. By incentivizing production shifts away from Asian manufacturing hubs toward the Western Hemisphere, the organization aims to secure a more transparent and resilient supply chain. The industry proposes a collaborative incentive program designed to prioritize US cotton and domestic raw materials, a move projected to generate over 56,000 new manufacturing positions. By excluding raw cotton from restrictive mechanisms that might unintentionally punish local producers and exempting essential machinery from new tariffs, NCTO seeks a framework that rewards high-standard supply chain integrity. This policy alignment represents a concerted effort to harmonize trade compliance with domestic growth, ensuring the sector remains viable amidst intensifying global regulatory pressures.

Supporting domestic production growth

The National Council of Textile Organizations serves as the primary trade association representing the US textile sector, spanning fiber to finished apparel. Focusing on policy advocacy and market expansion, the organization supports domestic manufacturing growth. With $60.9 billion in 2025 shipments, the sector targets increased Western Hemisphere supply chain integration.

 

Source Fashion has inaugurated its July 2026 edition at Excel London, marking a definitive transition toward a larger, more internationally diverse platform for the textile and apparel sector. This relocation to the expanded venue accommodates 305 exhibitors from 19 countries, reflecting a 22 per cent increase in floor space compared to previous iterations. The event now features dedicated international pavilions - including first-time participants from Vietnam, Mauritius, and Egypt—signaling a shift in how retail buyers are balancing traditional supply bases with emerging, high-capacity manufacturing regions. This move addresses the industry's critical need for resilient, multi-regional supply chains in an era of global volatility.

Bridging technical innovation and ethical supply

Beyond raw capacity, the current exhibition underscores a pivot toward transparency and circularity. With sustainability now a baseline requirement for procurement, the event showcases collaborations such as the partnership with Neuthread, which repurposes surplus textiles into commercial collections. Buyers are no longer just seeking new suppliers; they are vetting long-term partners capable of delivering both operational flexibility and measurable ESG compliance, observes Suzanne Ellingham, Event Director, Source Fashion. The integration of technical workshops and AI-focused sourcing debates highlights the sector’s effort to harmonize high-speed production with the rigorous standards of modern retail. As brands navigate complex environmental legislation, these interactive sessions are providing the essential frameworks needed for manufacturers to maintain competitiveness in the high-stakes European apparel market.

Premier European exhibition

Source Fashion is Europe’s premier exhibition connecting fashion brands, retailers, and private label businesses with audited global manufacturers. Its primary categories include textiles, apparel, trims, and production technology. Following rapid growth since its 2023 launch, the event focuses on long-term sustainability, transparent supply chain partnerships, and ethical manufacturing growth.

Lefties becomes Inditexs new weapon against Primark and Shein

 

While much of the global apparel industry has focused on the rapid rise of digital-first retailers such as Shein and Temu, Spain's Inditex is pursuing a different strategy. Rather than building an entirely new low-cost retail model, the company is utilizing the scale, technology and supply chain that power Zara to transform Lefties into a formidable value-fashion competitor across Europe.

Originally created as an outlet chain for excess Zara inventory, Lefties has evolved into a standalone brand positioned to challenge established discount retailers including Primark, Kiabi and Gémo. The strategy goes beyond competing on price alone. By combining Inditex's sourcing capabilities, logistics network and omnichannel infrastructure, Lefties is emerging as a technology-enabled value retailer capable of delivering fast fashion at highly competitive prices.

Price meets scale

Inditex is positioning Lefties squarely within Europe's highly competitive budget apparel segment. Entry-level pricing across key apparel categories closely matches or undercuts traditional discount chains while remaining competitive with digital-only platforms.

Table: Core apparel pricing benchmarks in Euros

Product category

Lefties (Inditex)

Primark baseline

Kiabi baseline

Shein digital baseline

Basic T-Shirt

€3.99

€4.50

€4.00

€3.49

Casual Dress

€9.90

€11.00

€10.00

€9.49

Standard Jeans

€12.99

€15.00

€14.00

€13.99

Structured Shirt

€15.99

€16.00

€15.00

€14.49

Industry observers note that the real competitive advantage lies not in marginal price differences but in the industrial ecosystem supporting Lefties. Unlike independent value retailers, the brand benefits from the same centralized sourcing, merchandising expertise and logistics capabilities that have made Zara one of the world's most efficient fashion businesses.

Powered by the Inditex group

The discount apparel market has traditionally been dominated by retailers with distinct competitive strengths. Primark relies on massive physical store volume, Shein has perfected algorithm-driven online merchandising, while Kiabi leverages strong regional market penetration. Lefties combines elements of all three while drawing on Inditex's global infrastructure.

Table: Retail competitor analysis

Retailer brand

Parent entity

Core operational strategy

Primary supply chain advantage

Digital capability focus

Average Est. margin profile

Lefties

Inditex Group

Tech-Driven Value Flagships

Centralized Logistics & Nearshore Sourcing

Omnichannel: Click-&-Collect / RFID Sync

Moderate (High Group Backup)

Primark

Associated British Foods

High Physical Store Volume

Massive Long-lead Far East Sourcing

Limited (Click-&-Collect Only Trial)

Low to Moderate

Kiabi

Association Familiale Mulliez

Regional Proximity & Family Focus

Established French/European Hubs

Standard E-commerce Baseline

Moderate

Shein

Independent Entity

Digital-First / Algorithmic Fast

Direct-to-Consumer Small-Batch On-Demand

Pure Play UI/UX Data Maximization

High Gross / Volatile Net

The model enables Lefties to utilise global procurement, premium retail locations, sophisticated inventory management and integrated digital services that many traditional value retailers cannot easily replicate. The strategy is backed by strong financial performance. During the latest first quarter, Inditex reported revenue of €8.75 billion, up 5.8 per cent year-on-year, while net profit increased 5.4 per cent to €1.38 billion. These results provide the financial flexibility to fund an aggressive expansion into value retail despite inflationary pressures across Europe.

Rapid store expansion

Physical retail remains central to Lefties' growth strategy. Inditex plans to add around 200 stores across Western Europe, targeting high-footfall shopping destinations where consumers are increasingly seeking affordable fashion. A major milestone is the brand's planned entry into the UK, directly confronting Primark in its home market. Flagship stores are planned for London's Oxford Street and Westfield London, alongside locations at Lakeside in Essex, Bluewater in Kent and Metrocentre in Gateshead. Each outlet will average approximately 1,800 square metres, reinforcing Inditex's commitment to large-format value retail. Beyond Britain, the expansion includes Germany, with a flagship in Düsseldorf, as well as France and other key European markets.

Technology as a differentiator

Where Lefties differs from many traditional discount retailers is its investment in digital retail infrastructure. Many value chains have deliberately limited technology investments to protect thin operating margins. Primark, for example, has always maintained only a limited e-commerce offering. Lefties is moving in the opposite direction by integrating omnichannel services into its stores.

New flagship locations feature extensive self-checkout areas, automated click-and-collect services, LED digital displays and integrated inventory systems that connect online and offline shopping. The stores also adopt the clean, modern layouts associated with Zara and other Inditex brands rather than the warehouse-style format common among discount retailers. This allows Lefties to offer a premium shopping experience while maintaining value-oriented pricing.

Balancing growth and margins

Despite the opportunities, the expansion also has its challenges. Budget fashion inherently operates on thinner margins, making operational efficiency critical. Inditex must ensure that the rapid growth of Lefties does not dilute the profitability of its broader brand portfolio, which achieved a gross margin of 61.2 per cent during the first quarter. Competition is equally intense. Primark enjoys strong customer loyalty and significant economies of scale, while Shein continues to dominate digital fast fashion through data-driven merchandising and on-demand manufacturing. Regional players such as Kiabi also retain deep local market knowledge.

For Lefties, sustained success will depend on whether its combination of nearshore sourcing, rapid product development and advanced retail technology can generate sufficient volumes to offset the costs of operating large-format stores while maintaining low prices.

Originally launched in 1999 as an outlet concept, Lefties has undergone a complete transformation. Today the brand operates more than 210 stores, serves over five million active customers in Spain and Portugal, and has expanded into Mexico, the Middle East and North Africa. Supported by Inditex's €2.3 billion capital expenditure programme and an increasingly Gen Z-focused social media strategy, Lefties is now positioned as a key pillar of the group's next phase of international growth.

As inflation continues to reshape consumer spending patterns, Inditex is signalling that the future of value fashion may no longer belong solely to discount specialists or digital disruptors. Instead, it could increasingly be defined by retailers capable of combining scale, technology and operational excellence under one integrated platform.

Bangladeshs apparel export model hits a breaking point as price wars reduce margins

 

Bangladesh's apparel industry, long regarded as the world's manufacturing hub for affordable, high-volume garments, is facing one of its most significant commercial challenges in recent years. Fresh trade data from Eurostat reveals that the country's traditional low-cost sourcing model is failing to protect export earnings as global buyers prioritize value, speed, flexibility and product differentiation over price alone.

The first quarter of 2026 shows the severity of the shift. While total European Union apparel imports declined by 11.62 per cent year-on-year to €21.09 billion, Bangladesh's exports to the bloc contracted by an even steeper 19.26 percent to €4.59 billion, representing the sharpest decline among the world's leading apparel suppliers. More concerning is that export volumes fell by only 8.32 per cent, while average unit prices fell 11.93 per cent to just €13.84 per kg, indicating that manufacturers are sacrificing profits simply to retain production orders.

Table:

Supplier

Value growth

Volume growth

Unit price growth

World

-11.62%

-5.53%

-6.44%

China

-7.90%

-1.02%

-6.95%

Bangladesh

-19.26%

-8.32%

-11.93%

Turkey

-18.92%

-20.14%

+1.52%

India

-10.15%

-4.13%

-6.28%

Vietnam

-2.12%

-7.16%

+5.43%

Source: Eurostat; compiled by Mohiuddin Rubel (Former Director, BGMEA).

Pricing power matters

The comparison with competing sourcing destinations highlights the weakness in Bangladesh's export model. Although Turkey experienced a significant reduction in shipment volumes, it increased its average selling price by 1.52 per cent to €27.93 per kg. Vietnam performed even better, raising unit prices by 5.43 per cent to €29.35 per kg while largely preserving export revenues.

These figures show that buyers remain willing to pay higher prices for suppliers capable of delivering technical products, design complexity, faster replenishment and stronger compliance credentials. Bangladesh, by contrast, continues to compete primarily on price, leaving manufacturers trapped in an increasingly unsustainable race to the bottom.

The US denim puzzle

The same pattern is evident in the US, where Bangladesh appears to be gaining market share but losing commercial value. By April 2026, Bangladesh accounted for 30.4 per cent of all men's denim pants imported by volume, up from 25.2 per cent a year earlier. However, this achievement came alongside an 8.33 per cent decline in average FOB prices, which dropped from $7.93 to $7.27 per garment. Among major suppliers, only Tanzania exported jeans at a lower average price.

Meanwhile, competing exporters moved in the opposite direction. Pakistan raised denim prices by 9.45 per cent, Mexico increased prices by 7.56 per cent, while suppliers from the EU27 recorded a remarkable 28.05 per cent increase, reflecting their focus on higher-value products rather than discount-led competition.

Supplier

Unit share

FOB price

2026 Price change

Mexico

27.80%

$11.60

+7.56%

Bangladesh

30.40%

$7.27

-8.33%

Pakistan

16.30%

$8.02

+9.45%

Egypt

5.70%

$9.02

+2.74%

Vietnam

4.50%

$11.39

+4.36%

Source: US Office of Textiles and Apparel (OTEXA).

Although Bangladesh increased its share in commodity denim, its overall value share of US apparel imports slipped from 11.1 per cent to 10.5 per cent through March 2026. Vietnam, meanwhile, increased its value share from 19.3 per cent to 22.5 per cent, underscoring the growing importance of premium product positioning.

Beyond basic manufacturing

Stakeholders argue that the downturn reflects deeper operational shortcomings rather than temporary market weakness. Many domestic manufacturers continue to define competitiveness through production efficiency for standardized basics, while international retailers increasingly demand technical capabilities, rapid product development, sustainable manufacturing and complex garment construction.

Traditional quality control systems often prioritize consistency in basic products, whereas higher-value apparel requires flexible manufacturing capable of accommodating sophisticated designs and evolving fashion trends. Similarly, factories frequently simplify product specifications to match existing production capabilities instead of investing in technology, skills and processes that enable more complex manufacturing.

Lessons from foreign investors

Foreign-owned manufacturers operating in Bangladesh demonstrate that an alternative model is already viable. South Korean manufacturer Youngone has built its business around specialized outdoor apparel, technical sportswear and performance garments rather than commodity basics. These operations invest heavily in workforce training, advanced production technologies and sustainability standards while paying wages substantially above industry averages. Their success suggests that Bangladesh possesses the labour force needed to produce high-value apparel. The primary constraint lies not with workers but with investment strategies and factory management models that continue to prioritize volume over value creation.

Preparing for post-LDC era

Bangladesh's upcoming graduation from Least Developed Country status has accelerated the need for structural reforms. Under the government's 2026-2029 RMG strategy, policymakers are shifting emphasis from traditional subsidies towards measures designed to strengthen long-term competitiveness.

The proposed framework includes negotiating new Free Trade Agreements to preserve preferential market access, expanding Export Credit Insurance to support deferred payment arrangements, strengthening independent compliance audits, improving product testing infrastructure and establishing transparent mechanisms for handling worker and buyer complaints.

These initiatives reflect changing buyer expectations. Global brands increasingly evaluate suppliers on governance, traceability, sustainability and financial reliability alongside production costs. Compliance has evolved from a competitive advantage into a prerequisite for participation in international sourcing networks.

For an industry that generates over 80 per cent of Bangladesh's export earnings, the challenge extends beyond weathering a cyclical slowdown. The current trade data suggests that the era of winning business primarily through the world's lowest prices is drawing to a close. Sustained growth will depend less on producing larger volumes of basic garments and more on building the technological capabilities, product sophistication and commercial resilience required by an increasingly value-driven global apparel market.

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